 Episode 22: THE HUMAN RANCH (NINGEN BOKUJO) ***1/2
Episode 22: THE HUMAN RANCH (NINGEN BOKUJO) ***1/2
Dubbed title: CHROMOSOME EATERS
 During
 a birthday party for a young woman named Ruriko, a monster walks out of
 the ocean, kills her dog and makes off with the girl. Anne, who is 
attending the party, alerts her comrades. Searching for her missing 
friend, they find the monsters footprints, but no sign of the creature. 
The Ultra Guard eventually find Ruriko unconscious on the beach with a 
strange parasite attached to her arm. They discover to their horror that
 these spores can only grow and multiply inside of female host bodies. 
The only cure is Radiation Alpha 73, a special element found on Saturn. 
With but hours to save her and Anne both, Ultraseven and the Ultra Guard
 must face an assault by dozens of aliens before Seven can race to the 
ringed planet to retrieve the element required to save the two women.
During
 a birthday party for a young woman named Ruriko, a monster walks out of
 the ocean, kills her dog and makes off with the girl. Anne, who is 
attending the party, alerts her comrades. Searching for her missing 
friend, they find the monsters footprints, but no sign of the creature. 
The Ultra Guard eventually find Ruriko unconscious on the beach with a 
strange parasite attached to her arm. They discover to their horror that
 these spores can only grow and multiply inside of female host bodies. 
The only cure is Radiation Alpha 73, a special element found on Saturn. 
With but hours to save her and Anne both, Ultraseven and the Ultra Guard
 must face an assault by dozens of aliens before Seven can race to the 
ringed planet to retrieve the element required to save the two women. 

 
 
 This
 moody little number is one of the handful of shows with an engaging 
storyline that's also modestly frightening for what it suggests. The 
notion that an alien life form uses the bodies of women to cultivate 
itself recalls such later horrors as ALIEN (1979) and THE THING (1982); 
only here, the subject of impregnation is essentially violation by an 
invading alien force. The script never gets too explicit with the 
material, but it's a dark topic being explored in what is ostensibly a 
children's show.
This
 moody little number is one of the handful of shows with an engaging 
storyline that's also modestly frightening for what it suggests. The 
notion that an alien life form uses the bodies of women to cultivate 
itself recalls such later horrors as ALIEN (1979) and THE THING (1982); 
only here, the subject of impregnation is essentially violation by an 
invading alien force. The script never gets too explicit with the 
material, but it's a dark topic being explored in what is ostensibly a 
children's show. 

 
 
 Unfortunately
 for monster fans, Seven never actually squares off against the Burako. 
Moroboshi does in human form, though. At the end, Seven and the Ultra 
Hawk 1 have an aerial dogfight. The Ultra Hawk shows off some new moves 
such as a rotating formation that leads to the destruction of numerous 
alien spores. It's also the first time the Ultra Guard and Ultraseven 
jointly work together. In fact, the Hawk saves Seven at one point when 
he's surrounded and caught in the combined rays shot from the cluster of
 spores. The Ultra Garrison would save Seven again later in the series 
when he was put in an even more life-threatening predicament.
Unfortunately
 for monster fans, Seven never actually squares off against the Burako. 
Moroboshi does in human form, though. At the end, Seven and the Ultra 
Hawk 1 have an aerial dogfight. The Ultra Hawk shows off some new moves 
such as a rotating formation that leads to the destruction of numerous 
alien spores. It's also the first time the Ultra Guard and Ultraseven 
jointly work together. In fact, the Hawk saves Seven at one point when 
he's surrounded and caught in the combined rays shot from the cluster of
 spores. The Ultra Garrison would save Seven again later in the series 
when he was put in an even more life-threatening predicament. 
 
The
 Pointer also demonstrates a new ability. Near the beginning of the 
show, the Ultra crew drive towards the ocean. The Pointer then hovers 
just above the water searching the waters surface. The Pointer is 
quickly becoming a series favorite where SciFi gadgetry is concerned. 
James Bond would have loved one of these.
 The
 lack of monster action will likely put many off to this one. Save for 
the discreet shots of the beast walking out of the surf and killing a 
dog (offscreen), the only other time we see a monster is the 
brief scuffle in the operating room between Dan and the Burako. As with 
many of the other episodes, there's an off-kilter quality here with 
varied, and odd camera angles, and curious color palette. In the end, 
the story sells it -- weak effects work and all.
The
 lack of monster action will likely put many off to this one. Save for 
the discreet shots of the beast walking out of the surf and killing a 
dog (offscreen), the only other time we see a monster is the 
brief scuffle in the operating room between Dan and the Burako. As with 
many of the other episodes, there's an off-kilter quality here with 
varied, and odd camera angles, and curious color palette. In the end, 
the story sells it -- weak effects work and all. 
MONSTERS: Burako
WEAPONS: The Pointer, Ultra Hawk #1 and #3