Directed by Nagase Samaji
In addition to a script marinated with an international flavor, director and co-writer Nagase Samaji swap out the all-too familiar cityscapes and water based sets for a desert location in the Middle East. It might seem like a bland setting, but the crew at Tsuburaya Productions bring it to life with a healthy dose of mythology and monsters.
The battle itself isn't too exciting, which is a shame since Antlar is, up to this point, the most exotic looking monster yet seen. The depiction of Ultraman as vulnerable, nearly beaten by his opponent likely riled up a lot of kids when it premiered. I remember being startled a handful of times by this series when I saw it as a small boy.
Teruo Arakaki is credited with being inside the Antlar suit, although Nakamura Harekichi (who played plant monster Green Mons in episode 5) is seen in pre-production photos (see above insert) wearing the costume for creature creator Ryosaku Takayama (far right in above insert). Antlar was one of the handful of monsters seen in ULTRAMAN EVE (THE BIRTH OF ULTRAMAN), a live special inside an auditorium designed to introduce the character and some of its antagonists that aired July 10th, 1966. On this occasion, suit actor Izumi Umenosuke was inside the Antlar costume.
The alien from M-78 is linked with those ancient astronauts in that another, or others like him had been to the Earth centuries before, destined to return again. Noa (or Noah), seen in the form of a stone statue within the city of Baraji, is supposed to be the oldest of the Ultra aliens. The character appears in later Ultra series's and has a pivotal role in the adult-oriented ULTRAMAN NEXUS (2004-2005).
The blue stone gripped in the palm of the statue of Noa is what actually defeats the monster, putting a nice spin on a mythology still in its infancy. For a show aimed primarily at children and prone to nostalgic fits of joy for grownups, it's intriguing to find cerebral ideas, subtle as they are, sprinkled throughout the occasional program.
Elsewhere, there's a few (obvious) matte paintings that accentuate the location change. One of which is a nice painting of the Baraji city. The open set of the main castle was the same one seen in the same year's Toshiro Mifune action-fantasy, ADVENTURE IN KIGAN CASTLE (1966) directed by Senkichi Taniguchi.
'The Blue Stone of Baraji' was the fourth episode produced but the seventh to air, on August 28th, 1966.
Next time, ULTRAMAN ramps up the monster action and introduces one of the goofiest, but one of the most popular creatures that had been seen previously in Tsuburaya's monsterless SciFi series, ULTRA Q (1965-1966).
MONSTERS: Antlar
WEAPONS: Jet VTOL, Spider Shot, Super Gun
To be continued in Episode 8: THE LAWLESS MONSTER ZONE!!!
