Neo-Shifters: The Beginning

Neo-Shifters: The Beginning (also known as Neo-Shifters: Episode Zero) is a 1985 Vlokuzuian-American-New Zealander science-fiction action tokusatsu superhero film. The film later spawned a television series Neo-Shifters, which ran from 1985 to 1988.

Plot
For thousands of years, two fractions of the shape-shifting alien robots known as "neo-shfiters", the heroic Paladins and the villainous Templars waged in the civil war over the sources of water. This was until the point where both fractions have been reduced to scavenging for water and the Paladins leave their home planet with their spaceship and the Templars follow them in their vessel and successfully boarded the Paladin ship. A battle breaks out in the ship while nobody is controlling the ship, the ship crashes into Roswell in planet Earth, leaving everyone in the ship unconscious.

38 years after the crash, Quinn Foster (Ivanson), a grown-up man living with his mother (Cher), his stepdad (Albano) and his stepbrother (Peyton), who likes to hang out with his friends who are his childhood friend Takehiro (Kayos) and his love interest Lise (Hershey) other than spending time with his family. The next day, they encountered a Paladin who is looking for sources of water in the Vloksville quarry. However, the Templars arrived at the quarry, starting the battle between them.

While Quinn, Takehiro and Lise try to drive through the battlefield, they were captured by the Templar ship, later to be shot down by a Paladin, causing to drop a car into the ground, leaving them unconscious. When Quinn woke up, he found out Takehiro and Lise are missing and he later got beamed by a Paladin ship while he is trying to find Takehiro and Lise.

Cast

 * Ben Ivanson as Quinn Foster/Magna::Rex
 * Andrew Kayos as Takehiro Nakahara/Atlas::Raan
 * Lise Hershey as Ashlee Collins
 * Lou Albano as Donnie Ford
 * Cher as Gail Foster
 * Jerrold Peyton as Sam Ford

Production
Neo-Shifters was Regal Group Network's attempt to succeed financially by exploiting the success of Bionicle, as RGN's popularity dropped after the theartical release of Quest for the Masks in 1981.

Filming
Neo-Shifters: The Beginning was filmed from March 23 to July 21, 1984. Unlike Bionicle V, which had a combination of stop-motion animation and computer-graphics animation, Neo-Shifters only had stop-motion animation, which was done by over 50 people and it took 6 months to complete. Some of the stop motion models were later reused in some Bionicle projects (albeit repainted and altered) due to the El TV Kadsre-RGN partnership deal of the time. It was filmed in Capulco, the Vloksville quarry, the Wats Lake basin and the spaceship interiors and operation rooms were filmed in Warner Bros. Studios in California.

Soundtrack
Neo-Shifters was scored by American composer John Williams. The ending credits theme, The Shifter from Space, was co-written by Rylan Forester and recorded by the Norwegian pop-music group A-ha, which can be heard on the Vlokozuian version of A-ha's debut album, Hunting High and Low.

Release
Neo-Shifters: The Beginning was released in theaters less than a month after the similar tokusatsu film Bionicle V: Web of Shadows. Neo-Shifters: The Beginning grossed $63 million in its opening weekend in the Vlokozuian movie market, second on the charts behind Bionicle V: Web of Shadows. It grossed $294 million that year making it Warner Bros' most highest grossing film, putting The Goonies into second place.

Reception
The film is received with mixed to positive reviews from critics. While it was praised for its costume design and concept, the film was criticized for being the blatant ripoff of Bionicle, despite El TV Kadsre refusing to sue Regal Group Network due to the partnership deal between them at the time. Neo-Shifters: The Beginning had a slightly better score on Rotten Tomatoes than Bionicle V: Web of Shadows.

Cancelled sequel
In 1991, Regal Group Network confirmed the possibility of the sequel of both the movie and the TV series entitled Web-Shifters, originally slated for 1996 release and commissioned for a script to the Technic Heroes writer Sung Gim. In 1995, it was announced the sequel was pushed to 1998. In January 1998, Regal Group Network announced the sequel was cancelled after Vlokfilm and Warner Bros. couldn't afford the monetary risk of producing it.