Silverwing (TV series) facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Silverwing |
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Silverwing DVD cover
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Genre |
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Written by |
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Directed by | Keith Ingham |
Voices of |
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Composer(s) |
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Country of origin |
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Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 13 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Cathy Schoch |
Editor(s) | Don Briggs |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Production company(s) |
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Distributor |
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Release | |
Original network | Teletoon |
Original release | September 6 | – December 14, 2003
Silverwing is a 2003 animated television series based on Kenneth Oppel's 1997 novel of the same name.
The show uses a hybrid of 2D and 3D animation.
Contents
Synopsis
Long ago before the first migration, the animals initiated the Great Battle to establish the balance of nature and the territory limits of every species. The birds and beasts banished all bats into the darkness for not choosing sides. Shade sets out on a journey to reason with them.
Characters
Bats
- Shade: (Bill Switzer) A young heroic Silverwing bat whom Zephyr taught how to use echo projection.
- Marina: (Sharon Alexander) A young Brightwing bat living alone on an island. The humans banded Marina and the colony banished her, thinking that the band was a bad omen. In the series, Shade and Marina remain friends.
- Goth: (Michael Dobson) A villainous cannibal bat brought from South America to the city for laboratory studies. After escaping from there, he tricks Shade into leading him to the colony. However, Shade and Marina foil the plan.
- Throbb: (Richard Newman) Goth's brother in-law.
- Frieda: (Pam Hyatt) The banded chief elder and main leader of the Silverwing colony.
- Bathsheba: (Shirley Millner) A selfish member of the Silverwing elders who dislikes Frieda and Shade. Bathsheba later abandons the colony.
- Ariel: (Randall Carpenter) Shade's mother whose mate, Cassiel leaves the colony.
- Mercury: (Ian James Corlett) Frieda's male loyal guardian and leader of the female bats.
- Chinook: (Matt Hill) Shade's best friend.
- Zephyr: (Richard Newman) A wise and blind albino bat living in the cathedral spire, serving as "traffic controller" and wishing the colony to be safe. He teaches Shade and Marina star navigation, herbal remedies and echo projection.
- Scirocco: (Ian James Corlett) The charismatic shapeshifting leader of the colony of banded bats dwelling in the mountain's cabin.
- Penelope: (Randall Carpenter) One of the banded bats, whom Shade rescues.
- Hector: (Lee Tockar) Chinook's father and one of the Silverwing elders. He later reunites with the colony at Hibernaculum.
- Breeze: (Stevie Vallance) Shade and Chinook's friend.
Others
- Brutus: (Richard Newman) The main leader of the owls who destroyed Tree Haven. He later declines the war and forgives the group of bats.
- Orestes: (Richard Ian Cox) Brutus' son. He, Shade and Marina save Brutus from Goth and Throbb.
- Atlas: (Michael Dobson) Brutus' assistant and the supporting leader of the owls.
- Ursa: (Candus Churchill) The Kermode bear who later serves as the leader of the beasts and protects the animals from wolves.
- Luger: (Lee Tockar) The evil leader of the wolves whom Goth recruited.
- Remus: (Richard Ian Cox) The selfish king of the rats and Romulus' brother.
- Romulus: (Lee Tockar) Remus' brother who trusts Shade and Marina, banishes Remus and becomes the new king of the rats.
Differences from the novel
- In the novel, Orestes is King Boreal's son, but changes into Brutus' for the series.
- In the novel, Throbb is killed by a thunderstorm. However, he survives in the series and is pursued by the owls.
- In Sunwing, King Boreal forgives the colony of bats. However, in the Silverwing television series, Brutus does the same thing.
- In the novel, Throbb is merely Goth's traveling companion, in the series, they're brothers-in-law.
- In the novel, the beasts do not become embroiled in the owl-bat conflict, but they do in the series.
- Shade cannot echo project in the novel, but he does develop a similar ability in Sunwing.
- Marina keeps her band throughout the series, whereas it is removed near the end of the novel.
Episodes
Note: The episodes were also released in miniseries format as three television films, with new endings created for the first two parts. Episodes 1–5 were released as A Glimpse of the Sun, episodes 6–9 as Towers of Fire and episodes 10–13 as Redemption.
No. | Title | Original air date (Teletoon) | |
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1 | "A Glimpse of the Sun" | September 6, 2003 | |
As Shade looks at the sun and mistakenly breaks the law, the owls destroy Tree Haven.
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2 | "No Bat Is an Island" | September 7, 2003 | |
During the early migration, after being separated from his colony, Shade ends up on an island and meets Marina, who explains that her colony banished her after she was banded. Shade suggests that Marina should meet Frieda.
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3 | "Pigeon Court" | September 14, 2003 | |
Arriving at the city, Shade and Marina evade the pigeons.
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4 | "Bat in the Belfry" | September 21, 2003 | |
Before leaving, Shade and Marina meet Zephyr, who teaches Shade how to use echo projection.
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5 | "Dark Alliance" | September 28, 2003 | |
Confronting Goth and Throbb, Shade and Marina learn that the two are killing animals.
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6 | "Friends in Deed" | October 5, 2003 | |
Orestes frees the Shade and Marina, and they escape from the group of owls. After Orestes forces the bats to leave the power station, Goth gets electrocuted and falls unconscious.
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7 | "Everything Is Not Black and White" | October 12, 2003 | |
Shade and Marina meet Ursa and suggest that she defend the animals from the wolves after a bear cub's mother is murdered. Goth kills a crow, while regaining consciousness.
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8 | "Deception" | November 2, 2003 | |
Shade and Marina continue to evade Goth and Throbb, while Bathsheba briefly becomes the leader.
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9 | "I'm With the Band" | November 9, 2003 | |
At the mountains, Shade and Marina save a group of banded bats from Goth and Throbb, who steal the rest of the bands. Meanwhile, the colony arrives at the airport.
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10 | "Rats" | November 23, 2003 | |
After Romulus banishes Remus at the junkyard, Shade and Marina reunite with Orestes. As the colony and Bathsheba leave, Ariel, Frieda and Mercury escape from the airport.
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11 | "Strange Batfellows" | November 30, 2003 | |
When Shade uses echo-projection to distract Goth, he and his allies leave the mine.
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12 | "Hibernaculum" | December 7, 2003 | |
As Shade, Marina and Orestes arrive at Hibernaculum, Shade reunites with his colony, Goth and Throbb recruit the wolves, and Bathsheba asks Brutus to remove Shade from the colony.
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13 | "Day of Judgment" | December 14, 2003 | |
After the bears defeat the wolves and Goth is killed by collapsing icicles, the animals congratulate the bats and permit them to fly outside.
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Production
The series was produced by Bardel Entertainment, with additional work done by Philippine Animation Studio. It was originally distributed by Bardel and B Wooding Media.
Early plans as of 2001 consisted of a theatrical movie with a budget of US$25–30 million to be co-produced with the UK's Melwood Pictures, followed by a US$5 million TV series developed with participation from an unspecified American broadcaster.
A second season of 13 episodes was announced to be in development in 2003, along with an online video game website with 13 levels to match the episodes. The website had over 20 games available by mid-2004, while the planned season was quietly shelved later that year.
Release
Broadcast
Silverwing was commissioned by and first aired on Teletoon in Canada in fall 2003.
In the United States, the series was shown on Toon Disney's Jetix block in autumn 2005, with Jetix later airing the show internationally.
Home media
The full series has been released on DVD in the US and the UK.
Awards and nominations
Year | Association | Category | Nominee | Result | Ref. |
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2004 | Gemini Awards | Best Original Music Score for a Dramatic Series | Brian Carson, Ari Wise | Nominated | |
2004 | Vancouver International Digital Festival (Vidfest) | Interactive Design: Entertainment | Website: silverwing.tv | 2nd |
See also
In Spanish: Silverwing para niños