Ultraman(ウルトラマン) is the generic name for the television series, movies, animations and other such things concerning a 40+ m several-thousand-ton giant from the Nebula M78 fighting monsters that harm the Earth (and saving the occasional innocent monster.)
Said being is also usually red-and-silver (although several colour variations have been seen in recent years), has glowing yellow bug-eyes and also has the ability to fire energy beams from various positions of crossed hands. The main weakness is that that the being only stay in his form for a few minutes owing to a limited supply of energy. This is marked by a light on the character's body, called the Colourtimer which eventually begins to blink with increasing frequency as his energy supply dwindles. At this stage, Ultraman must either find a way to recharge, or finish the fight as soon as possible.
Ultraman's creator was Eiji Tsuburaya from Tsuburaya Productions, a pioneer in special effects. The show's predecessor was a series called Ultra-Q, a black and white 28-episode series very much like today's The X-Files or The Twilight Zone. The gist of the first series goes like this; Science Patrol (Kagaku Tokusou Tai) member Hayata Shin was flying his plane when a red sphere of light crashes into his VTOL. The sphere turns out to be a giant red-and-silver giant called Ultraman, and feeling remorse for killing the human, he merges his essence with Hayata to revive him. In return, Hayata serves as the human form for this being, and when danger threatens, he raises the Beta capsule and transforms to Ultraman to save the day.
Ultraman ran from July 1966-April 1967 and was followed by many, many other series. Some of the more famous ones include UltraSeven (1967), Return of Ultraman (1971), Ultraman Ace (1972), Ultraman Taro (1973), Ultraman Great (a.k.a. Ultraman Towards the Future) (Australian production), Ultraman Tiga (1996), Ultraman Dyna (1997), Ultraman Gaia (1998) and the most recent incarnation, Ultraman Cosmos (2001). Foreign productions include the 1987 Hanna-Barbera co-production Ultraman: The Adventure Begins, an animated movie; Ultraman: Towards The Future, an Australian 1990 production and Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero, produced in the United States in 1994.
At present, close to 40 Ultraman/women exist, not counting the few animated efforts from Tsuburaya Productions.
Licensing rights dispute
Ultraman's licensing rights outside of Japan were for a long time subject of a prolonged legal dispute between Tsuburaya Productions and Tsuburaya Chaiyo Co Ltd based in Thailand.
After an 8 year battle in court, the Japanese supreme court handed the rights to Sompote Saengduenchai, president of Tsuburaya Chaiyo Co Ltd in a verdict on april 27th 2004. The ruling gives him the exclusive rights to all Ultraman characters and the Ultraman trademark outside of Japan.
Sompote is now looking to make a new Ultraman movie with the American market as its target audience.
External Links
http://home.cfl.rr.com/ultrafaq/Ultraman-FAQ.html - The Ultra[man] FAQ