Pokémon in Indonesia: Difference between revisions

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==Pokémon anime==
==Pokémon anime==
===TV series===
===TV series===
[[File:SCTV.png|thumb|left|SCTV logo at the time]]
[[EP001|The first episode]] of the [[Pokémon anime]] was aired on March 3, 2001 every Saturday and Sunday at 19:00-19:30 {{wp|Time in Indonesia|WIB}} ({{wp|UTC+07:00|GMT+7}}) by '''{{wp|SCTV (Indonesia)|Surya Citra Televisi Indonesia}}''' (better known as '''SCTV'''), the second Indonesian commercial TV station. According to SCTV, however, the first 26 episodes were temporarily to be aired.<ref>[http://east.sakura.ne.jp/aniba/aninews/id.htm Anihabara - Anime News in Indonesia]</ref> After several months, the broadcast was moved to every Sunday morning at 10:00-10:30 on July 8, 2001. Sometime in 2003, the show was moved once again at 08:30-09:00.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20030608071526/http://www.sctv.co.id/acara/acara.html SCTV schedule on June 8, 2003] (Archive)</ref>
[[EP001|The first episode]] of the [[Pokémon anime]] was aired on March 3, 2001 every Saturday and Sunday at 19:00-19:30 {{wp|Time in Indonesia|WIB}} ({{wp|UTC+07:00|GMT+7}}) by '''{{wp|SCTV (Indonesia)|Surya Citra Televisi Indonesia}}''' (better known as '''SCTV'''), the second Indonesian commercial TV station. According to SCTV, however, the first 26 episodes were temporarily to be aired.<ref>[http://east.sakura.ne.jp/aniba/aninews/id.htm Anihabara - Anime News in Indonesia]</ref> After several months, the broadcast was moved to every Sunday morning at 10:00-10:30 on July 8, 2001. Sometime in 2003, the show was moved once again at 08:30-09:00.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20030608071526/http://www.sctv.co.id/acara/acara.html SCTV schedule on June 8, 2003] (Archive)</ref>


The Indonesian dub mainly based on the {{wp|Japanese}} version; however, mostly proper names from the English version were used. At the time, Indonesia version subtitled [[Aim to Be a Pokémon Master|the first Japanese opening]] and [[One Hundred Fifty-One|ending themes]].<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhime2UxrSs Pokémon Ending Sub Indonesia]</ref> The most known renamed [[main character]] [[Ash Ketchum]], was given the dub name '''Ali''', while the rest of them are based on their English name. In a short period of time, Pokémon became well-known amongst children and people. Soon after the episodes around the [[Pokémon: The Adventures in the Orange Islands|Orange League season]], the show was known to be stopped indefinitely <!--certainly between June to August-->in August 2003.
The Indonesian dub mainly based on the {{wp|Japanese}} version; however, mostly proper names from the English version were used. At the time, Indonesia version subtitled [[Aim to Be a Pokémon Master|the first Japanese opening]] and [[One Hundred Fifty-One|ending themes]].<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xhime2UxrSs Pokémon Ending Sub Indonesia]</ref> The most known renamed [[main character]] [[Ash Ketchum]], was given the dub name '''Ali''', while the rest of them are based on their English name. In a short period of time, Pokémon became well-known amongst children and people. Soon after the episodes around the [[Pokémon: The Adventures in the Orange Islands|Orange League season]], the show was known to be stopped indefinitely <!--certainly between June to August-->in August 2003.


The anime series did not continuously air until December 26, 2004, when '''{{wp|Indosiar}}''' (sometimes known as '''Indosiar Visual Mandiri'''), took over and began their first broadcast from the episode around [[Pokémon: The Johto Journeys|the beginning of the Johto saga]] on Sundays from 07:30-08:00 WIB (GMT+7). Indosiar were using mostly the script and localization from Japanese as the main dub. Thus, the Indonesian dub name Ali was left, retained his Japanese name, '''[[Ash Ketchum|Satoshi]]'''. Unfortunately, the inconsistency began when the dub were using the mixture between the English and Japanese names for Pokémon and other things in some episodes cases, though this was not the case for the notable main characters; Satoshi, {{an|Misty|Kasumi}}, {{an|Brock|Takeshi}}, [[Jessie|Musashi]], [[James|Kojiro]], [[Meowth (Team Rocket)|Nyasu]] ({{p|Meowth}} in English). These were the most controversial for the Indonesian fans. Despite this, many fans still support this positive effort for retaining the main character's Japanese names.
[[File:Indosiar.png|thumb|left|240px|Indosiar]]
The anime series did not continuously air until December 26, 2004, when '''{{wp|Indosiar}}''' (sometimes known as '''Indosiar Visual Mandiri'''), took over and began their first broadcast from the episode around [[Pokémon: The Johto Journeys|the beginning of the Johto saga]] on Sundays from 07:30-08:00 WIB (GMT+7). Indosiar were using mostly the script and localization from Japanese as the main dub. Thus, the Indonesian dub name Ali was left, retained his Japanese name, [[Ash Ketchum|Satoshi]]. Unfortunately, the inconsistency began when the dub were using the mixture between the English and Japanese names for Pokémon and other things in some episodes cases, though this was not the case for the notable main characters; Satoshi, {{an|Misty|Kasumi}}, {{an|Brock|Takeshi}}, [[Jessie|Musashi]], [[James|Kojiro]], [[Meowth (Team Rocket)|Nyasu]] ({{p|Meowth}} in English). These were the most controversial for the Indonesian fans. Despite this, many fans still support this positive effort for retaining the main character's Japanese names.


After [[Pokémon: Master Quest|the last season]] of the {{series|original}} was finished, Indosiar continuously aired [[AG001|the first episode]] of the {{series|Advanced Generation}} ('''Pokémon AG''') from April 27, 2008. Since this series, almost of English localizations were used, with exception of previous notable characters. This made the new main characters, {{an|May}} and [[Max]], were named in their English name instead of Japanese name. However, in some episodes aired in the middle of 2009, almost of Japanese localization were used instead, due to the error.
After [[Pokémon: Master Quest|the last season]] of the {{series|original}} was finished, Indosiar continuously aired [[AG001|the first episode]] of the {{series|Advanced Generation}} ('''Pokémon AG''') from April 27, 2008. Since this series, almost of English localizations were used, with exception of previous notable characters. This made the new main characters, {{an|May}} and [[Max]], were named in their English name instead of Japanese name. However, in some episodes aired in the middle of 2009, almost of Japanese localization were used instead, due to the error.
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Diamond & Pearl series had been stopped on Indosiar from July 25, 2010 until November 21, 2010, in which were brought to reschedule to 08:00-08:30 after the retirement, continuing from [[DP024|twenty-fourth episode]] to [[DP025|the next episode]] on November 28, 2010.<ref>[http://bloggertouch.appspot.com/pokeindopedia/post/3086262967948381259 Pokémon series reappeared on Indosiar]</ref>
Diamond & Pearl series had been stopped on Indosiar from July 25, 2010 until November 21, 2010, in which were brought to reschedule to 08:00-08:30 after the retirement, continuing from [[DP024|twenty-fourth episode]] to [[DP025|the next episode]] on November 28, 2010.<ref>[http://bloggertouch.appspot.com/pokeindopedia/post/3086262967948381259 Pokémon series reappeared on Indosiar]</ref>


Recently, Indosiar broadcast their own Diamond & Pearl season without announcement called '''Pokémon D&P Part II''', possibly for the reason of the skipping episode lately from [[DP053]] to [[DP136]] on June 12, 2011.<ref>[http://pokemonstars.com/2011/06/20/pokemon-diamond-pearl-di-indosiar-meloncat-ke-eps-136/ Pokémon Stars - Diamond & Pearl series Skip]</ref> This season will consist of 52 episodes<ref>[http://lsf.go.id/film.php?module=sensor&sub=detail&id=89942 Lembaga Sensor Film - Pokémon D&P Part II Episode 52]</ref>, which were brought to the episode removal from [[DP138]] to [[DP141]]. Thus, [[DP142]] was aired instead after [[DP137]] on June 26, 2011.
Recently, Indosiar broadcast their own Diamond & Pearl season without announcement called '''Pokémon D&P Part II''', possibly for the reason of the skipping episode lately from [[DP053]] to [[DP136]] on June 12, 2011.<ref>[http://pokemonstars.com/2011/06/20/pokemon-diamond-pearl-di-indosiar-meloncat-ke-eps-136/ Pokémon Stars - Diamond & Pearl series Skip]</ref> This season will consist of 52 episodes<ref>[http://lsf.go.id/film.php?module=sensor&sub=detail&id=89942 Lembaga Sensor Film - Pokémon D&P Part II #52]</ref>, which were brought to the episode removal from [[DP138]] to [[DP141]]. Thus, [[DP142]] was aired instead after [[DP137]] on June 26, 2011.


===Movie===
===Pokémon movie===
In Indonesia, no [[Pokémon movie]]s have premiered in any theaters. Instead, Pokémon movies were aired on TV station. As the SCTV era, only [[M01|the first Pokémon movie]] was known to be aired. As Indosiar took over, they aired several movies, started with  ''[[M02|Revelation—Lugia]]'' and ''[[M03|Lord of the {{tt|Unknown|Unown}} Tower]]'' on consecutive days, June 16 and 17, 2008. The second movie was running again on May 16, 2010 at 16:30. The third movie had ever running once again around January 2011.
In Indonesia, no [[Pokémon movie]]s have premiered in any theaters. Instead, Pokémon movies were aired on TV station. As the SCTV era, only [[M01|the first Pokémon movie]] was known to be aired. As Indosiar took over, they aired several movies, started with  ''[[M02|Revelation—Lugia]]'' and ''[[M03|Lord of the {{tt|Unknown|Unown}} Tower]]'' on consecutive days, June 16 and 17, 2008. The second movie was running again on May 16, 2010 at 16:30. The third movie had ever running once again around January 2011.


In November 2008-January 2009, Pokémon movies were running continously from movies 4-7, replacing the regular episodes at the time. However, these movies were split up into several parts and aired weekly, only thirty-minutes to an hour available for one part. ''[[M04|Celebi: A Timeless Encounter]]'' was broadcast on November 30 and December 7. On December 14 and 21,  ''[[M05|Pokémon Heroes: Latias and Latios]]'' was also aired for the first time. At the celebration of {{wp|New Year's Day}}, ''[[M06|Jirachi: Wish Maker]]'' was first aired in two parts on December 28, 2008 and January 4, 2009, and ''[[M07|Destiny Deoxys]]'', premiered in three parts on January 11, 18, and 25, 2009.  The issue was no longer present, as on November 20, 21, and 27, 2010, Pokémon Heroes, Jirachi: Wish Maker, and Destiny Deoxys were re-running at 17:30 without segmented scenes.
In November 2008-January 2009, Pokémon movies were running continously from movies 4-7, replacing the regular episodes at the time. However, these movies were split up into several parts and aired weekly, only thirty-minutes to an hour available for one part. ''[[M04|Celebi: A Timeless Encounter]]'' was broadcast on November 30 and December 7. On December 14 and 21,  ''[[M05|Pokémon Heroes: Latias and Latios]]'' was also aired for the first time. At the celebration of {{wp|New Year's Day}}, ''[[M06|Jirachi: Wish Maker]]'' was first aired in two parts on December 28, 2008 and January 4, 2009, and ''[[M07|Destiny Deoxys]]'', premiered in three parts on January 11, 18, and 25, 2009.  The issue was no longer present, as on November 20, 21, and 27, 2010, Pokémon Heroes, Jirachi: Wish Maker, and Destiny Deoxys were re-running at 17:30 without segmented scenes.


''[[M08|Lucario and the Mystery of Mew]]'' and ''[[M09|Pokémon Ranger and the Temple of the Sea]]'' premiered at the first time in Indonesia on September 1 and 2, 2011, at 09:30, while ''[[M10|The Rise of Darkrai]]'' premiered on September 3 at 10:00. The following three movies were premiered to commemorate {{wp|Eid ul-Fitr|Idul Fitri}}.
''[[M08|Lucario and the Mystery of Mew]]'' and ''[[M09|Pokémon Ranger and the Temple of the Sea]]'' premiered for the first time in Indonesia on September 1 and 2, 2011, at 09:30, while ''[[M10|The Rise of Darkrai]]'' premiered on September 3 at 10:00. The following three movies were premiered to commemorate {{wp|Eid ul-Fitr|Idul Fitri}}.


===Home video===
===Home video===
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