"¡Mucha Lucha! Para Siempre" was a planned revival based on the original animated series, "¡Mucha Lucha!". It was planned to be a continuation of the original series, but it is set in a few years later. [1]
It was produced by Eddie Mort, one of the creators of the show. A 15-minute fully animatic was produced to Warner Bros. with the original casts, but WB doesn't seem to have an interest of reviving the show as of now. Mort produced the animatic and uploaded to his Vimeo channel on August 4, 2014, but it is privated through Mort's Vimeo channel.[2]
Synopsis[]
"A few years on and the world has changed. And so have they - Rikochet, Buena Girl, and The Flea deal with life outside the confines of the World's Foremost International School of Lucha Libre as sixteen-year-olds, taking on what is thrown at them - sometimes together, and sometimes apart. New situations, new characters, and new challenges ahead."
Plot[]
Work in Progress!
Characters[]
Major Characters[]
- Rikochet
- Buena Girl
- The Flea
- Guillermo El Conquistador (formerly Guillermo El Toro)
Minor Characters[]
- Lonestar
- Mama Maniaca
- Masked Dog
- TV Announcer
- Ring Announcer
- Referee
- Lucha Students at Community Center
- Community Center Supervisor
- Sonic Sumo
- French Twist
- Penny Plutonium
- Minotoro
- El Gundamo
- La Piñata
- Sr. Hasbeena
- Double Ninja Ninja
- El Haystack Grande
- El Loco Mosquito
- Protozoa
- Francisco of the Forest
- Potato Patata Jr.
- Timmy of a Thousand Masks
- Zero Kelvin
- Skelantonio
- Cindy Slam
- Snow Pea
- Megawatt (pictured in yearbook/flashback)
- Los Justice Enforcers (archival clip)
- Blue Demon Jr.
- Cheetah Bonita (archival clip)
- Dr. Terrorrifico (archival clip)
- Los Monstros (archival clip)
- Frankie Estain (archival clip)
- Crying Woman's Ghost (archival clip)
- Robot Aztec Mummy (archival clip)
- La Mariposa (pictured in yearbook/poster)
- Kid Wombat (pictured in poster)
- Doomien (pictured in poster)
- Abuelito (stock picture)
- Buena Mom (stock picture)
- Buena Dad (stock picture)
- Mr. Flea (stock picture)
- Mrs. Flea (stock picture)
- Pulgita (stock picture)
- Heavyweight (pictured in yearbook)
- El Perrito (pictured in yearbook)
- El Toro Amarillo (pictured in yearbook)
- Hula Hattie (pictured in yearbook)
- Pierre Del Fuego (pictured in yearbook)
- Private Reinhardt (pictured in yearbook)
- El Oscuro Invasor (pictured in yearbook)
- Psiclone (pictured in yearbook)
- Tibor the Terrible (pictured in yearbook)
- Influenza (pictured in yearbook)
- El Guapo (pictured in yearbook)
- Tiki Tornado (pictured in yearbook)
- Miracle (pictured in yearbook)
- Ensalada De Frutas (pictured in yearbook)
- Monkeyman (pictured in yearbook)
- Botas Del Fuego (pictured in yearbook)
- The Ballroom Blitzkriegs (one is pictured in yearbook)
- Pierre Del Fuego (pictured in yearbook)
- Dragonfly (pictured in yearbook)
- El Pacifico (pictured in yearbook)
- La Flamencita (pictured in yearbook)
- Mucus (pictured in yearbook)
- Coco Demento (pictured in yearbook)
- Tic Tac Toe (pictured in yearbook)
- Cow Patty (pictured in yearbook)
Galleries[]
Click here to visit ¡Mucha Lucha! Para Siempre's Gallery!
Trivia[]
- Unlike the show's original style, the lines would be less bulky and the design on the characters would be leaner since they are now teenagers.
- Most ideas and dialogues from the script were taken from a planned graphic novel from Tokyopop. [3]
- Carlos Alazraqui, Kimberly Brooks, and Candi Milo returned to voice their respective characters from the original series. However, they also provided the voices to a variety of old and new characters.
- The story takes place 7 years after the original series ended.