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During this episode, Speed attends a road racing school where Racer X suddenly appears, wheels the Mach 5 through a tricky slalom course, and thus intimidates the other drivers and the school instructor, but not Speed; Racer X also chances upon Pops, Mom and Speed, all remembering Rex and saddened in wishing he would return - a wish Rex quietly ...
In the anime, Speed was often suspicious of Racer X's identity and motives, because Racer X would sacrifice winning races to protect Speed from drivers who tried to harm him. The assistance from Racer X nearly always led to Speed winning races, while Racer X came in second place. Racer X always left the scene unnoticed, receding into his secret ...
He wins the race and returns to the track with only a little air left. In the end, Chezko turns out to be Speed Racer Sr.'s engineer, Sparky. X decides to go pro, which would mean leaving the school. Speed Racer Sr. finally reveals himself to his son, Speed. NOTE: This is the final three-part special to air on Nickelodeon on April 11, 2009.
The series follows the adventures of an orphan teenager named Speed who dreams of being a famed car racer like the one he is named after. He takes a bus to the elite Racing Academy, founded by the Racer family, and soon experiences the difficulties of fitting in and competing with X, the best racer/student in the school, and Speed Racer's son.
Speed Racer X: 1997: Shueisha / DIC Entertainment / Funimation: TV Tokyo: Speed Racer. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: 2003–09: Mirage Studios / Dong Woo Animation / 4Kids Entertainment: Fox: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Speed Racer: The Next Generation: 2008–2013: Shueisha / Speed Racer Enterprises / Animation Collective / Toonz Animation ...
Speed Racer is making its way back to TV screens. A live-action series based on the Japanese manga and animated show has received a series order at Apple TV+, per The Hollywood Reporter. J.J ...
The show aired in Japan in 1997 on TV Tokyo and lasted only 34 episodes of a planned 52. In 1998, Speed Racer Enterprises planned to release an English dub of the series in the United States as Speed Racer Y2K, though the project did not succeed and only the third episode, "Silver Phantom", was dubbed. [2]
Speed Racer X: 2002: Nickelodeon Nick GAS: Tatsunoko Production, Speed Racer Enterprises [note 3] English dub; owned by Tatsunoko Production Liberty's Kids: 2002–03: PBS : Melusine Productions, [4] WHYY: Stargate Infinity: Fox Disney Channel France M6: Les Studios Tex, MGM Television Entertainment: International rights owned by Amazon MGM Studios