Saint Seiya

Saint Seiya (聖闘士星矢 Seinto Seiya) is an anime series based on the shōnen manga created by Masami Kurumada and produced by the Japanese animation studio Toei Animation. It aired from October 11, 1986 to April 1, 1989 on Japan's TV Asahi, consisting of 114 episodes.

The story follows five mystical warriors called the "Saints" who fight wearing sacred armors named "Cloths", the designs of which derive from the various constellations the characters have adopted as their destined guardian symbols, and empowered by a mystical energy called "Cosmo". The Saints have sworn to defend the reincarnation of the Greek goddess Athena in her battle against other Olympian gods who want to dominate Earth.

Dubbing History
In July 2002, ADV Films announced at their Otakon 2002 panel that they had purchased the rights to release the series in North America. The following June, it was revealed that the company had only acquired a sublicense to the series through an agreement with children's entertainment company DiC Entertainment. The French studio announced that it had sold 40 episodes of the show to Cartoon Network for broadcast in the United States under the name Knights of the Zodiac.

DiC produced an edited English dub recorded in Toronto, Ontario by Kaleidoscope Entertainment. This version featured significant visual edits, storyline modifications and a cover of The Flock of Seagulls song "I Ran" by American rock band Bowling for Soup as its opening theme song. The series debuted on Cartoon Network in the United States on August 30, 2003. Parallel to DIC's dub, ADV Films produced their own uncut version under the Saint Seiya name. Utilizing an entirely separate voice cast from the Houston, Texas area, their dub was released on DVD from October 21, 2003 to May 31, 2005. While ADV intended to complete the dub of the series, they were only able to sub-license 60 episodes from DiC, as they had only licensed that many for their own adaptation.

Cartoon Network would end up pulling the series from air due to abysmal ratings. Though Cartoon Network initially planned to run the rest of DiC's dub in a late night slot, the show was pulled from the channel's schedule in April 2004 after 32 episodes aired. ADV Films would later release those 32 episodes across 8 DVD and VHS releases between January and November 2004. In Canada, however, all 40 episodes aired on television, with the dub's conclusion airing on July 24, 2004.

DiC Dub
Additional Voices/Unidentified Roles
 * Jeff Berg
 * Shane Bland
 * George Buza
 * Drew Coombs
 * Neil Crone
 * Andrew Pifko
 * Martin Roach
 * Robert Norman Smith
 * Dan Warry-Smith
 * Maurice Dean Wint

Additional Voices

 * Christine Auten
 * Christopher Ayres
 * Marta Bechtol
 * Shelley Calene-Black
 * Jin Ho Chung
 * Matt Crawford
 * Patrick Givens
 * Joey Goubeaud
 * Jacob A. Gragard
 * Tiffany Grant
 * John Gremillion
 * Joe Grisaffi
 * Karen Hatch
 * Kyle C. Jones
 * Sandra Krasa
 * Kelly Manison
 * Vic Mignogna
 * Amanda Nanawa
 * Chris Nelson
 * Eric Opella
 * Mariela Ortiz
 * Lidia Porto
 * Kim Prause
 * Henry Rogers
 * Don Rush
 * Gilda Santiago
 * Randy Sparks
 * Allison Sumrall
 * John Swasey
 * Jimmy David Taylor
 * Shelly Thomas
 * Kira Vincent-Davis
 * Mike Yantosca