The G.I. Joe force learn that Cobra is out to clone a new leader for the organization, making them a greater threat than ever before.The G.I. Joe force learn that Cobra is out to clone a new leader for the organization, making them a greater threat than ever before.The G.I. Joe force learn that Cobra is out to clone a new leader for the organization, making them a greater threat than ever before.
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Charlie Adler
- Low-Light
- (voice)
Jack Angel
- Wet Suit
- (voice)
Michael Bell
- Duke
- (voice)
- …
Gregg Berger
- Col. Brekhov
- (voice)
Arthur Burghardt
- Destro
- (voice)
- …
Corey Burton
- Tomax
- (voice)
William Callaway
- Beach Head
- (voice)
Christopher Collins
- Cobra Commander
- (voice)
- (as Chris Latta)
- …
Peter Cullen
- Zandar
- (voice)
Brian Cummings
- Dr. Mindbender
- (voice)
Hank Garrett
- Dial Tone
- (voice)
Dick Gautier
- Serpentor
- (voice)
Ed Gilbert
- Gen. Hawk
- (voice)
Dan Gilvezan
- Slip-Stream
- (voice)
Zack Hoffman
- Zartan
- (voice)
Kene Holiday
- Roadblock
- (voice)
- (as Kene Holliday)
Jerry Houser
- Sci-Fi
- (voice)
Buster Jones
- Doc
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe Joe's steal a laserdisc from Cobra the enemy. This is ironic since this movie is the only G.I. Joe episode on laserdisc.
- GoofsAirtight disappears and reappears randomly during the rescue mission for Sgt. Slaughter.
- Alternate versionsThere are two different versions of the opening episode: The first starts with no background music through about the first 10 minutes (The softball game, the Cobra attack on the base, the arrival of Sgt. Slaughter); the music doesn't start until the Joes are shown doing their running exercises. All other versions (including the Rhino DVD version) include background music starting at the opening titles.
- ConnectionsEdited from G.I. Joe: Arise, Serpentor, Arise!: Part I (1986)
Featured review
I'll betcha I watched this film 25 times when I was 11 or 12. I actually didn't get into G. I. Joe at a very young age like many people from my generation. I was always more a Star Wars and Ninja Turtles kinda guy (kid). Somewhere along the line, I was introduced to the Marvel Comics G.I. Joe saga and realized just how genius and complex the storyline was. Larry Hama (whom can be found on this site for the three or four things he's acted in) is an excellent writer and I wish he'd work on more. However, the cartoon was always far less superior to the comic, and even this, which is one of the better stories for the cartoon, is not even close to the comic. Still, I believe any person who was a fan of G.I. Joe growing up might get a kick out of watching this. It is available on DVD now, though I have to wonder how easy it is to find. A little known fact about this film is that Duke originally died from Serpentor's snake. Larry Hama never liked the Duke character and Hasbro gave the cartoonists permission to kill off the character. However, the public outcry from Optimus Primes death in the Transformers film forced the filmmakers to alter the dialog so that it would say he went into a coma.
- PickUrFeetInPoughkeepsie
- Dec 3, 2002
- Permalink
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- Release date
- Countries of origin
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- Also known as
- Action Force: Arise, Serpentor, Arise!
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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What was the official certification given to G.I. Joe: Arise, Serpentor, Arise! (1986) in the United States?
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