Inuyasha
Inuyasha | |
Genre | Adventure, Action, Comedy, Drama, Fantasy, Historical, Romance |
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Created by | Rumiko Takahashi |
Manga | |
Written by | Rumiko Takahashi |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Anime | |
Directed by | Masashi Ikeda (eps 1 to 44) Yasunao Aoki (44 onwards) |
Studio | Sunrise |
Feature movies | |
InuYasha (犬夜叉), full title InuYasha, a Feudal Fairy Tale (戦国お伽草子–犬夜叉, Sengoku Otogi Zōshi InuYasha) (also romanized as Inuyasha), is a popular manga series written by Rumiko Takahashi. The story centers around a time-traveling middle school student, a half-demon, a lecherous monk, a young fox demon, a demon slayer, and a nekomata during the Sengoku period who seek to restore the Jewel of Four Souls (Shikon no Tama) and to keep it out of the hands of the evil Naraku. This series also displays the hardships and chaos in that Japanese era.
The manga was adapted into a 167 episode anime series directed by Masashi Ikeda (episodes 1 to 44) and Yasunao Aoki (44 onwards) and produced by Sunrise. The anime first aired on Yomiuri TV in Japan from 16 October 2000 to 13 September 2004. The television run of the anime ceased without a conclusion to the story. As of September 2007, the manga is still being released in Japan.
In 2002, the Manga won the Shogakukan Manga Award for best shōnen title of the year.
Plot overview
The story begins in Feudal Japan with InuYasha, a hanyo stealing the Shikon no Tama, a jewel that can increase anyone's powers enormously, from a village. He does not get far before Kikyo, the young miko of the village, shoots InuYasha with a sacred arrow, sealing him forever to Goshinboku, a tree in the nearby forest. Mortally wounded, Kikyo tells her younger sister, Kaede, to burn the jewel with her body to prevent it from falling into the wrong hands.
In modern Tokyo, a junior high-school girl named Kagome Higurashi is on her way to school. She stops in the well house of her family's Shinto shrine to retrieve her cat, Buyo, when a centipede demon bursts forth and pulls her into the Sengoku period of Japan.
Not knowing where she is, Kagome wanders around a forest near the well. She spots Goshinboku off in the distance and proceeds towards it. When she reaches the tree, she finds InuYasha, who is still sealed with an arrow to the tree, asleep. Villagers seize her and take her to the old miko, Kaede. Recognizing that Kagome is the re-incarnation of her sister Kikyo, Kaede tells the story of Kikyo and InuYasha.
The centipede attacks again, and Kagome is forced to release InuYasha to kill it. After defeating the centipede, in order to prevent InuYasha from taking the Jewel of Four Souls, Kaede casts magical prayer beads around InuYasha's neck so Kagome can subdue him.
Then the jewel attracts more demons. In a battle against a carrion crow demon, the jewel is shattered into numerous shards.
Kagome and InuYasha set out to collect the shards and restore the Jewel of Four Souls. Along the way they befriend Shippo, a fox demon, Miroku, a cursed monk, and Sango, a demon-slayer whose brother was tricked into slaughtering the rest of their village. The group often encounters: InuYasha's older half-brother, Sesshomaru; Naraku who tricked Kikyo and InuYasha into turning against each other; Kikyo who was brought back from the grave with part of Kagome's soul; and a wolf demon, Koga, who is in love with Kagome and wants to make her "his woman".
Characters
- Kagome Higurashi (日暮 かごめ, Higurashi Kagome) Voiced by: Satsuki Yukino (Japanese); Moneca Stori (English)
- Kagome is a 15 year-old 9th grade student. She is the reincarnation of Kikyo, a miko who died 50 years before the time Kagome first emerges from the Bone Eater's Well in the Sengoku Jidai. Because of this Kagome has powerful spiritual powers herself and can even sense the Shikon no Tama. Kagome can be extremely sweet, but can also become very dangerous when provoked. InuYasha wears a special bead necklace which only responds to Kagome's command: when she yells "Sit!".[1] At this, InuYasha is thrown to the ground. The necklace was placed upon him by Kaede because he was threatening to kill Kagome if she did not give the jewel to him. [2]
- InuYasha (犬夜叉) Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi (Japanese); Richard Ian Cox (English)
- InuYasha is a hanyō, the product of an inu-yōkai (犬妖怪, dog demon) and a human. He wields the Tetsaiga,[3] a supernatural sword made from one of his deceased father's fangs. This sword, when properly wielded, can destroy one hundred demons with a single swing. InuYasha can quickly recover from injuries which would be fatal for any average human, because of his demonic heritage. On the night of the new moon each month, InuYasha will change into a normal human with black hair, brown eyes, and loses his yokai power during this time. InuYasha was bound to Goshinboku by Kikyo's arrow for fifty years until Kagome freed him.
- Miroku (弥勒) Voiced by: Kōji Tsujitani (Japanese); Kirby Morrow (English)
- A Buddhist "hōshi" (low-ranking, itinerant monk), Miroku traveled the countryside performing services such as exorcisms and yōkai exterminations to earn his living. He suffers from a hereditary curse originally inflicted upon his grandfather Miyatsu (also a Buddhist monk) by Naraku. The curse created a hole in his hand that became a kazaana (風洞, air void or "wind tunnel") which sucks in anything not nailed down, regardless of mass. However, absorbing poisons harms him, a fact Naraku takes advantage of by creating highly poisonous insects whose presence prevents Miroku from using his kazāna on Naraku or his allies. Miroku uses the kazāna as a powerful weapon against yōkai, but if the curse is not broken (by defeating Naraku), it will grow too large to control and consume Miroku himself. Miroku is a talented con artist who does not hesitate to invent fictitious supernatural menaces which he can then offer to combat in return for food and shelter, and he has a distinct weakness for pretty single women. He makes a point of asking every attractive woman he meets if she will bear his child, and he habitually strokes the buttocks of attractive women. He eventually proposes to Sango, though this does little to curb his flirtations with other women.
- Sango (珊瑚) Voiced by: Houko Kuwashima (Japanese); Kelly Sheridan (English)
- A "yōkai taijiya" (demon slayer) who hails from a village of professional yōkai slayers. Sango wields the Hiraikotsu, a massive boomerang made of yōkai bones, in addition to a broad repertoire of tools and tricks for battling yōkai. Sango seeks revenge against Naraku for the death of her family and her entire village. In addition, Sango seeks to rescue her brother Kohaku from Naraku's influence and somehow save his life, even though Kohaku's life is tied to the jewel shard embedded in his back. She also eventually falls for Miroku. Although everyone but InuYasha noticed, she never wanted to admit it. Her interest was manifested by hitting Miroku when he flirted with other single women.
- Shippo (七宝, Shippō) Voiced by: Kumiko Watanabe (Japanese); Jillian Michaels (actress) (English)
- A young orphan kitsune whose father was killed by the Thunder Brothers, Hiten and Manten, and the first character in the story to join InuYasha and Kagome in their travels as a group. Shippo can shapeshift, but his forms are temporary, often incomplete and ineffective, and he is usually given away by his tail. His other noteworthy abilities illusionary tricks with toys like his giant spinning top attack, using his race's notable fox fire magic, and making things like leaves or himself multiply. He tends to be naively observant and often makes pointed and cheeky comments directed towards InuYasha, earning him a retaliatory bonk on the head for his unsolicited "advice".
- Kirara (雲母) Voiced by: Tarako Isono
- Sango's faithful nekomata; Kirara [4] has light-tan colored fur, with black stripes on each of her two bushy tails near the tip, and black-tipped paws. Kirara can change between two forms, a ferocious yōkai the size of a lion with the ability to fly, and a cute little kitten. Sango, Miroku, and Shippo often use Kirara's flying ability as transportation in order to keep up with InuYasha.
Media
Manga
The manga was serialized in Japan in the weekly publication Shonen Sunday by Shogakukan, with the first installment issued on November 13, 1996. Every 180 pages, usually ten chapters, the issues are collected in bound tankōbon. Volume 45, collecting chapters 439 through 448, was published in May 2006.[5] Volume 49 was recently published. The chapters for volume 50 are ready but are yet to be published. Inuyasha recently surpassed 500 chapters, and still shows no sign of stopping. Chapters 499 onwards will comprise of volume 51. The latest chapter (published on 19 September 2007) is chapter 522, Possession.
In the United States the English version is published by Viz Media. The artwork is flipped to conform to the American standard of reading left to right. Volume 1 was published in March 1998, with either two or three new volumes following each year. At present, the series has stepped up to a quarterly release basis. Volume 29 was published on April 10, 2007, and volume 30 on July 10, 2007. Although Viz is still several years away from catching up to the number of volumes in Japan, they will start to catch up soon with the release of volume 31 on October 9, 2007.
The manga won the 2002 Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen.
It should be noted that the anime ended at the equivalent of manga volume 36.
Anime
The InuYasha anime series spanned 167 episodes, and was broadcast across Japan by the anime satellite television network, Animax, who have also aired the series across its English-language network in South Asia (being the first network to fully broadcast the series in the English language) and also across its networks in East Asia, Yomiuri TV and Nippon Television. The series ended on September 13 2004.
The anime is licensed in North America by Viz and ShoPro Entertainment, and the actual dubbing is done by the The Ocean Group.
InuYasha was first broadcast in the United States on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim on August 31 2002. The series later premiered on Canadian television screens on YTV on September 5 2003.
InuYasha is now also shown on Cartoon Network's Latin American incarnation, Cartoon Network LA. In Latin America, it is shown dubbed in Spanish and in Portuguese (Brazil or with SAP in other countries). Cartoon Network LA can be seen in many countries south of the United States, as well as some cruise ships in the Caribbean. It is unknown if the last 7 episodes will air dubbed in the region.
At one point in Latin America, new episodes of InuYasha were airing twice a day, 5 times a week, and reruns were being aired Saturday night - 5 episodes in two hours. This is why the series concluded much faster than in the United States. As of December 2006, InuYasha is in rotation on the network.
In the United States, the final episode of InuYasha aired on October 27, 2006. The Japanese version of the manga continues the story much farther than the anime. (The English version of the manga has not caught up with the anime yet.) The series started its second run on January 1, 2007 (The second run meaning Adult Swim has begun from episode 1 again, showing 8 episodes a week, twice a day from Monday to Thursday, until Adult Swim added Friday to the line-up, making it 10 episodes a week) This second run, however, despite skipping over episodes 73 to 80 for reasons that have not yet been made clear, ended on May 18, 2007 and a third run has started in the same fashion. Starting on the second week of July 2007, it has been airing on 5 days, Tuesday to Saturday, from 1:30 a.m. to 2:30 a.m., making 10 episodes a week. Episodes 73 to 80 are scheduled to air in this run, and the run is scheduled to end in late September 2007. It will end on September 24 2007, and will start its fourth run the following day.
In Canada, YTV's Bionix programming block aired the final episode on December 1, 2006. On December 8, 2006, YTV's Bionix began airing reruns of InuYasha, starting with episode 105 "The Ghastly Steel Machine" and the consecutive episodes after it, instead of beginning from the first episode. On June 2, 2007, YTV began airing InuYasha at 10:30 p.m. in its Saturday Bionix block. Inuyasha just restarted back to 105 yet again on September 5, 2007 and will now air 5 nights a week due to Death Note's premiere being delayed.
InuYasha was dubbed in Mandarin Chinese and hosted on Xing Kong, a Taiwanese TV Channel. InuYasha also was dubbed in Bahasa Melayu for ntv7. The show is aired every Friday at 7:30 p.m.
On April 16 2007, the first 12 InuYasha episodes were released on DVD in the United Kingdom. In the U.S. season 4 is coming out in September 2007.
As of July 27 2007, http://www.netflix.com shows 55 DVDs available, containing episodes 1 through 167. There are also four DVD movies. According to http://www.inuyashaworld.com, there are 167 episodes, and four movies. It would appear that the entire series is now available.
Season | Episodes | Discs | Features | DVD release date |
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1 | 1 - 27 | 5 |
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September 7 2004 |
2 | 28 - 54 | 5 |
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November 8 2005 |
3 | 55 - 81 | 5 |
|
September 12 2006 |
4 | 82 - 99 | 4 |
|
September 4 2007 |
Season | Episodes | Discs | Features | DVD release date |
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1a | 1 - 12 | 3 |
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April 16 2007 |
Movies
Four movies, which exist separate from the anime plot, have been released. The first movie, InuYasha the Movie: Affections Touching Across Time was released on December 16, 2001 in Japan with InuYasha the Movie: Fire on the Mystic Island being the last movie to be released; on December 23, 2004 in Japan. The fourth movie was released three months after the series finale of InuYasha in Japan. As of September 2007, there are no plans for a fifth movie.
Four theatrical releases of the series have appeared so far:
Movie | Premiere date |
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InuYasha the Movie: Affections Touching Across Time (映画犬夜叉 時代を越える想い, Eiga Inuyasha: Toki o Koeru Omoi)
|
Japan: December 16, 2001 |
InuYasha the Movie: The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass (映画犬夜叉 鏡の中の夢幻城, Eiga Inuyasha: Kagami no Naka no Mugenjō)
|
Japan: December 21, 2002
U.S.: December 28, 2004 |
InuYasha the Movie: Swords of an Honorable Ruler (映画犬夜叉 天下覇道の剣, Eiga Inuyasha: Tenka Hadō no Ken)
|
Japan: December 20, 2003
U.S.: September 6, 2005 |
InuYasha the Movie: Fire on the Mystic Island (映画犬夜叉 紅蓮の蓬莱島, Eiga Inuyasha: Guren no Hōraijima)
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Japan: December 23, 2004 |
Music
Song title | Notes |
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"Change the world" |
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"I Am" |
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"Owari nai Yume" (終わりない夢 Unending Dream) |
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"Grip!" |
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"One Day, One Dream" |
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"Angelus" (アンジェラス) |
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"My will" |
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"Fukai mori" (深い森 Deep Forest) |
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"Dearest" |
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"Every Heart" (ミンナノキモチ - Minnano Kimochi) |
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"Shinjitsu no Uta" (真実の詩 Song of Truth) |
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"Itazura na Kiss" (イタズラな Kiss - Mischievous Kiss) |
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"Come" |
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"Change the world" |
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"Brand new world" |
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Movie # | Original title | Notes |
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1 | "No more words" |
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2 | "Yura Yura" (ゆらゆら Rock) |
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2 | "Ai no Uta" (愛の謳 Song of Love) | Insert song
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3 | "Four Seasons" |
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4 | "Rakuen" (楽園 Paradise) |
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Games
InuYasha has been adapted into a mobile game – released for Java and Brew handsets on June 21, 2005, [6] a trading card game – an English-language original Trading card game first released on October 20, 2004 created by Score Entertainment, and the following video game console games:
Title | Console | Release date | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
InuYasha: A Feudal Fairy Tale | PlayStation | April 9, 2003 (North America) |
Japanese title: Inuyasha: Sengoku Otogi Kassen (戦国お伽草子–犬夜叉) |
InuYasha: The Secret of the Cursed Mask | PlayStation 2 | November 1, 2004 (North America) | Japanese title: Inuyasha: Juso no Kamen (犬夜叉 呪詛の仮面) |
InuYasha: Feudal Combat | PlayStation 2 | August 23, 2005 (North America) | Japanese title: Inuyasha: Ōgi-Ranbu (犬夜叉 奥義乱舞) |
InuYasha: Secret of the Divine Jewel | Nintendo DS | January 23, 2007 (North America) | English only.[7] |
Inuyasha: Kagome no Sengoku Nikki (犬夜叉 ~かごめの戦国日記, InuYasha: Kagome's Warring States Diary) | WonderSwan | November 2, 2001 (Japan) | Japanese only. |
Inuyasha: Fūun Emaki (犬夜叉 風雲絵巻) | WonderSwan | July 27, 2002 (Japan) | Japanese only. |
Inuyasha: Kagome no Yume Nikki (犬夜叉 かごめの夢日記, InuYasha: Kagome's Dream Diary) | WonderSwan | November 16, 2002 (Japan) | Japanese only. |
Inuyasha: Naraku no Wana! Mayoi no Mori no Shōtaijō (犬夜叉~奈落の罠!迷いの森の招待状, InuYasha: Naraku's Trap! Invitation to the Forest of Illusion) | Game Boy Advance | January 23, 2003 (Japan) | Japanese only. |
Growth and popularity
InuYasha is fairly popular in the Canadian internet community. According to Google, InuYasha was the most searched for term on their search engine in Canada, in 2004. InuYasha was also the third most popular searched for term in Canada in all of 2003.[8][9]
Leaping onto American TVs on August 31 2002, InuYasha made its debut in Cartoon Network's Saturday Adult Swim Block. The show's rapid rise in popularity quickly pushed it to air five nights a week. Although no new episodes are available since 2005, as of 2007, reruns are still aired in two back-to-back episodes five nights per week.
According to Viz, the release of the feature film, InuYasha: Affections Touching Across Time on DVD has sold over 30,000 units to-date and has occupied the number two spot on Nielsen Videoscan’s Anime Rankings for three consecutive weeks. As a series overall, more than 800,000 DVDs of the InuYasha series have been sold since March 2003.
On the literary side, InuYasha graphic novels also continue to show strong sales numbers. Volume 19 of the InuYasha manga series has been ranked Number 3 on Nielsen Bookscan’s Graphic Novel Top 50 List for the week ending October 3, 2004, and Volume 1 is at Number 18 in its 77th straight week on top, confirming a growing interest among new fans. [1]
Fanfiction
Many fanfictions have been made including tragic, romance, comedy and drama fanfictions. InuYasha has gained more popularity in fanfiction than Ranma 1/2, which makes it very popular among young people (mostly teens) and adults. Fanfiction.net and InuYasha-Fanfiction.com houses the most InuYasha fanfictions on the internet.
Allusions
InuYasha has its roots in a short story from the 1980s that Rumiko Takahashi wrote entitled "Fire Tripper". The story deals with a high school girl named Suzuko traveling back in time to the Sengoku Era where she encounters Shukumaru, a brash young warrior who takes a romantic liking to her. While Fire Tripper deals mostly with the story device of time travel, it does share many things in common with InuYasha. InuYasha and Shukumaru both have similar personalities, fighting first and asking questions later, while the schoolgirl outfits of both Suzuko and Kagome are hard to miss.
In addition, many if not all of the major characters bear a resemblance to a character from one of Takahashi's earlier manga, most often Ranma 1/2.
Notes and references
- ^ Note:Often "Sit, boy!" in the dub.
- ^ Episode 2
- ^ Note: it is incorrectly pronounced "Tetsaiga" and spelled "Tetsusaiga" in the English dub
- ^ Note:Also called Kilala (pronounced "Kee-Lah-Lah") in the English dub, but spelled Kirara, because the Japanese language treats "r" and "l" as one phoneme.
- ^ Inuyasha volume 45 Template:Ja icon
- ^ Inuyasha mobile phone game
- ^ ign.com
- ^ "Google Press Center: Zeitgeist". Google. Retrieved 2006-12-24.
- ^ "Google Press Center: 2003 Year-End Zeitgeist". Google. Retrieved 2006-12-24.
External links
Template:Contains Japanese text
Official sites:
- Viz's official InuYasha website
- Shonen Sunday's Official InuYasha manga website Template:Ja icon
- Sunrise's official InuYasha anime website Template:Ja icon
- Yomiuri Television's official InuYasha anime website Template:Ja icon
Unofficial sites:
- The InuYasha Companion
- Inu Yasha ({{{type}}}) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Inuyasha Scripts & Episode Capsules
- Manga series
- Animated television series
- Action anime and manga
- Adventure anime and manga
- Anime of the 2000s
- Fantasy anime and manga
- Romance anime and manga
- InuYasha
- Japanese mythology in anime and manga
- Manga of the 1990s
- Shows on Adult Swim
- Sunrise
- Viz Media manga
- Shōnen
- 2000 television program debuts
- Time travel television series
- Winner of Shogakukan Manga Award (Shōnen)