Nabari no Ou

Nabari no Ou

The cover of the first volume of the original Japanese manga release
隠の王
Genre Action, Comedy, Drama, Supernatural
Manga
Written by Yuhki Kamatani
Published by Square Enix
English publisher Yen Press
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Monthly GFantasy
Original run 20042010
Volumes 14 (List of volumes)
TV anime
Directed by Kunihisa Sugishima
Studio J.C.Staff
Licensed by Funimation Entertainment
Network TV Tokyo, TV Aichi, TV Osaka, TV Hokkaido, TV Setouchi, TVQ Kyushu Broadcasting
English network Funimation Channel
Original run April 6September 28, 2008
Episodes 26 (List of episodes)
Anime and Manga Portal

Nabari no Ou (隠の王 Nabari no Ō?, lit. Ruler of Nabari) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Yuhki Kamatani. The series premiered in Japan in Monthly GFantasy in 2004 ended serialization in 2010. Square Enix is also publishing the individual chapters in collected volumes with fourteen volumes released as of February 2011. The series has been licensed for an English language release in North America by Yen Press. The first volume was released in May 2009.[1]

J.C.Staff created a twenty-six episode anime adaptation of the Nabari no Ou manga series. Directed by Kunihisa Sugishima, the series premiered in Japan on TV Tokyo on April 6, 2008. The episodes subsequently air on other TXN networks, including TV Aichi and TV Osaka. The series has been licensed by FUNimation. Part one of the complete series was released in the US on DVD September 22, 2009.

Contents

Plot

Miharu Rokujo is a modern-day Japanese student apathetic to the world around him. One day, Miharu is protected from ninja by Koichi Aizawa and Tobari Kumohira, who are ninja affiliated with the Banten Village. He learns that his body carries the Shinra Banshou, a scroll within him that can grant his inner most desires and is the most powerful secret art in the ninja world of Nabari. Because the Grey Wolves, a faction associated with Iga village that wants to use the Shinra Banshou for their personal gain, will kill Miharu for the secret art, Miharu cannot return to his normal life. Although he wants nothing to do with ninja, Tobari vows to protect him until he becomes Nabari's ruler. Miharu instead asks that the Shinra Banshou be removed, which has never been successfully done. Soon after, Raimei Shimizu, a samurai from the neighboring Fuuma ninja village, arrives to test Miharu's abilities. Eventually, Raimei invites the Banten ninja to see Kotarou Fuuma, the leader of Fuuma village. Because he has written every text on ninjutsu, he may find a way to remove the Shinra Banshou. At Fuuma village, they discover that the Grey Wolves are searching for Fuuma village's forbidden art. The Grey Wolves recognize Miharu as the one who possess the Shinra Banshou, and Yoite, a user of Iga's forbidden art of Kira, attacks. The Grey Wolves escape soon after. With this, the Fuuma and Banten ninja realize that the Grey Wolves are collecting the forbidden arts in the hope of finding a way to remove the Shinra Banshou from Miharu. The Fuuma and Banten follow suit.

After Miharu returns to the Banten village, he is approached by Yoite. Yoite wishes that his existence be erased. If Miharu does not comply, Tobari, Aizawa, and Raimei will die. As Miharu tries to gain enough control over the Shinra Banshou to grant Yoite's wish, Grey Wolves, Fuuma, and Banten collect the forbidden arts from the other ninja villages. After learning that the Grey Wolves will kill Yoite, Yoite, his caretaker Kazuhiko Yukimi, and his physician Kazuho Amatatsu defect from the Grey Wolves and join Banten. Raikō Shimizu and Gau Meguro also leave the faction, and with Raimei, the three reestablish the nearly extinct Shimizu clan. Aizawa and Shijima Kurookano are revealed to have gained immortality long ago through the Shinra Banshou's power, and the two separate from the Banten ninja. During a Grey Wolf attack on Banten, Yoite overuses the Kira, which drains the user's life, and dies. Miharu uses the Shinra Banshou to erase Yoite's existence, and everyone forgets about Yoite. Fuuma is also found to be working with the Grey Wolves. Tobari is able to complete a ninjutsu that will remove the Shinra Banshou. First, he will use Banten's forbidden art to return the memories everyone in Nabari lost. Ten years ago, Tobari and his grandfather attempted to remove the Shinra Banshou from the body of Asahi, Miharu's mother. Before they could, Miharu's father, Tobari's grandfather, and Miharu were killed by a cloaked figure. Asahi went insane from the shock and brought Miharu back to life, losing her own life and transferring the Shinra Banshou to Miharu in the process. In the present, Tobari tries to remove the Shinra Banshou from Miharu, but the cloaked figure reappears. His hood falls back, and the figure is revealed to be Fuuma.

Miharu withdraws into himself, where Asahi battles with the Shinra Banshou. The Shinra Banshou wants Miharu to remain apathetic, while Asahi wants her son to trust people again. Eventually Miharu realizes he doesn't have to hide from people anymore, and grows more confident. Asahi is pleased with her son, and vanishes. The Shinra Banshou decides to return everybody's memories of ten years ago, noting that there are still "lies" in Miharu's heart. Meanwhile, Ichiki has also remembered what happened ten years ago - and, for some reason, this prompts her to kill Hattori. She then opens her eyes for the first time, suggesting that she is not blind after all. She decides to return to where the Shinra Banshou is, clearly planning something. Fuuma meanwhile explains that his goals are to attain wisdom beyond human knowledge, and essentially "become God." Tobari is extremely hurt by his betrayal, and attacks him. Raimei and Raikō also return to protect Miharu, making it clear they will no longer be on Fuuma's side. Shijima and Kouichi, too, call off their long alliance with Fuuma. The chapter ends with Tobari being horribly wounded by Fuuma; it is unclear as of yet whether he will survive.

Media

Manga

The manga series is written and illustrated by Yuhki Kamatani. It started serialization in the Japanese shōnen manga magazine Monthly GFantasy in 2004. Square Enix released the first volume on November 27, 2004 and, as of June 27, 2009, eleven volumes have been released in Japan.[2] The manga has been licensed by Yen Press for distribution in English in North America. The manga will be serialized in Yen Press' Yen Plus anthology magazine, the first issue of which went on sale on July 29, 2008.[3] The first English volume of the manga was sold in May 2009.[1]

Anime

An anime adaptation directed by Kunihisa Sugishima, and animated by J.C.Staff premiered in Japan on TV Tokyo on April 6, 2008. The series aired weekly, with each episode subsequently airing on various other TXN networks, including TV Aichi, TVQ Kyushu Broadcasting, TV Osaka, TV Setouchi, and TV Hokkaido[4] The series ran for a total of twenty-six episodes.[5]

On August 19, 2008 Funimation, on the behalf of d-rights, sent cease and desist orders to the fansub groups who were subtitling the series, to prevent copyright infringement, although the company did not have licensing rights at the time.[6]

On December 24, 2008, Funimation announced that they will be releasing the English dub of the anime in 2009. At Otakon 2009, the first episode was shown in English at a Funimation panel.[7] The first DVD was released September 22, 2009.[8]

The series made its North American television debut when it started airing on the FUNimation Channel March 29, 2010.[9]

Reception

Nabari no Ou was a finalist in the 2005 Japan Media Arts Festival and was a recommended title.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b "NABARI NO OU by Yuhki Kamatani". Yen Press. http://yenpress.us/?page_id=450. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  2. ^ "作家名別出版物一覧「か」" (in Japanese). Square Enix. http://www.square-enix.co.jp/magazine/lineup-book/sakkabetu/ka.html. Retrieved July 2, 2009. 
  3. ^ "Yen Press Announces Titles to Run in Anthology Mag". Anime News Network. April 19, 2008. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2008-04-19/yen-announces-titles-to-run-in-anthology-magazine. Retrieved 2008-04-19. 
  4. ^ "Official Nabari no Ou site - 放送情報 (Broadcasting information)" (in Japanese). nabari.tv. http://www.nabari.tv/onair.html. Retrieved 2008-05-06. 
  5. ^ "Official Nabari no Ou site - 各話紹介 (Episode introductions)" (in Japanese). nabari.tv. http://www.nabari.tv/story.html. Retrieved 2008-05-06. 
  6. ^ "3 Titles' Fansubs Pulled on Behalf of Japan's d-rights". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2008-08-11/3-titles-fansubs-pulled-on-behalf-of-japan-d-rights. Retrieved 2008-08-28. 
  7. ^ "New Show A-Go-Go: A Ten Day Countdown of New Anime for the New Year". Funimation. http://www.funimation.com/newshowagogo. Retrieved 2008-12-24. 
  8. ^ "Nabari no Ou DVD Complete Series Part 1 (Hyb)". rightstuf.com. http://www.rightstuf.com/1-800-338-6827/catalogmgr/3tX-ayoBACt42eglXC/browse/item/84226/4/0/0. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  9. ^ http://www.funimationchannel.com/schedule/1_e014.htm
  10. ^ "2005 Japan Media Arts Festival". http://plaza.bunka.go.jp/english/festival/2005/recommend/magazine.php. Retrieved 2008-06-04. 

External links