Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning | |
The first volume of Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning as released by Square Enix |
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スパイラル―推理の絆 (Spiral: Suiri no Kizuna) |
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Genre | Detective fiction, Comedy, Romance, Thriller, Mystery |
Manga | |
Written by | Kyou Shirodaira |
Illustrated by | Eita Mizuno |
Published by | Square Enix |
English publisher | Tokyopop (former) Yen Press (current) |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Monthly Shōnen Gangan |
Original run | February 2000 – October 2005 |
Volumes | 15 |
TV anime | |
Directed by | Shingo Kaneko |
Studio | J.C.Staff |
Licensed by | Funimation Entertainment MVM Films Madman Entertainment |
Network | TV Tokyo |
English network | FUNimation Channel, CoLours TV |
Original run | October 1, 2002 – March 25, 2003 |
Episodes | 25 |
Manga | |
Spiral: Alive | |
Written by | Kyou Shirodaira |
Illustrated by | Eita Mizuno |
Published by | Square Enix |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Gangan Wing, Shōnen Gangan |
Original run | April 2004 – June 2008 |
Volumes | 5 |
Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning (スパイラル〜推理の絆 Spiral: Suiri no Kizuna ) is a fifteen-volume shōnen mystery manga series written by Kyou Shirodaira and illustrated by Eita Mizuno. It was published by Enix and then Square Enix in Monthly Shōnen Gangan from February 2000 to October 2005 and collected in 15 bound volumes. The series focuses on Ayumu Narumi and his efforts to solve the mystery of the Blade Children, cursed geniuses with cat-like eyes lacking a seventh rib bone. A prequel series by Shirodaira and Mizuno, called Spiral: Alive, was published in Gangan Wing and Monthly Shōnen Gangan from April 2004 to June 2008 and collected in five bound volumes.
Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning was originally licensed for an English language release in North America by Tokyopop, however the company dropped the series. Yen Press acquired the license for Northern American release, and published the first volume in October 2007.
The series was adapted as a twenty-five episode television anime series broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1, 2002 until March 25, 2003. The anime is licensed in Region 1 by FUNimation, who released it on DVD and broadcast it on the FUNimation Channel programming block on CoLours TV in 2006. The series was also adapted as four light novels and a series of CD dramas.
Contents |
Two years ago, Ayumu Narumi's older brother Kiyotaka, a famous detective and pianist, disappears without a trace. Ayumu's only clue as to his brother's whereabouts is the phrase "Blade Children," the only words Ayumu could make out in Kiyotaka's final phone call. Now in high school, Ayumu becomes involved in solving in a series of murders and other incidents, all related to the Blade Children. Together with his school's journalist, Hiyono Yuizaki, and the unwilling assistance of his sister-in-law, Madoka, Ayumu tries to figure out who the Blade Children are and what are their goals.
The Blade Children are the central mystery of the series, known only as cursed children that few know about and are being pursued by so-called Hunters. They are distinguished by their cat-like eyes and by missing the seventh right rib bone. As Ayumu investigates them, he meets Blade Children Kousuke Asazuki, Rio Takeuchi, Eyes Rutherford, Ryoko Takamachi, and Kanone Hilbert, and is tested in various ways by them. Those who meet him eventually conclude, some more reluctantly than others, that Ayumu does have what it takes to "save" the Blade Children, as they say Kiyotaka claims.
The anime series, which adapts the story through the sixth volume of the manga, compares the Blade Children to cuckoo birds, having been deposited in human "nests" to be raised, and suggesting that cuckoos go violently crazy toward the end of their lives. The manga continues the story, depicting Ayumu's discoveries about the origin of the Blade Children, their relationship with Kiyotaka, and why his older brother thinks Ayumu might be their savior.
Some thirty years ago, a man called Yaiba Mizushiro was born with one rib missing from his right ribcage. Like Kiyotaka, he excelled at everything he chose to put his mind to. When he turned twenty-three, Yaiba started his own secret society, which swiftly grew powerful enough to manipulate world events. Citing boredom, Yaiba initiated the "Blade Children Project": using in vitro techniques and his DNA, he created eighty children, and had a rib removed from each of them at birth as a mark of their relationship to Yaiba. These Blade Children were cursed in the same way Yaiba was: they would grow up as geniuses in their own right, but one day their blood would awaken murderously and take over their self-will, becoming Avatars of Yaiba. Yaiba's organization split into three parties over the Blade Children Project:
When Yaiba was thirty-six, a Japanese man came out of nowhere and easily killed him: Kiyotaka Narumi, Yaiba's counterpart—if Yaiba had been a destroyer, Kiyotaka was a creator. Yaiba had intended to remake the world literally in his own image; with his death, the Blade Children project was halted. Kiyotaka had his hands full trying to stop the Hunters from killing the Blade Children, while trying to check the Savers at the same time.
Just as Kiyotaka and Yaiba were linked, Ayumu eventually meets his own counterpart: Hizumi Mizushiro, Yaiba's younger brother, and the one who will awaken the blood of the remaining Blade Children. As Ayumu comes to know and becomes friends with Hizumi, he comes to accept his own powers are as strong as Kiyotaka's and his role as the savior of the Blade Children, leading to a final confrontation that resolves things once and for all.
Spiral: Alive is centered on a girl, Imari Sekiguchi, who falls in love with Shirou Sawamura, a boy who wants to become a detective. However, before Imari can confess to him, he unexpectedly quits school to pursue Kiyotaka Narumi. Imari learns that he also is dating Yukine Amanae, a beautiful girl at their school, and both Shirou and Imari are unaware that Yukine is actually a reluctant murderer. Meanwhile, Toru Saiki, a member of the Police Department's First Investigations Department, investigates the mysterious murders connected with Amanae and is unwilling to bring in Kiyotaka, believing that Tokyo's greatest detective is more demonic than divine. Imari, Shirou, and Saiki become involved in events that are mysteriously connected to the Blade Children. Several characters from the original series return, including Kiyotaka, Kousuke, Ryoko, Kanone, and Madoka.
The series reveals that of the eighty original Blade Children watched by the Hunters, Savers, and Watchers, thirteen have been completely erased from their lists of Blade Children. The one responsible for this had been a neutral party who committed suicide after accomplishing this. The only information about the thirteen missing Blade Children is contained in the Mikanagi File, named after Professor Isabel Mikanagi, who was responsible for their disappearance. With Professor Mikanagi's death, the file was entrusted to her associates, Yukine's parents. After their deaths as the result of a Hunter's actions, Yukine survived and currently holds in her memory the only record of the Mikanagi File.
Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning was serialized by Enix in Monthly Shōnen Gangan magazine from February 2000 to October 2005, and collected in 15 tankōbon.[1] The manga was licensed in North America in 2005 by Tokyopop,[2] with the first volume initially scheduled for release October 2005.[3] The series was never published and Tokyopop dropped the license. The license was later acquired by Yen Press in 2007. Yen Press released the first volume in October 2007, and as of August 2008 plans to release the remaining volumes quarterly, with the final volume in April 2011.[4]
No. | Japanese | North American[4] | |||
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Release date | ISBN | Release date | ISBN | ||
1 | February 22, 2000[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0175-1 | October 17, 2007 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2341-8 | |
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2 | July 22, 2000[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0271-0 | January 9, 2008 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2407-1 | |
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3 | December 20, 2000[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0370-0 | April 22, 2008 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2637-2 | |
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4 | June 22, 2001[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0468-4 | July 15, 2008 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2834-5 | |
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5 | October 22, 2001[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0557-5 | October 28, 2008 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2835-2 | |
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6 | April 22, 2002[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0678-7 | January 6, 2009 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2913-7 | |
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7 | September 21, 2002[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0790-6 | April 30, 2009 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2914-4 | |
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8 | January 22, 2003[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0854-5 | July 2009 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2915-1 | |
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9 | July 22, 2003[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0982-5 | October 2009 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2916-8 | |
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10 | December 22, 2003[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1099-9 | January 2010 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2917-5 | |
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11 | April 22, 2004[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1186-6 | April 2010 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2918-2 | |
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12 | August 21, 2004[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1252-8 | July 2010 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2919-9 | |
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13 | April 22, 2005[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1366-2 | October 2010 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2920-5 | |
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14 | September 22, 2005[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1521-5 | January 2011 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2921-2 | |
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15 | January 21, 2006[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1605-2 | April 2011 | ISBN 978-0-7595-2922-9 | |
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Spiral: Alive, a prequel and spin off of the original series, also written by Shirodaira and illustrated by Mizuno, began publishing in the April 2004 issue of Gangan Wing. In 2006, the series moved to Monthly Shōnen Gangan, where it ended in June 2008.[5] It has been collected in five bound volumes.
No. | Release date | ISBN |
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1 | April 22, 2004[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-0674-9 |
2 | February 22, 2007[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-1948-0 |
3 | September 22, 2007[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-2114-8 |
4 | February 22, 2008[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-2221-3 |
5 | August 22, 2008[1] | ISBN 978-4-7575-2355-5 |
Spiral: The Bonds of Reasoning was adapted as a 25-episode television anime series by TV Tokyo with production by J.C.Staff. It adapts the first six volumes of the manga, with a different ending. It was directed by Shingo Kaneko with music by Akira Mitake and character designs by Yumi Nakayama. The series was broadcast from October 1, 2002 to March 25, 2003, and released on nine DVDs between December 18, 2002 and August 27, 2003.[6]
The opening theme was "Kibouhou" ("Cape of Hope") by Strawberry Jam, and the ending theme was "Kokuteru" ("Cocktail") by Hysteric Blue. There was also an insert song, "Twinkle My Heart" by Mitake Akira, which is sung by the character Hiyono Yuizaki. Piano music used during the series includes Jeux d’eau by Maurice Ravel (episode 3), Liebestraume No. 3 by Franz Liszt (played in concert by Eyes Rutherford in episode 13), Benediction de Dieu dans la solitude by Liszt (episode 21; in the manga, this is a significant piece of music for Eyes and Kanone Hilbert), and Arabesque No. 1 by Claude Debussy (episode 25). A soundtrack album was released March 19, 2003.[6]
The series is licensed in Region 1 by FUNimation, which has released it on six DVDs and as a box set.[7] FUNimation also aired the series, in dubbed format, in the FUNimation Channel programming block on CoLours TV from June 19, 2006 until August 22, 2006.
# | Title[7][8] | Original airdate[9] | U.S. airdate |
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1 | "Spiral of Destiny" "Unmei no Rasen" (運命の螺旋) |
October 1, 2002 | June 19, 2006 |
2 | "Manor of Death" "Shi no Seijukan" (死の聖樹館) |
October 8, 2002 | June 20, 2006 |
3 | "Cursed Children" "Norowareta Kodomotachi" (呪われた子供たち) |
October 15, 2002 | June 21, 2006 |
4 | "The Happiness of Those Who Believe" "Shinjirumono no Kōfuku" (信じる者の幸福) |
October 22, 2002 | June 22, 2006 |
5 | "Misty Gallows" "Kiri no Shikei dai" (霧の死刑台) |
October 29, 2002 | June 23, 2006 |
6 | "Blind Spot in the Web" "Houi Ami no Hokaku" (包囲網の死角) |
November 5, 2002 | June 26, 2006 |
7 | "The Choice of the Nonbeliever" "Shinjinumono no Sentaku" (信じぬ者の選択) |
November 12, 2002 | June 27, 2006 |
8 | "Day of the Defeated" "Haisho Bakari no hi" (敗者ばかりの日) |
November 19, 2002 | June 28, 2006 |
9 | "All Things That Are Possible to You" "Kimi ni Dekiru Arayurukoto" (きみにできるあらゆること) |
November 26, 2002 | June 29, 2006 |
10 | "Only One Wise Action" "Tatta Hitotsu no Saeta Yari Kata" (たった一つの冴えたやり方) |
December 3, 2002 | June 30, 2006 |
11 | "Goodnight Sweetheart" "Guddonaito Suītohātsu" (グッドナイトスイートハーツ) |
December 10, 2002 | July 3, 2006 |
12 | "Dry Eyes" "Kawaita Hitomi" (乾いた瞳) |
December 17, 2002 | July 4, 2006 |
13 | "Overture" "Overture -Jokyoku-" (Overture 〜序曲〜) |
December 24, 2002 | July 5, 2006 |
14 | "Shimmering Fragrance" "Amaki Kaori Kagerou ni Nite" (甘き香り陽炎に似て !) |
January 7, 2003 | July 25, 2006 |
15 | "Like a Swan" "Raiku a Suwan" (ライク·ア·スワン) |
January 14, 2003 | July 26, 2006 |
16 | "Moving Targets" "Marekanezaru Hōmonsho" (まねかれざる訪問者) |
January 21, 2003 | July 27, 2006 |
17 | "The Watcher in the Darkness" "Kurayami no Sukyanaa" (暗闇のスキャナー) |
January 28, 2003 | July 28, 2006 |
18 | "The Lamenting Angel" "Nageki no Tenshi" (嘆きの天使) |
February 4, 2003 | July 31, 2006 |
19 | "Mirror of the Heart" "Kokoro no Kagami" (心の鏡) |
February 11, 2003 | August 1, 2006 |
20 | "Whispering Shadows" "Sasayaku Kage" (ささやく影) |
February 18, 2003 | August 2, 2006 |
21 | "The Sound of a Breaking Heart" "Kokoro no Kudakeru Oto" (心の砕ける音) |
February 25, 2003 | August 3, 2006 |
22 | "The Confession" "Kamen no Kokuhaku" (仮面の告白) |
March 4, 2003 | August 4, 2006 |
23 | "Relentless Rain" "Yamanai Ame" (止まない雨) |
March 11, 2003 | August 18, 2006 |
24 | "The Man in the High Castle" "Takai Shiru no Otoko" (高い城の男) |
March 18, 2003 | August 21, 2006 |
25 | "The Sound of an Iris Freezing and Melting" "Ayame no Ite Toku Oto" (アヤメの凍て解く音) |
March 25, 2003 | August 22, 2006 |
The anime adaptation has been praised for its creation of suspense and good mystery stories.[10]