Kyūkyoku Chōjin R

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Kyūkyoku Chōjin R
究極超人あ~る
(Kyuukyoku Choujin a~ru)
Genre Comedy, Slice of life story, Science Fiction
Manga
Written by Masami Yuuki
Published by Shogakukan
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Shōnen Sunday
Original run 19851987
Volumes 9
Original video animation
Directed by Ayumi Tomobuki
Studio Bandai Visual, Media Rings, Studio COA
Released September 26, 1991
Runtime 74 minutes

Kyūkyoku Chōjin R (究極超人あ~る Kyuukyoku Choujin a~ru) is a manga series written and illustrated by Masami Yuuki. It was serialised in Shogakukan's Shōnen Sunday from 1985 to 1987. The series revolved around a teenage robot named R. Ichiro Tanaka. Later, it was revealed that R's creator Dr. Narihara only built R for a failed attempt to take over the world.

Characters

R. Ichiro Tanaka (R・田中 一郎 R. Ichirō Tanaka)
Voiced by: Kaneto Shiozawa

A fifteen year-old android boy who begins going to a Japanese school. He is naive, friendly and airheaded, but loves to eat rice. R has a tendency to turn his head around 180 degrees, take off his hands or feet, and get off a bicycle without stopping it. He is modelled after Dr. Narihara's son Akira, who is barely aware of R's existence.

Dr. Nariyuki Narihara (成原 成行 Narihara Nariyuki)
Voiced by: Takeshi Aono

A self-proclaimed mad scientist who built R. His original plan was to utilize R in a plan for world domination, but scrapped the idea when Narihara realized it would be too much work. He throws R away, and only restarts interest in him when R enrolls himself in school. Narihara has a wife and a son named Akira, whom he based R's looks on. Narihara and his wife originally told the Camera Club that Akira died and was rebuilt in an Astro Boy-esque accident, only to have Akira walk by shortly after.

R #29 (R・29号 (アール・デコ) R 29-gou (R. Deco))

R's younger sister, who Narihara builds near the end of the series. Both R and R. 29 have the same airy facial expression, but R29 is smarter than him and more devoted to her "father". She later becomes the key tool in Narihara's second attempt to take over the world. At her insistence, Narihara names her "R. Hideko Takamine", but she prefers "R. Deco" or "Carmen". Deco was designed by Akemi Takada.

Entry Year 1984

Sango Otojima (大戸島 さんご Ōtojima Sango)
Voiced by: Hiroko Kasahara

A tomboyish, gentle girl who is in the camera club. She first meets R on a club trip to the forest, where she learns of his love of rice. Sango has an abnormal motor nerve. At first she is horrified that he is in her homeroom class, but befriends him soon enough. Sango later appears to have a crush on R.

Shiiko Horikawa (堀川 椎子)
Voiced by: Miina Tominaga

Sango's best friend, who is very athletic, and is the only member of the Camera Club seriously considering a career as a photographer. she called "Shii-chan". Shiiko is quick-witted and is often called "Mother of the Camera Club", who repeatedly saves the club from a variety of crises. She is always present to keep Sango company, but towards the end of the manga, she begins to appear less and less.

Asano & Kishida (あさの と きしだ Asano & Kishida)
Voiced by: Hisayoshi Izaki (Asano), Voiced by: Arihiro Hase (Kishida)

Two members of the camera club who are close friends. Asano wears glasses and has a stuttering problem, and Kishida has small eyes and slicked-back hair. They are mostly in the background of the camera club.

Entry Years 1983 & 1980

Tosaka the Senior (鳥坂センパイ Tosaka-senpai)
Voiced by: Akira Kamiya

The president of the Camera Club. a senior student who has enormous school pride, a sense of justice, an aggressive personality and a tendency to flip people the middle finger. Tosaka is very arrogant and unreasonable. Despite having graduated late into the series, he still helps with the Camera Club, and it is hinted that he sleeps in the club room. While his temper is short with R, he enjoys R's company, since R follows his orders and willingly takes a beating. Tosaka is always seen with sunglasses over his eyes (even when his glasses are off, his eyes are hidden by his hair), and gets around via motorcycle.

Tawaba (たわば [束場] Tawaba)
Voiced by: Aki Tomato

The oldest member of the Camera Club, aged 20 at the start of the series, and it is hinted that Tawaba has been held back a few years. He is a chain-smoker, easily-agitated and cynical. Tosaka appears to be his best friend, but Tawaba is deeply annoyed by R's presence.

Entry Year 1985

Sayoko Amano (天野 小夜子 Amano Sayoko)
Voiced by: Michiru Shimada (Drama CD), Voiced by: Mako Hyodo (OVA)

A girl who begun going to her old classroom (the former Camera Club's room) as a ghost. Her body was still in the hospital, unconscious from a traffic accident. (but her injury is extent in which the elbow was abraded.) Sayoko hated returning to her body, but she recovers instead of moving into a Harukaze high school. She can be rather controlling and mean, and clashes with Tosaka. Sayoko became the camera club's president of R's successor, and won a large amount expense from Division of Enforcement. She had been drawn to R's body in many cases because she liked the magnetic field generated from R.

Shimasaki (島崎)
Voiced by: Yuuji Kaida (Drama CD), Voiced by: Taoki Tatsuta (OVA)

The effeminate, pudgy leader of the Civil Engineering Research Club, who always has eyes like stars. He becomes student body president after Marii graduates, but tends to pay more attention to building and construction than actually running the council. He's kind, sort of timid, and has a strong sense of responsibility. In the OVA, Shimazaki and his construction crew rescue R and company from being lost in the forest and give them a ride to the next train station.

Entry Year 1986

Makoto Hyodo (兵藤 信 Hyōdō Makoto)
Voiced by: Yuki Masami (Drama CD), Voiced by: Katsumi Toriumi (OVA)

A friendly male student with transvestite tendencies. He meets the camera club by answering their call for attractive female models, revealing his gender shortly after, much to the club's later horror. He appears to hold some sort of affection for Gou, and is good friends with Erika.

Erika Saionji (西園寺 えりか Saionji Erika)
Voiced by: Akemi Takada (Drama CD), Voiced by: Mika Kanai (OVA)

A female freshman student, whom R discovered when he accidentally tripped and pulled down her skirt. Despite being in the wrong school, Erika is hyper, sweet, and cheerful. Her older sister Marii also goes to school and is embarrassed by her younger sister's presence. Erika has a very outward crush on R, and has fought with Sayoko over this.

Gou Magaki (曲垣 剛 Magaki Gō)
Voiced by: Ami Tomobuki (Drama CD), Voiced by: Toru Furuya (OVA)

A somewhat-lunkheaded member of the camera club, mostly seen with Makoto and Erika. He enjoys flower arrangement, and whenever he is shocked or surprised, he makes a reaction similar to The Scream painting. He, Erika and Makoto are very close as a group, and look up to R, Shiiko and Sango as their senior students. Makoto is his childhood friend since kindergarten.

Student Council

Marii Saionji (西園寺 まりい Saionji Marī)
Voiced by: Maria Kawamura

The pushy leader of the student council. Marii is nearsighted, but refuses to wear her glasses in public for fear of ruining her image. Known at school as the "Iron Woman", she hates the Camera Club, mostly R and Tosaka, and is often accompianied by her makeshift assistant Iwashimizu. Her family owns a stamp tour agency, something that comes into play during the OVA. She loves volleyball and getting adoration from the student body. Her design was based on Maria Kawamura, who is also her voice actress.

Hitoshi Iwashimizu (鰯水 等 Iwashimizu Hitoshi)
Voiced by: Burajiru (Drama CD) :Voiced by: Hirotaka Suzuoki (OVA)

Marii's companion and adviser. Iwashimizu is handsome and narcissistic. He is known as a "seducer" and for having a very good memory, but can be quite spineless. Iwashimizu formerly hated and avoided the Camera Club, but he compulsively joined because of a careless word, and his activity with them increases through the series. He appears to be in love with Marii.

Kamoike (鴨池 Kamoike)

The intellectual adviser of the student council. His first name is unknown. He wears glasses. His face is plain but he is a very cool-headed realist, and is the student council's brain. Kamoike only appears in the manga.

Manga

The original Kyūkyoku Chōjin R was written and illustrated by Masami Yuuki, published by Shogakukan in nine tankōbon volumes through January 18, 1986 and August 18, 1987. In later years, they were re-released into five volumes.[1][2] The manga was re-released in five kanzenban volumes. The first two volumes were re-released on March 17, 1998,[3] the third and fourth volume released on May 16, 1998[4] and the final volume released on July 17, 1998.[5] The manga was re-released again in 4 kanzenban volumes between August 10, 1991 and November 9, 1991.[6][7]

Volume listing

No.Release date ISBN
1 January 18, 1986[1]ISBN 4-09-121411-8
2 April 18, 1986[8]ISBN 4-09-121412-6
3 July 16, 1986[9]ISBN 4-09-121413-4
4 August 13, 1986[10]ISBN 4-09-121414-2
5 October 18, 1986[11]ISBN 4-09-121415-0
6 December 13, 1986[12]ISBN 4-09-121416-9
7 March 18, 1987[13]ISBN 4-09-121417-7
8 June 18, 1987[14]ISBN 4-09-121418-5
9 August 18, 1987[2]ISBN 4-09-121419-3

Cameos

R was one of the characters used for the PlayStation Portable game, Sunday VS Magazine: Shuuketsu! Choujou Daikessen!, which is used to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Shogakukan's Shōnen Sunday and Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine manga magazines.[15]

In another of Masami Yuuki's anime, Assemble Insert, R and other characters cameo several times. R, Sango, Magaki, Makoto and Erika appear firstly in an ad for "Kougaman", a parody of the super sentai tokusatsu genre. Kougaman was actually a fifteen-page sentai parody in the manga, with elements designed by Yutaka Izubuchi. Kougaman theme song does writing songs and the composition by Masayuki Yamamoto based on Kougaman intro in manga volume 7 and is made. In the second OVA, R is shown renting a tape of Assemble Insert part one, then as a photographer at the music awards. In turn, the character Chief Hattori cameos briefly in the beginning of the Kyukyoku Chojin R OVA, and early in the manga as a detective following R.

OVA

On September 26, 1991, one original video animation movie was released by Bandai Visual. The plot featured R and the Camera Club going on a stamp tour throughout Japan, the tour agency being owned by Marii's family, who added the threat of the Camera Club being closed down unless they could collect all the stamps by 6:00 PM. In August 1991, a variety of concerts were held, featuring Hiroko Kasahara, Sango's voice actress. On July 25, 2001, Bandai Visual released an DVD for Kyūkyoku Chōjin R.[16]

Soundtrack

On March 21, 2007, Columbia Music Entertainment re-released 4 Image albums (CDs) for the series, based on the original LP released from the mid-eighties. There were Drama Special, Anime Original Karaoke, Manatsu no Ichiyazuke and Kyukyoku Chojin R Box, which featured the entire cast of characters either singing, performing radio dramas, or the female voice actors performing songs based on the series. In the CDs made ahead of OVA, the budget doesn't suffice because they appointed famous voice actors and Japanese comic storyteller. so Yuki Masami who is author and a lot of animation staff are doing the voice of characters in CDs.[17]

Reception

In 1988, Kyūkyoku Chōjin R received the Seiun Award for the best comic of the year.[18]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 1』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 9』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  3. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 1』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
    "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 2』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  4. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 3』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
    "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 4』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  5. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 5』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  6. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 1』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  7. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 4』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  8. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 2』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  9. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 3』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  10. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 4』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  11. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 5』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  12. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 6』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  13. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 7』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  14. "小学館:コミック 『究極超人あ~る 8』" (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 
  15. "サンデーVSマガジン 集結!頂上大決戦" (in Japanese). Konami. Retrieved 2009-07-09. 
  16. "KYUKYOKU CHOJIN R". cdjapan.co.jp. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
  17. "Kyukyoku Chojin R Dorama Special". cdjapan.co.jp. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
    "Kyukyoku Chojin R Anime Original Karaoke". cdjapan.co.jp. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
    "Kyukyoku Chojin R Manatsu no Ichiyazuke". cdjapan.co.jp. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
    "Kyukyoku Chojin R Box". cdjapan.co.jp. Retrieved 2009-03-27. 
  18. "日本SFファングループ連合会議:星雲賞リスト" (in Japanese). Federation of the Science Fiction Fan Groups of Japan. Retrieved 2009-02-22. 

External links

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