Witchblade
Witchblade | |
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Front cover to Witchblade Vol. 1 (Witch Hunt) TPB (Feb. 2008). | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Top Cow Productions |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Ongoing series |
Genre |
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Publication date | 1995–2015 |
Number of issues | 185 |
Main character(s) | Sara Pezzini |
Creative team | |
Writer(s) |
David Wohl Marc Silvestri Brian Haberlin Ron Marz |
Artist(s) |
Michael Turner Keu Cha Marc Silvestri Stjepan Sejic |
Creator(s) |
Marc Silvestri David Wohl Brian Haberlin Michael Turner |
Witchblade is a comic book series published by Top Cow Productions, an imprint of Image Comics, from 1995 to 2015.[1] The series was created by Top Cow editors Marc Silvestri and David Wohl, writers Brian Haberlin and Christina Z, and artist Michael Turner.
The Witchblade title was adapted into a television series in 2001–2002 as well as an anime series, a manga series and a novel in 2006. A feature film based on the comic, titled The Witchblade, was scheduled for a 2009 release[2] but was later cancelled.
Plot summary
The series follows Sara Pezzini, a NYPD homicide detective who comes into possession of the Witchblade, a supernatural, sentient artifact in the form of a gauntlet which bonds with a female host and provides them with a variety of powers in order to fight supernatural evil. Sara struggles to hone the powers of the Witchblade and fend off those with a nefarious interest in it, such as entrepreneur Kenneth Irons and his bodyguard Ian Nottingham.
Characters
Sara Pezzini
- A New York City detective, Sara first encountered the Witchblade while on a case with her then partner, Michael Yee. After both officers were mortally wounded by criminal Ian Nottingham, the gauntlet suddenly left the possession of Nottingham's employer, Kenneth Irons, and gave its power to Sara, healing her wounds. When Jackie Estacado, the host of the Darkness, was possessed by its influence, he impregnated a temporarily comatose Sara as part of an effort to sway the Witchblade's balance. However, neither of them became aware of this until later. Eventually, Sara met and relinquished the Witchblade to Danielle Baptiste, whom the artifact had a strong affinity toward. Amidst complications during the birth of her daughter, Hope, Sara's life was saved when she received half of the Witchblade from Dani. Sara now possesses the full Witchblade and Dani is now the host for the Angelus.
Danielle Baptiste
- Danielle is a young ballet dancer who was born in New Orleans. After moving to New York to pursue her career, she experienced a mysterious dream in which she saw herself inheriting great power by means of a mystical gauntlet. Dani found herself taking a walk and wandering to an antique shop the next day. It was there that she encountered Sara Pezzini, the current host of the Witchblade. Having become pregnant, Sara realized that the time had come for her to relinquish the artifact. Sara relinquished the Witchblade to Dani when she realized that she was meant to become its next host. While exploring her powers, Dani faced and overcame a number of mystical opponents. Eventually, Dani returned half of the Witchblade to Sara in order to save Sara's life following the birth of her child. She currently does not have any portion of the Witchblade as she is the present host to the Angelus.
Patrick Gleason
- An NYPD detective; Sara's former partner and boyfriend. Following Hope's birth he serves as the babies surrogate father and Sara's confidant in issues involving the Witchblade.
The Curator/The Survivor
- The owner of an antiques shop, the Curator is a sage-like spectator and occasional informant. One of Sara and Dani's most trusted confidants, he knows much about the various Artifacts. The Curator later dies, spontaneously exploding after saying "all hope is lost". It was later revealed that the Curator was actually the Survivor – the mysterious mastermind behind all of the recent events in Sara's life. He is the sole survivor of the previous universe in which he was the "Codex" – a being meant to ensure its survival in the event of Armageddon. Having failed in his duty and witnessed the destruction of his family, the Survivor has been gradually gathering and manipulating the Artifacts and their bearers throughout history as part of his plan to resurrect his universe.
Tau'ma
- The Curator's brother, Tau'ma has sided with the Darkness and can pull Darklings from out of his head to attack or spy on others. He also wields a powerful cane with a gem-encrusted hawk head.
Hope Pezzini
- Sara's daughter with Jackie Estacado. She is neither of the Darkness nor the Angelus, but has unknown powers that are dormant. Hope is the subject of a search by several Artifact bearers following her capture by the Survivor. Hope is the "Codex" for the entire universe, meant to survive and ensure its survival. The Survivor plans to kill Hope and replace her as the Codex in order to guarantee the resurrection of his own universe.
Julie Pezzini
- Sara's sister. She was romantically involved with Jake but the two broke up when Jake discovered that she was running drugs. Jake later returned and shot Julie, but she survived, leading to her arrest and imprisonment. Julie was later released after serving her sentence and was reunited with Sara. While taking Hope to a fair, Julie was surprised by Aphrodite who killed Julie after shooting her in the head.
Ian Nottingham
- Formerly a Captain of the British Special Air Service, Ian subsequently joined MI5. He underwent behavioural modifications for the purpose of infiltrating the Yakuza. Afterwards, he forgot his past and became Kenneth Irons' bodyguard. Ian has phenomenal skill with both ancient and modern weapons. Ian kills Sara's partner Michael Yee. For a time he underwent a great change, allowing him the capability to absorb great quantities of energy and to drain energy from entities, even going so far as to temporarily host both the Witchblade and the Darkness. He also temporarily wielded Excalibur, the Witchblade's twin, but it was revealed that Excalibur was merely a shard of the Witchblade, which quickly reabsorbed it. After he lost Excalibur and was defeated by Sara, Ian was taken to prison, only to be later freed by Aphrodite IV. He then retrieved the Blood Sword from Michael Finnegan, gravely wounding the wielder of the Glacier Stone in the process, and left him in the river to die.
Kenneth Irons
- A rich entrepreneur who discovered the Witchblade in Greece, Irons' age is undefined. It was eventually revealed that he was a Templar Knight of the third crusade and that he once drank from the Holy Grail, granting him a healing factor and immortality, establishing his age as greater than 800 years. However, due to his exposure to the Witchblade during an attempt to host it, Irons does not age at a normal rate; he appears to be no older than 35. In a failed bid to gain control of the Witchblade, Kenneth Irons lost his hand and sacrificed his wife. Kenneth Irons was later one of two characters left in the Deathpool. As a result, Chief Joe Siry killed Irons for all of the trouble that Irons had unleashed on Sara. Kenneth is the father of Geraud Irons.
Joe Siry
- Sara's former captain when she served at the 18th Precinct. He was the partner of Sara's dead father, Detective Vincent Pezzini.
Jake McCarthy
- An NYPD detective, Jake was Sara's best friend and former partner. He fell in love with Sara, but his feelings were unrequited. A demon came to Earth and entered Jake's body, possessing him while he was wounded defending a weakened Sara. While in a coma he was placed in a hospital. When he later awoke up, the god-like demon took full control of his body. The demon was bent on destroying the world to remake it into a hellish kingdom with him as ruler. Sara eventually drove the demon's influence out of his mind, but Jake, still possessed by the demon, committed suicide to ensure that the demon could never control his body again.
Lisa Buzanis
- Daughter of Maria, a deceased friend of Sara's.
Adaptations
Television series
Following a pilot film in August 2000, the cable network TNT premiered a television series based on the comic book series in 2001. The series was directed by Ralph Hemecker and written by Marc Silvestri and J.D. Zeik. Yancy Butler starred as Sara Pezzini. Although critically acclaimed and popular with audiences, the series was canceled in September 2002.[3]
Witchblade ran for two seasons on TNT, featuring 12 episodes each. The first episode aired on June 12, 2001, and the last episode aired on August 26, 2002. On April 1, 2008, Warner Home Video announced a DVD release called Witchblade: The Complete Series — a seven-disc collectors set including the original made-for-TV movie, all 23 episodes of the series, and special features — which was released on July 29, 2008.[4]
Anime series
In August 2004, Top Cow announced they had made an agreement with Japanese animation studio GONZO to produce an anime adaptation of Witchblade,[5] which began broadcast during April 2006 and ran for 24 episodes.[6] Although the anime features a new story with all new characters, it exists in the same canon as the comic book and manga.[7] The anime focuses on Masane Amaha, who has no recollection of her past beyond six years earlier.
Manga
In August 2004, Top Cow made an agreement with manga publisher Kodansha to produce a manga adaptation of Witchblade.[5] The subsequent adaptation, Witchblade Takeru (ウィッチブレイド丈流 Wicchibureido Takeru),[8][9] was released in March 2006, written by the anime's writer main writer Yasuko Kobayashi (小林靖子) and drawn by Kazuasa Sumita (隅田 かずあさ Sumita Kazuasa),[7] featuring a different plot and characters than the Witchblade anime and comic book but set in the same continuity as both.[10] The manga focuses on Takeru Ibaraki, an average Japanese high school girl raised in a Buddhist convent who experiences recurring nightmares about the Witchblade and eventually becomes its newest bearer.[8] The manga was later released in the US by Top Cow and Bandai Entertainment from February 2007 to February 2008.[7]
Japanese novel
Witchblade: Ao no Shōjo (ウィッチブレイド 碧の少女 Witchibureido Ao no Shōjo) is a Japanese novel written by Satoshi Ichikawa (市川智士) with art and illustrations done by Makoto Uno (うのまこと), who previously worked on the Witchblade anime as the lead art & character designer, and was published in August 2006.[10] The protagonist is Yuri Miyazono, a sickly 15-year-old Okinawan girl who bonds with the Witchblade for her own survival.[10] The novel is set the same continuity as the Witchblade anime and manga, with Yuri as the immediate successor of Takeru Ibaraki from Witchblade Takeru and the immediate predecessor of Masane Amaha from the Witchblade anime.[10]
Film adaptation
A feature film adaptation of the comic was announced in 2008 and scheduled for a 2009 release,[2] but was later cancelled. The film was to be produced by Platinum Studios, Top Cow Productions and Arclight Media, with Top Cow's Matt Hawkins & Marc Silvestri, Platinum's Rich Marincic and Greenberg Group’s Randy Greenberg serving as executive producers. Production was planned for September 2008, with filming to be done in Australia.[11]
References
- ↑ Ching, Albert. "EXCLUSIVE: "Witchblade" to End in October, Sejics Now Top Cow-Exclusive". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- 1 2 SuperHeroHype (2008-05-26). "Witchblade Teaser Poster and Site Revealed". Superhero Hype. Retrieved 2013-09-21.
- ↑ "Entertainment News, Celebrity Gossip, Celebrity News | E! Online UK". Eonline.com. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
- ↑ "Witchblade DVD news: Announcement for Witchblade - The Complete Series". TVShowsOnDVD.com. Retrieved 2013-08-19.
- 1 2 "Gonzo to Produce Witchblade Anime - News". Anime News Network. 2004-08-16. Retrieved 2014-05-31.
- ↑ "GONZO 作品一覧 -ウィッチブレイド". Gonzo.co.jp. Retrieved 2013-10-07.
- 1 2 3 "Top Cow Announces Witchblade Manga in 2007". Anime News Network. 2006-12-12. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- 1 2 "Modern Visual Culture Digest » Manga Review: Witchblade ~Takeru~ Chapter 1". Heisei Democracy. 2006-04-09. Retrieved 2014-05-31.
- ↑ Kazuasa, Sumita (2006). Wichblade Takeru. Tōkyō: Akita Shoten. ISBN 978-4-25323-155-8.
- 1 2 3 4 Productions, Top Cow (2006). Witchblade: Lost Generation Midori no shōjo. Tōkyō: Tokuma Shoten. ISBN 978-4-19905-162-3.
- ↑ Michael Fleming (2008-05-11). "‘Witchblade’ sharpened for bigscreen". Variety. Retrieved 2016-02-10.
External links
- Witchblade at the Comic Book DB
- Witchblade at Don Markstein's Toonopedia
- Top Cow
- Air dates and episode guide
- GONZO Witchblade anime site (Japanese)
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