Kamen Rider | |
Creator: | Shotaro Ishinomori Ishimori Productions Toei Company |
Origin: | Kamen Rider |
Owner: | Ishimori Productions Toei Company MBS/NET (1971–1975, up to Amazon) MBS/TBS (1975–1989, from Stronger up to Black RX) TV Asahi (2000–present) ADK (2000–present) |
Years: | 1971–present |
Films: | See below |
Tv: | See below |
Games: | Rangers Strike |
Vgs: | |
Music: | Rider Chips Kamen Rider Girls |
Toys: | DX Henshin Belts Complete Selection Modification Super Imaginative Chogokin Souchaku Henshin Series S.H. Figuarts Rider Kick's Figure Series |
Otherlabel1: | Mainly sponsored by |
Otherdata1: | Bandai McDonald's Seiban Ltd. (for Seiban-branded backpacks) Otsuka Pharmaceutical Company (for Oronamin C) Shogakukan Kodansha |
The, also known as Masked Rider Series (until Decade), is a Japanese superhero media franchise consisting of tokusatsu television programs, films, manga, and anime, created by manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori. Kamen Rider media usually revolves around the titular defined group of motorcycle-riding superheroes with an insect motif who fights supervillains, often known as .
The franchise began in 1971 with the Kamen Rider television series, which followed college student Takeshi Hongo and his quest to defeat the world-conquering Shocker organization. The original series spawned television and film sequels and launched the Second Kaiju Boom (also known as the Henshin Boom) on Japanese television during the early 1970s, impacting the superhero and action-adventure genres in Japan.[1]
Bandai owns the toy rights to Kamen Rider in Japan and other Asian regions. Bandai Collectables, a subsidiary of Bandai Namco, distributes Kamen Rider merchandise in North America.[2]
In 1970, Toei producer proposed a "Masked Hero Project", which he approached Shotaro Ishinomori to provide character designs for. This became Kamen Rider, which premiered on April 3, 1971 initially intended as an adaptation of Ishinomori's Skull Man manga. He and Hirayama redesigned the main character to resemble a grasshopper. The hero Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider, played by actor and stuntman Hiroshi Fujioka, was described as a (cyborg). During the filming of episode 10, Fujioka was thrown from his motorcycle during a stunt and broke both legs. Although most staff wanted Takeshi to be killed off, Hirayama opposed it, saying "We can't destroy the children's dreams of being almighty."[3] His character was thus temporarily phased out until the introduction of another transformed human, Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2 (played by Takeshi Sasaki) in episode 14. Takeshi (Fujioka) was reintroduced in episode 40, and by episode 53, had fully replaced Ichimonji's character until the two were united in episodes 72, 73, 93, 94 - and the series finale - episode 98.
The series from April 1971 to January 1976 (Kamen Rider, V3, X, Amazon, Stronger) included a recurring mentor, Tobei Tachibana, and also featured regular team-ups with each protagonist, with the exception of Amazon, with Hirayama stating "I was planning to save it until the next development, so I thought it was not necessary for a while, but the cancellation was decided." After a four-year hiatus following the finale of Kamen Rider Stronger, the series returned to broadcast television in October 1979 for two years with The New Kamen Rider (featuring Skyrider) and Kamen Rider Super-1. This was initiated by Hirayama studying the recent trend in science fiction productions and discussing ideas with fans. In these shows, Tachibana was replaced by a similar character named . The annual new shows ended briefly during the 1980s, punctuated by the 1984 Kamen Rider ZX special Birth of the 10th! Kamen Riders All Together!! (Hirayama's last project for the franchise).
Kamen Rider Black premiered in 1987, the first series since Amazon not hinting at a relationship to its predecessors. Black was the first show in the franchise with a direct sequel: Kamen Rider Black RX, the basis of Saban's Americanized Masked Rider. In RX finale, the ten previous Riders returned to help Black RX defeat the Crisis Empire. Kamen Rider Black RX was the final show produced during the Shōwa era, with the franchise resuming production by the end of the 20th century. A manga of Kamen Rider Black was a novelization and reimagination of the Black-RX series' continuity. Absent from television during the 1990s, the franchise was kept alive by stage shows, musical CDs, and the Shin, ZO, and J films.
Toei announced a new project, Kamen Rider Kuuga, in May 1999. Kuuga was part of Ishinomori's 1997 Kamen Rider revival in preparation for its 30th anniversary, but he died before the shows materialized. During the summer of 1999, Kuuga was promoted in magazine advertisements and TV commercials. On January 30, 2000, Kamen Rider Kuuga premiered with newcomer Joe Odagiri.[4] Following Kuuga 2001 sequel Kamen Rider Agito, the series deviated into a series of unconnected stories starting from Kamen Rider Ryuki in 2002 to Kamen Rider Kabuto in 2006.
In 2005, was produced. Written by Toshiki Inoue, the film reimagines the manga and original television series and characters from the original series had their storylines altered to fit the film's time span. Masaya Kikawada played Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1 and Hassei Takano (previously Miyuki Tezuka/Kamen Rider Raia in Kamen Rider Ryuki) was Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2. This was followed in 2007 by Kamen Rider The Next, an adaptation of Kamen Rider V3 starring Kazuki Kato (previously Daisuke Kazama/Kamen Rider Drake in Kamen Rider Kabuto) as Shiro Kazami/Kamen Rider V3 and with Kikawada and Takano reprising their roles.
The eighth series, Kamen Rider Den-O, followed in 2007. It differed from past Kamen Rider series with the main protagonist being unsure of himself and uses a large vehicle, the DenLiner: a time traveling bullet train. Although the series has only two riders (Den-O and Zeronos), they have multiple forms similar to Black RX, Kuuga, and Agito. Due to Den-O popularity, a second film crossover with the 2008 series Kamen Rider Kiva was released on April 12, 2008. The top film in its opening weekend,[5] it grossed ¥730 million.[6] In addition, Animate produced an OVA, Imagin Anime, with SD versions of the Imagin. A third film, (with two new riders) serves as a series epilogue. According to Takeru Satoh, who played the titular protagonist in the television series and first three films, Den-O was successful because of its humor.[7]
The 2009 series, Kamen Rider Decade, commemorated the Heisei run's 10th anniversary with its protagonist able to assume the forms of his predecessors. Japanese recording artist Gackt performed the series' opening theme, "Journey through the Decade", and the film's theme song ("The Next Decade") and jokingly expressed interest in playing a villain on the show.[8] Also announced in 2009 was a fourth Den-O film[9] (later revealed as the beginning of the Cho-Den-O Series of films),[10] starting with . In the March 2009 issue of Kindai magazine, Decade star Masahiro Inoue said that the series was scheduled for only 30 episodes.
Advertisements in May, June, and July 2009 promoted the debut of Kamen Rider W, who first appeared at the 10th-anniversary Masked Rider Live event[11] and was featured in . The staff of W said that they planned to make 10 more years of Kamen Rider, differentiating subsequent series from the Kuuga through Decade period (including a new broadcast season from September of one year to about August of the next). The hero of Kamen Rider W is the first Kamen Rider to transform from two people at once,[12] and the series premiered on September 6, 2009.[13] Continuing into 2010 with , W ran from September 2009 to September 2010 instead of from January to January. The second, third, and fourth films of the Cho-Den-O series, collectively known as , were also released in 2010.[14] Late 2010 brought the series Kamen Rider OOO to television after Ws finale, and 2011 observed the 40th anniversary of the franchise. Festivities that year included the Kamen Rider Girls idol group, the film (released on April 1) and OOOs successor, Kamen Rider Fourze, which references the previous heroes in its characters' names and its plot. A crossover film, , was released in 2012 featuring the heroes of all Kamen Rider and Super Sentai series to date.[15]
With Fourzes run complete in 2012, Kamen Rider Wizard premiered; its protagonist was the first Kamen Rider to use magic.[16] Wizard additionally had the first homosexual character and cast member with Kaba-chan.[17] , a sequel to 2012's Super Hero Taisen with the revived Metal Hero Series characters from and other characters created by Shotaro Ishinomori appearing in , was released in 2013.
On May 20, 2013, Toei filed for several trademarks on the phrase .[18] Kamen Rider Gaim previewed on July 25, 2013, revealing a Sengoku period and fruit-themed motif to the series' multiple-rival Kamen Riders and Gen Urobuchi as the series' main writer.[19] [20] The third entry in the Super Hero Taisen film series, , marked the 15th anniversary of the Heisei Kamen Rider era and revolved around a conflict between the 15 Heisei Riders and the 15 Showa Riders with Kamen Rider Fifteen, and a cameo appearance by the ToQgers and the Kyoryugers. It also marked the start of a yearly involving each year's Kamen Rider teaming up with the current Super Sentai team in a story tying into that year's entry in the Super Hero Taisen movie series. Gaim was followed in 2014 by Kamen Rider Drive, the first Kamen Rider since Kamen Rider Black RX (who also used a motorcycle), to use a car instead of a motorcycle.[21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] [28] [29] The fourth Super Hero Taisen, Super Hero Taisen GP, marks Kamen Rider 3 first live-action appearance after the Showa Kamen Rider manga. Kamen Rider Ghost was introduced in 2015. In 2016 the Kamen Rider series celebrated its 45th anniversary, and Toei released the film Kamen Rider 1 on March 26, 2016.[30] Kamen Rider Ex-Aid was introduced in 2016 and was the first Rider series to have a character, Kiriya Kujo, portray the main Rider's motorcycle. A Movie War film known as was announced for December 10, 2016, featuring Bandai Namco Entertainment's original character created by Namco prior to merging with Bandai in 2006, Pac-Man. Following up Ex-Aid's finale, Kamen Rider Build premiered on September 3, 2017.[31] The twentieth and last series of the Heisei era, Kamen Rider Zi-O, which commemorates the 20th anniversary of the Heisei era, premiered on September 2, 2018. On December 22, 2018, a film commemorating all the Riders of the Heisei Era titled Kamen Rider Heisei Generations Forever premiered in Japanese theaters.
On May 13, 2019, Toei filed a trademark on the phrase, which premiered on September 1, 2019.[32] It is followed up by on September 6, 2020, and is later followed by on September 5, 2021. In commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the Kamen Rider series, Neon Genesis Evangelion director Hideaki Anno was announced as the writer and director of, a reimagining of the original 1971 series. It is planned for release in 2023.[33]
The franchise's latest complete entry in the Reiwa era is, which debuted in September 2022 following the finale of Revice. The series would end in 2023, with debuting following the finale as the current airing series. Following this, Kamen Rider Gavv will air as 2024's Rider series.
The following is a list of the Kamen Rider series and their broadcast years:
Series | Show | Episodes | Broadcast date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Showa Era | ||||
1 | Kamen Rider | 98 | ||
2 | Kamen Rider V3 | 52 | ||
3 | Kamen Rider X | 35 | ||
4 | Kamen Rider Amazon | 24 | ||
5 | Kamen Rider Stronger | 39 | ||
6 | Kamen Rider Skyrider | 54 | ||
7 | Kamen Rider Super-1 | 48 | ||
8 | Kamen Rider Black | 51 | ||
9 | Kamen Rider Black RX | 47 | ||
Heisei Era Phase 1 | ||||
10 | Kamen Rider Kuuga | 49 | ||
11 | Kamen Rider Agito | 51 | ||
12 | Kamen Rider Ryuki | 50 | ||
13 | Kamen Rider 555 | 50 | ||
14 | Kamen Rider Blade | 49 | ||
15 | Kamen Rider Hibiki | 48 | ||
16 | Kamen Rider Kabuto | 49 | ||
17 | Kamen Rider Den-O | 49 | ||
18 | Kamen Rider Kiva | 48 | ||
19 | Kamen Rider Decade | 31 | ||
Heisei Era Phase 2 | ||||
20 | Kamen Rider W | 49 | ||
21 | Kamen Rider OOO | 48 | ||
22 | Kamen Rider Fourze | 48 | ||
23 | Kamen Rider Wizard | 53 | ||
24 | Kamen Rider Gaim | 47 | ||
25 | Kamen Rider Drive | 48 | ||
26 | Kamen Rider Ghost | 50 | ||
27 | Kamen Rider Ex-Aid | 45 | ||
28 | Kamen Rider Build | 49 | ||
29 | Kamen Rider Zi-O | 49 | ||
Reiwa Era | ||||
30 | Kamen Rider Zero-One | 45 | ||
31 | Kamen Rider Saber | 47 | ||
32 | Kamen Rider Revice | 50 | ||
33 | Kamen Rider Geats[34] | 49 | ||
34 | Kamen Rider Gotchard | 50 | ||
35 | Kamen Rider Gavv | TBD |
Show | Year | |
---|---|---|
All Together! Seven Kamen Riders | 1976 | |
Immortal Kamen Rider Special | 1979 | |
Birth of the 10th! Kamen Riders All Together!! | 1984 | |
This Is Kamen Rider Black | 1987 | |
Kamen Rider 1 through RX: Big Gathering | 1988 | |
Ultraman vs. Kamen Rider | 1993 | |
Kamen Rider Kuuga: First Dream Of The New Year | 2000 | |
Kamen Rider Agito Special: Another New Transformation | 2001 | |
Kamen Rider Ryuki Special: 13 Riders | 2002 | |
Kamen Rider Blade: New Generation | 2004 | |
35th Masked Rider Anniversary File | 2006 | |
Kamen Rider G | 2009 |
Direct-to-video releases, films focusing on secondary riders and storylines, began appearing during the franchise's Heisei era. Hyper Battle Videos are episodes included with Televi-Kun magazine.
In 1975–1976, Tong Hsing Film Co., Ltd. in Taiwan produced a Super Riders series based on the Japanese version.
In 1995, Saban produced the first American Masked Rider series after its success adapting Super Sentai into Power Rangers and the Metal Hero Series (VR Troopers and Beetleborgs). Unfortunately, the show was panned by critics and fans from the series, and it only lasted one 40-episode season, with the first 27 debuting on Fox Kids, while the other 13 debuted in syndication.
In 2009, a new series, produced by Michael and Steve Wang, was broadcast: , which was adapted from Kamen Rider Ryuki. Although it was canceled before finishing its syndicated run, it won the first Daytime Emmy for Outstanding Stunt Coordination at the 37th Daytime Emmy Awards.[35] [36]
In 1975, Chaiyo Productions made an unofficial Kamen Rider movie entitled Hanuman and the Five Riders, which used original footage of Chaiyo's Hanuman character, spliced with footage from the "Five Riders Vs. King Dark" movie. However, Chaiyo went ahead with the production without authorisation after Toei denied them permission to make an official movie with them, putting the legality of the movie into question.
, Bandai Namco has sold Kamen Rider transformation belts since February 2000.[37]
The Kamen Rider franchise has been parodied in and outside Japan. One parody is of the Kamen Rider henshin (metamorphosis) pose.
In video games, Skullomania (from Street Fighter EX) and May Lee (from The King of Fighters) are examples of Kamen Rider parodies. The titular protagonist of the Viewtiful Joe game series is modeled after the heroes of Kamen Rider and other tokusatsu series of the 1960s and 1970s, according to character designer Kumiko Suekane. In the Pokémon franchise, the grasshopper-based Pokémon known as Lokix appears to take inspiration from the heroes of the Kamen Rider series, further evidenced by the original Kamen Rider's grasshopper motif (which is also shared with other primary Riders).
In anime, examples include Fair, then Partly Piggy, My-HiME (and its sequel, My Otome), Dragon Ball Z, Bleach, and Franken Fran. In the Crayon Shin-chan series, the title character interacts with Kamen Riders in crossover specials. Case Closed has a recurring TV series the detective boys like to watch, Kamen Yaiba. In One-Punch Man, the C-Class Hero Mumen Rider is a parody, being an ordinary man in a world of superhuman beings, riding a bicycle rather than a motorcycle. However, despite his weakness, he is extremely heroic and his actions counter his parodic character conception. The series has also been parodied and homaged in the Disney Channel series Amphibia, referencing Kamen Rider 1, Kamen Rider Kuuga, and Riderman from Kamen Rider V3.
In live-action, parodies include "Kamen Renaider" by SMAP's Takuya Kimura and Shingo Katori, a parody of Ryuki; "Kamen Zaiber", a parody of the original series; "Kamen Norider" by the Tunnels, a parody of Kamen Rider 1 and as well as the first series; "Kamen Rider HG", Hard Gay's parody of the original for a Japanese TV show, and "Ridermen" (a short skit with a man called Ridermen, a parody of the Riderman on the set of Kamen Rider Kuuga.
Akimasa Nakamura, a Japanese astronomer named two minor planets in honor of the series: 12408 Fujioka for actor Hiroshi Fujioka, known for his portrayal of Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1,[38] [39] and 12796 Kamenrider for the series itself.[40]