Justy | |
Ja Kanji: | ジャスティ |
Ja Romaji: | Jasuti |
Genre: | Science fiction |
Type: | manga |
Author: | Tsuguo Okazaki |
Publisher: | Shogakukan |
Demographic: | Shōnen |
Magazine: | Shōnen Sunday Zōkan |
First: | August 1981 |
Last: | November 1984 |
Volumes: | 5 |
Volume List: |
|
Type: | ova |
Cosmo Police Justy | |
Director: | Motosuke Takahashi |
Producer: | Yūji Nunokawa |
Music: | Hiroya Watanabe |
Studio: | Pierrot |
Released: | July 20, 1985 |
Runtime: | 44 minutes |
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tsuguo Okazaki which ran in Shōnen Sunday Zōkan.[1] It was adapted into an original video animation (OVA) released on July 20, 1985.[2] [3] The OVA was released as a double feature with the Area 88 film.[1] [4]
The story follows Justy Kaizard, a police officer who chases down criminal espers; his tactics might be similar to those of a bounty hunter but he is a salary-drawing officer. Justy is also an esper with remarkable powers. He is able to moderate his psychic forces by the use of the headband that he wears. With this device, which acts only as a psychic damper, he can finely attenuate his powers to prevent collateral damage.
Viz translated part of the manga into English and released nine out-of-order issues in North America between December 6, 1988 and April 4, 1989.
Justy Kaizard is the most powerful esper in the known universe, and he works as a member of the Galaxy Patrol System Cosmo Police to bring down esper criminals. During one such takedown, he killed Magnamum Vega while his young daughter Astaris was watching. After the fight, she transformed from a young girl into a young woman and attacked him. While he was wounded in her attack, she forgot everything. Justy took the girl home and began raising her as his younger sister with the help of Jelna Flarestar.
Because he has brought down over 200 esper criminals since joining the Cosmo Police, the rest of the esper criminals are willing to do anything to get rid of Justy. To this end, they hijack a civilian shuttle transport and demand that Astaris, Magnamum's daughter, be brought in exchange for the passengers on board the transport. Justy is assigned to take her there, but as she is making the EVA journey between ships, a group of the criminal espers joins together using telepathy to make her remember what happened to her father and who was responsible for it.
Astaris begins attacking the policeman, destroying Justy's ship and using more and more power to try to break through his defenses. Worried for the safety of the nearby transport, Justy uses his powers to teleport it away from the fight. In doing so, he lets down his guard and Astaris is able to hit him with the full force of her powers, causing him to disappear. The criminal espers believe they have destroyed him, so they take the transport with all the hostages and warp away, leaving Astaris floating in space. Astaris comes out of her rage and begins wondering what happened and where Justy went. She then falls asleep, exhausted. After the shuttle leaves, Justy appears and rescues the sleeping Astaris, promising to bring the criminal espers to justice for using her in their ploy.
After surrounding Astaris in a protective bubble, Justy warps after the escaping transport. On teleporting into the transport, Justy eliminates three of the hijackers before the others teleport in an attempt to escape, and easily follows them. He handily defeats all but four after demanding that they return Astaris to the way she was. The remaining four combine their powers to try to defeat Justy, but he eliminates them one by one until he's down to the ringleader. He tells him that Astaris is his beloved younger sister now, and proceeds to eliminate him.
Justy returns and rescues Astaris, and the voiceover as they return shows that Astaris remembers nothing of her attack on Justy and has returned to loving him as her heroic older brother. The show ends with Justy and his partner going out on another mission.
The characters of Justy, Jelna, and Bolba previously appeared in Okazaki's debut manga 2nd Year A Class Hoshiko-sensei.
CP Σ04-1 (Cosmo Police Sigma 04-1), the first chapter in the story, was published in the August 1981 issue of Shōnen Sunday Zōkan as a standalone story. Okazaki then continued the story with manga published monthly from November 1981 through September 1984. There were editorial disputes over the storyline with some of the Shogakukan editors, however, so when the story went out of print through Shogakukan, the manga was published through the gravure idol magazine Scola.
The series was collected into five tankōbon volumes under the title in Japan, and the equivalent of about two of them were released in English by Viz in nine badly-translated, out-of-order[5] comic book releases.[6] as one of their early translations. The last issue, The Blue Witch, was released on April 4, 1989. The manga didn't fare well due to being too similar to English-language space comics. Viz also changed the names of some of the characters.[7]
In the July 15, 2009 issue of Shōnen Sunday, a column titled "Shōnen Sunday 1983" had an interview with Okazaki as well as an updated version illustration of Justy.
Shōnen Sunday Comics imprint from Shogakukan
Burger SC imprint from Scola
Studio Pierrot released a single 44-minute OVA, titled, on July 20, 1985, directed by Motosuke Takahashi, the director of the Fire Tripper OVA.[1] [8] In addition to the voices listed in the character section, other voice actors providing additional voices in the OVA include Michihiro Ikemizu (Magnumam Vega), Daisuke Gōri, Hōchū Ōtsuka, Kōzō Shioya, Tomohiro Nishimura, Fumihiko Tachiki, Masashi Sugawara, and Matsumi Ōshiro.[2] [3]
The OVA is partly based on two stories from the comics: The Tears of Astaris, listed in the first page of the English comic book publications as volumes one and two, and also Hostages which is listed as volumes four and five. It was released as a double feature with the Area 88 film.[1] [4]
In the July 1985 issue of Shōnen Sunday Zōkan included a 50-page insert about the OVA. The anime has not been released in English due to the high licensing costs.
There were several singles and albums released containing music from the OVA:
Justin Sevakis, in a review of the OVA for Anime News Network, had mixed feelings about it. He stated the OVA had a "heavy over-the-top cheese factor", but said "the film is one that simply can't be dismissed entirely." He especially liked the ending theme song, performed by Miki Asakura, calling it a "[guilty] pleasure", and pointed out that Astalis was the "closest any character ever got to being moë in 1985".[10]
Fred Patten called the Justy manga one of the "best" of a new (in 1984) group of manga influenced by Locke the Superman which featured "lone-wolf teenage space heroes who possess unusual talents."[11]
The backgrounds of the manga were compared by Jason Thompson to those used by Ryōichi Ikegami in his manga. Thompson also wrote that Okazaki's "characters' childlike, cute faces [foretold] the anime style of the 1980s." Thompson also mentioned the out-of-order release of the few English-language chapters.[5] Helen McCarthy gave it two-and-a-half stars (out of five) in her The Anime! Movie Guide review book.[7]