Kamen Rider J Explained

Director:Keita Amemiya
Producer:Ishimori Productions
Toei
Bandai
Starring:Yūta Mochizuki
Yuka Nomura
Kyoji Kamui
Music:Eiji Kawamura
Studio:Bandai
Ishimori Productions
Distributor:Toei Company
Runtime:47 minutes
Language:Japanese

is a 1994 Japanese tokusatsu superhero movie produced by Toei Company[1] [2] and loosely based on their Kamen Rider Series. It was the final story in which Shotaro Ishinomori was involved, who died 4 years later. It was also the final installment of the Showa era (or Ishinomori era) in which Ishinomori was involved in the series. The film was released on April 16, 1994.

Plot

After conducting a praying ceremony, the three oldest children of the alien Fog Mother hunt for an ideal human to feed to their newly hatched siblings. They find Kana, the young friend of environmentalist reporter Kouji Segawa, when he is investigating pollution at the lake. Protecting Kana from the villains as they escape, Kouji is thrown over a cliff by the reptilian Agito and dies; Kana is taken by the insectoid, Zu. The Earth Spirits resurrect Kouji as Kamen Rider J to fight the Fog Mother with the Earth Spirits' emissary, Berry, as his guide. With Fog Mother sensing Kouji's presence, Agito tries to finish the job and is killed by J. Kouji enters the Fog Mother's domain, facing Zu in her proper form. J kills Zu as they crash into the fortress which is Fog Mother. After Zu dies, Kouji learns about Fog's intention to let her new brood devour humanity as Garai completes the ritual, sends Kana to the hatching chamber, and manhandles Kouji. Berry intervenes to free Kana from Fog's spell before he is struck down by Garai; Kana is sent down to her death, and Fog Mother begins attacking a nearby city to prepare for her children's awakening. J fights Garai in a heated battle in his true form (Cobra Man). After he kills Garai, J is digested by Fog Mother as he tries to save Kana. Absorbing the life energy around him, J kills Fog Mother's newborn offspring, escapes from her bowels, and assumes the Jumbo Formation. After ripping Kana out of Fog Mother, J kills the monster. Escaping Fog Mother's destruction, Kouji brings Kana to a peaceful place as Berry watches from a distance.

Characters

Fog

are a group of monsters whose presence is signaled by mist. Every millennium, the Fog Mother gives birth to a new brood to feed on the occupants of the world on which she landed. One such brood was responsible for the mass extinction of the dinosaurs, which were their sole food supply. Seventy-five million years later, the Fog Mother returns to Earth with a new brood. Her three children say a ritual prayer before going out to obtain a sacrifice for their siblings to feed on so they can consume the human race.

Other appearances

J joined Kamen Rider ZO in the eight-minute 3D film, Kamen Rider World, and appeared in the 2009 film . In the film's climax, he is summoned (in giant form) by Kamen Rider Diend to battle King Dark. With Diend's help, he merges with Kamen Rider Decade to form Kamen Rider Decade Final Form: Jumbo Formation.

J also appeared in the 2010 film , in which Kamen Rider Decade defeated him and turned him into a card. After Decade's defeat, all the Riders turned into cards are restored to their respective worlds. Kamen Rider J also appears among the Riders in the Kamen Rider Series 40th-anniversary film (2011), (2012), (2014), and (2015).

Cast

Songs

"Just One Love" and the closing song, written by Eiji Kawamura with lyrics by Akira Ōtsu, were sung by BYUE.

Releases

The film was released on April 16, 1994, for the Toei Super Hero Fair.

As part of the media franchise's 40th anniversary, J was shown on Toei's pay-per-view channel in September 2011.[4]

Stock Footage for Masked Rider

Saban Entertainment used monster footage from the film in their Masked Rider TV show. Hachi Woman became Hydrasect, appearing in the episode "Stranger from the North" with a monster from the previous film Kamen Rider ZO. Fog Mother became Ultivore, appearing in the episode "Saturday Morning Invasion", and Tokage Man became Cyborgator and appeared in the episode "Ectophase Albee".

Legacy

Notes and References

  1. Televi Magazine First Issue 31st Anniversary Project: All Hero Great Assembly (December 2002.
  2. Televi Magazine Deluxe 66, January 17, 1997. .
  3. Kamen Rider Art Collection: Hero Edition . Page 72-74, June 2003.
  4. Web site: 2011年9月のラインナップ. Toei Channel. 2011-11-20. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120506085921/http://www.toeich.jp/backnumber/2011/1109.html. 2012-05-06.
  5. Hyper Hobby, August 2009
  6. Web site: 仮面ライダー総集結のアクションゲーム『ライダージェネレーション』が発売!. Dengeki.com. 2011-05-23. 2011-11-19.