Kurozuka (novel) explained

Kurozuka
Ja Kanji:黒塚
Type:novel
Author:Baku Yumemakura
Publisher:Shueisha
Published:August 25, 2000
Type:manga
Author:Baku Yumemakura
Illustrator:Takashi Noguchi
Publisher:Shueisha
Demographic:Seinen
Magazine:Oh Super Jump
First:2002
Last:2006
Volumes:10
Type:tv series
Director:Tetsurō Araki
Producer:Tarō Morishima
Music:Kiyoshi Yoshida
Studio:Madhouse
Licensee:Mill Creek Entertainment
Network:Animax, BS11
First:October 7, 2008
Last:December 23, 2008
Episodes:12
Episode List:
  1. Anime

is a Japanese novel written by Baku Yumemakura. A manga adaptation was illustrated by and it was serialized in the seinen manga magazine Oh Super Jump starting in 2003 by Shueisha and ended in December 2006. An anime adaptation by Madhouse was announced by Japanese anime television network Animax in May 2008[1] and ran between October and December 2008, spanning a total of 12 episodes.

Plot

The series begins in 12th century Japan and centers on Kuro, a character based loosely on the legendary Japanese swordsman Minamoto no Yoshitsune. Kuro and his servant, Benkei, meet a beautiful and mysterious woman named Kuromitsu while on the run from Kuro's elder brother, who seeks his life. Kuromitsu and Kuro fall in love, but he soon discovers that she harbors a terrible secret: she is a vampiric immortal. Following an attack by his pursuers, Kuro is badly injured and must imbibe Kuromitsu's blood to save his own life. Kuro is then betrayed and attacked by Benkei, who has been subverted by a shadowy organization called the Red Army, and Kuro's head is severed, which interferes with his transformation into a fully immortal being.

Kuro loses consciousness and wakes up centuries later in a post-apocalyptic, dystopian Japan with his memories of the past century missing. The surviving citizens have fallen under constant oppression by the Red Army, and Kuro is quickly found and recruited by an underground revolutionary movement called Haniwa. The remaining episodes follow Kuro's fight with the Red Army and its host of elite warriors, who have been hunting Kuromitsu for her blood, believing it contains the secret to eternal life; focusing on Kuro's quest to find his inexplicably lost love.

In the first few episodes, the story shows Kuro's memories of travelling through the centuries with Kuromitsu with gaps in the recollection indicating lapses in his memory. The recollections show the past up until Kuromitsu goes missing.

The starting plot for the series is probably inspired by Kurozuka, a 1939 Japanese dance-drama, which features a man-eating ogress named Kuromitsu,[2] as well as the life of Minamoto no Yoshitsune.

Media

Novel

Kurozuka was originally developed as a novel by Baku Yumemakura and it was first published by Shueisha on August 25, 2000.[3] Shueisha republished it in bunkoban format on February 20, 2003,[4] and in digital format on November 1, 2013.[5]

Manga

The Kurozuka manga was adapted from the original novel by author Baku Yumemakura and was illustrated by Takashi Noguchi. Serialized in Shueisha's Oh Super Jump,[6] the series spanned ten volumes. The first was released on January 6, 2003 and the last on December 4, 2006.[7] [8]

Anime

The anime adaptation of Kurozuka is produced by Madhouse and directed by Tetsurō Araki, with Yoshinobu Fujioka, Tsutomu Shirado and Araki himself handling series composition, Masanori Shino designing the characters and Kiyoshi Yoshida composing the music.[1] It began on October 7, 2008, on Animax.[1] The opening theme is "Systematic People" by Wagdug Futuristic Unity with Maximum the Ryo of Maximum the Hormone. The closing theme is "Hanarebanare (ハナレバナレ)" by Shigi. The English dub was produced by Ocean Productions, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, using their own studio actors.

References

  1. Web site: Loo. Egan. Sony's Animax to Produce, Run Anime of Kurozuka Manga. Anime News Network. May 23, 2020. May 1, 2008.
  2. Web site: Kurozuka, from Kabuki World.
  3. Web site: http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-774479-5&mode=1 . https://web.archive.org/web/20020516191857/http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-774479-5&mode=1 . May 16, 2002 . ja:黒塚 . Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . ja.
  4. Web site: 黒塚 KUROZUKA . Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . Japanese.
  5. Book: 黒塚 KUROZUKA . e!Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . ja.
  6. Web site: http://sj.shueisha.co.jp/contents/ohsj/index.html . https://web.archive.org/web/20030911092137/http://sj.shueisha.co.jp/contents/ohsj/index.html . September 11, 2003 . ja:オースーパージャンプ最新号のみどころ . Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . ja.
  7. Web site: KUROZUKA—黒塚— 1 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040525043437/http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-859336-7&mode=1 . May 25, 2004 . Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . ja.
  8. Web site: KUROZUKA—黒塚— 10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20061222014948/http://books.shueisha.co.jp/CGI/search/syousai_put.cgi?isbn_cd=4-08-859613-7&mode=1 . December 22, 2006 . Shueisha . October 21, 2016 . ja.

External links