Magic Boy (film) explained

Magic Boy
Director:Akira Daikubara
Taiji Yabushita
Producer:Hiroshi Ōkawa
Screenplay:Michihei Muramatsu
Toppei Matsumura
Story:Kazuo Dan
Music:Satoshi Funemura
Toru Funamura
Studio:Toei Animation
Runtime:83 minutes
Country:Japan
Language:Japanese

Magic Boy, known in Japan as, is a 1959 Japanese animated feature film released on December 25, 1959. Released as Toei Animation's second theatrical anime, the film was released in theaters in the United States by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on June 22, 1961,[1] making it the first anime film to be released in the country, followed by The Tale of the White Serpent on July 8, 1961.

Story

In medieval Japan, a boy named Sasuke and his sister live in a forest along with several young animals of different species. One day, one of the animals (a young deer) is grabbed by an eagle and thrown into a lake. Sasuke and another animal jump into the lake to save it, but a monstrous salamander arrives and devours one of the animals. Sasuke tries to fight the monster, but is defeated. The beast leaves the lake, revealing its true form: a female demon named Yakusha. Sasuke's sister tells him Yakusha was transformed into a salamander by a powerful wizard millennia ago, but now she can muster enough power to have her normal shape back and found a reign of terror in Japan. Sasuke then decides to seek a magician master to learn to fight against Yakusha to save Japan and avenge the death of his pet.

Cast and characters

CharacterOriginalEnglish
Sarutobi SasukeTeruo Miyazaki Billie Lou Watt
O-YūHiroko Sakuramachi Unknown
Tozawa HakuunsaiKenji Susukida
O-Kei-chanTomoko Matsushima
Sanada YukimuraKatsuo Nakamura
Miyoshi SeikaiAkira Kishii
Yasha-hime O-MonHarue Akagi
Yamaarashi no GonkurōYoshio Yoshida
Okera no KintaRyōei Itō
Batta no SanjiShunji Sakai
GuardKazuo Kishida

The MGM version

In the English language version, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer left most of the original songs with Japanese language lyrics. Since the creators of the English version preferred to liken Sasuke to the public perception of samurai, who were viewed as heroic, as opposed to the ninja, who were viewed as "sinister spies and assassins," MGM's publicity incorrectly claimed that The Adventures of the Little Samurai was the Japanese title of the film.[2] This despite the movie poster's accurate display of the actual title.

Video game

A video game titled Shōnen Sarutobi Sasuke (also known as Sasuke Ninja Boy) was released by Sunsoft for the Super Famicom in 1994.[3]

Reception

According to animation historian Jerry Beck, the film exhibited Toei Animation's effort to use the "Disney formula of presenting a traditional folktale with songs and plenty of cute animals."[2]

Home media

Much like another MGM film, Night of the Lepus, the film never had a VHS release from MGM. Eventually in 2014, Warner Home Video released the MGM dub of the film on DVD for the first time as a Warner Archive title.[4]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lenburg . Jeff . The Encyclopedia of Animated Cartoons . 2009 . Checkmark Books . New York . 978-0-8160-6600-1 . 3rd . 200.
  2. [Jerry Beck|Beck, Jerry]
  3. 忍者ゲーム 【スーパーファミコン】
  4. https://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00LO1T3D4/