Ja Kanji: | のらくろ |
Type: | manga |
Author: | Suihō Tagawa |
Publisher: | Kodansha |
Magazine: | Shōnen Kurabu |
First: | 1931 |
Last: | 1981 |
Volumes: | 36 |
Type: | tv series |
Director: | Toru Murayama |
Music: | Hidehiko Arashino |
Studio: | TCJ |
Network: | FNS (Fuji TV) |
First: | 5 October 1970 |
Last: | 29 March 1971 |
Episodes: | 26 |
Type: | tv series |
Norakuro-kun | |
Director: | Masami Anno |
Studio: | Pierrot |
Network: | FNS (Fuji TV) |
First: | 4 October 1987 |
Last: | 2 October 1988 |
Episodes: | 50 |
is a Japanese manga series created by Suihō Tagawa, originally published by Kodansha in Shōnen Kurabu, and one of the first series' to be reprinted in format.[1] The titular protagonist, Norakuro, or Norakuro-kun, is an anthropomorphic black and white dog inspired by Felix the Cat.[2] The name Norakuro is an abbreviation of and .
In the original story, the central character Norakuro was a soldier serving in an army of dogs called the . The strip's publication began in Kodansha's Shōnen Kurabu in 1931, and was based on the Imperial Japanese Army of the time; the manga artist, Suihō Tagawa, had served in the Imperial Army from 1919 to 1922. Norakuro was gradually promoted from private to captain in the stories, which began as humorous episodes, but eventually developed into propaganda tales of military exploits against the "pigs army" on the "continent" - a thinly-veiled reference to the Second Sino-Japanese War.[3] The series became a hit in Japan; Shonen Kurabu
Serialization of Norakuro stopped in 1941 for wartime austerity reasons. After the war, due to the popularity of the strip, the character returned in various guises, including a sumo wrestler and a botanist.
There is an excerpt that appears in the sixth Kramer's Ergot comics anthology which is the only example of Tagawa's work published in English.[8]
At least seven extant animated short films featuring Norakuro were made from June 1933 to 1939.
English title | Japanese title | Release date | Directed by | Written by | Studio | Runtime | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Private 2nd Class Norakuro: The Training[9] [10] | のらくろ二等兵 演習の巻 | 14 June 1933 | Yasuji Murata | Chuzo Aochi &<br> Suihō Tagawa | Yokohama Cinema Company | 1 film reel | |
Private 2nd Class Nora-kuro: The Drill | のらくろ二等兵 教練の巻 | 14 June 1933 | Yasuji Murata | Chuzo Aochi &<br> Suihō Tagawa | Yokohama Cinema Company | 1 film reel | |
Corporal Nora-Kuro[11] | のらくろ伍長 | 9 March 1934 | Yasuji Murata | Chuzo Aochi &<br> Suihō Tagawa | Yokohama Cinema Company | 11 minutes | |
Private 1st Class Nora-Kuro[12] | のらくろ一等兵 | 1935 | Mitsuyo Seo | Suihō Tagawa | Seo Talkie Manga Labs | 1 film reel | |
Private 2nd Class Nora-Kuro[13] | のらくろ二等兵 | 1935 | Mitsuyo Seo | Suihō Tagawa | Seo Talkie Manga Labs | 2 film reels | |
Nora-Kuro's Tiger Hunt[14] | のらくろ虎退治 | 1938 | Mitsuyo Seo | Suihō Tagawa | Geijutsu Eiga Sha | 10 minutes | |
Norakuro The Sergeant: The Air Ride[15] | のらくろ軍曹 空襲の巻 | c.1939 | Mitsuyo Seo | Suihō Tagawa | Geijutsu Eiga Sha | 52 seconds (Surviving print) |
Two post-war animated series of Norakuro, in 1970 and 1987, have also been produced. In the 1970 series, the voice of Norakuro was played by Nobuyo Ōyama, also known as the voice of Doraemon. During the 1980s and early 1990s, Norakuro was the mascot of the Physical Training School (Tai-Iku Gakko) of the Japan Self-Defense Forces.