Oishinbo Explained

Oishinbo
Ja Kanji:美味しんぼ
Genre:Cooking,[1] comedy[2]
Type:manga
Publisher:Shogakukan
Demographic:Seinen
Magazine:Big Comic Spirits
First:October 1983
Last:May 12, 2014 (indefinite hiatus)
Volumes:111
Type:tv series
Director:Yoshio Takeuchi
Producer:Hidehiko Takei (NTV)
Yoshio Katō (Shin-Ei Animation)
Music:Kazuo Otani
Studio:Shin-Ei Animation
Network:NNS (NTV)
First:October 17, 1988
Last:March 17, 1992
Episodes:136
Episode List:List of Oishinbo episodes
Type:tv film
Oishinbo: Kyūkyoku Tai Shikō, Chōju Ryōri Taiketsu!!
Director:Iku Suzuki
Music:Kazuo Otani
Studio:Studio Deen
Network:NNS (NTV)
Released:December 11, 1992
Runtime:90 minutes
Type:tv film
Oishinbo: Nichibei Kome Sensō
Director:Iku Suzuki
Music:Kazuo Otani
Studio:Studio Deen
Network:Nippon TV
Released:December 3, 1993
Runtime:89 minutes
Type:live film
Director:Azuma Morisaki
Producer:Shigehiro Nakagawa
Renji Tazawa
Junichirō Hisaita
Katsuhiko Takemasa
Osamu Kamei
Hisaomi Saitō
Music:Takayuki Inoue
Studio:Shochiku
Released:April 13, 1996
Runtime:105 minutes
Portal:yes

is a long-running Japanese cooking manga series written by and drawn by . The manga's title is a portmanteau of the Japanese word for "delicious",, and the word for someone who loves to eat, .[3] The series depicts the adventures of culinary journalist Shirō Yamaoka and his partner (and later wife), Yūko Kurita. It was published by Shogakukan between 1983 and 2008 in Big Comic Spirits, and resumed again on February 23, 2009,[4] only to be put on an indefinite hiatus after the May 12, 2014, edition in the weekly Big Comic Spirits, following harsh criticism of Oishinbos treatment of the Fukushima Daiichi disaster.[5]

Before this suspension, Oishinbo was collected in 111 tankōbon volumes, making it the 18th longest manga released and among the best-selling manga series in history. The series was a perennial best-seller, selling 1.2 million copies per volume,[6] for a total of more than 135 million copies sold.[7]

The series received the 1986 Shogakukan Manga Award for seinen/general manga.[8] It was adapted as a 136-episode anime television series broadcast on Nippon Television from October 17, 1988, to March 17, 1992, followed by two sequel TV anime film specials in 1992 and 1993.

It was adapted into a live-action film directed by Azuma Morisaki, starring Kōichi Satō and Rentarō Mikuni, which premiered on April 13, 1996.[9] The manga is licensed in English in North America by Viz Media.

In March 2016, writer Tetsu Kariya announced on his blog that he wanted to end the manga after it returned from hiatus. He wrote that "30 years is too long for many things" and that he believed "it's about time to end it."[10]

Plot

Oishinbo is a drama featuring journalist Shirō Yamaoka who works for Tōzai Shimbun. He is a cynical food critic who is tasked by the newspaper's owner, along with the young Yūko Kurita, to provide recipes for the "ultimate menu". During their search, they encounter Yamaoka's fastidious and demanding father, Yūzan Kaibara, a famous gourmand who tries to sabotage Yamaoka's project.

Characters

The character names listed here are in western order of family name last. The official English language manga volumes use the Japanese naming order of family name first.

Played by Toshiaki Karasawa (1994 show), Masahiro Matsuoka (2007 show)
  • Shirō Yamaoka a 27-year-old journalist for the 's culture division and the head of its Ultimate Menu project. He is the only son of the world-famous potter and gourmand Yūzan Kaibara. He was forced to cook in his father's Gourmet Club when he was still at school and he resents his father, blaming him for his mother's early death. He once destroyed his father's paintings and ceramics because he believed his father cared more about food and his reputation than his family. Yamaoka appears lazy and uninterested unless it concerns food where he possesses a deep knowledge.
    Played by Yuriko Ishida (1-3), Yasuko Tomita (4-5) (1995 show), Yuka (2007 show)
  • Kurita is Yamaoka's co-worker and assists him in the Ultimate Menu project. She is often seen with Noriko Hanamura and Kinue Tabata, and together they are referred to as the "Culture Department Flower Trio". Kurita later marries Shirō Yamaoka and they have two children together, and .
    Played by Yoshio Harada (1), Tōru Emori (2-5) (1994 show); Ken Matsudaira (2007 show)
  • Kaibara is Yamaoka's father and rival. Kaibara trained Yamaoka, but the two had a falling-out. The relationship worsens when Kaibara begins to work for the Supreme Menu project of the, a rival newspaper. Kaibara is the founder and director of the Gourmet Club. He is also an artist and the author of the Dictionary of Poetic References. He is modelled after Kitaoji Rosanjin.[11]
    Ōhara is the publisher of the Tōzai News and initiates the Supreme Menu project.
  • Editor-in-chief of the Tōzai News.
  • Tanimura is the director of the arts and culture department of the Tōzai News.
  • Tomii is the deputy director of the arts and culture department. He is known for his buck teeth and baldness. His son's name is Hitoshi, who's known for his glasses, bowlcut hair and freckles and he studies in Class 5-B alongside classmate Masashi, who is the victim of this class' bullying.
  • Tōyama is a famous ceramicist and gourmet and is married to the much younger woman, Ryoko.
  • Okaboshi is a talented young chef and the owner of Yamaoka's preferred place to socialize.
  • Fuyumi becomes Okaboshi's wife and runs the restaurant with him.
  • Seiichi's younger brother who works as a chef in Kaibara's Gourmet Club.
  • A wealthy businessman and a gourmet who lives in Osaka.
  • She is a friend of Yūko Kurita and one of the "Culture Department Flower Trio".
  • She is a friend of Yūko Kurita and one of the "Culture Department Flower Trio".
  • A Police Inspector with a gruff exterior, but he is quite soft-hearted and forms a friendship with Yamaoka.
  • A homeless man who collects leftovers from various restaurants in Ginza, so he knows which ones have the highest quality food. He introduced Yamaoka to Okaboshi's restaurant.[12] His full name is .
  • He is the head chef of the Gourmet Club.
  • An American food writer and researcher who gets acquainted with Yamaoka and Kurita when he is in Japan studying tofu dishes. He later becomes a rakugo artist and takes the name Kairakutei. His original name is Henry James Black but he also uses the pen name Stan Black.
  • One half of a manzai comedy duo. She marries Kairakutei Black and they have a daughter together.
  • Mariko Niki is a co-worker of Yamaoka and Kurita who writes for Touzai Graph a weekly pictorial magazine. Her family is very wealthy. Her father is Takashi Niki, the president of one of Japan's biggest banks. She studied at a university in Paris and transferred back to Japan from the Touzai Paris office. To the dismay of Yūko Kurita, she pursues Yamaoka romantically but he is not interested in marrying her. Later, she marries a freelance photographer named .
  • Teruko is Mariko's aunt. Mariko believes her difficult personality is the reason she's still unmarried. However, eventually she marries a novelist called Katamori.
  • Mariko's grandfather and chairman of the Nito Financial Group. He believes he should have a say in who Mariko chooses as a husband.
  • A friend of Kairakutei Black and an editor for an American magazine. He often asks Yamaoka and his colleagues for help when he writes articles about Japan. His Japanese is strange as he uses archaic words and odd expressions.
  • Media

    Manga

    Volume List

    Anime

    See main article: List of Oishinbo episodes.

    The manga was adapted into a television anime series that ran from October 1988 to March 1992 for 136 episodes.The series was followed by two television specials. was aired in December 1992 and was aired a year later in December 1993.

    Video games

    North American release

    The manga is licensed in English in North America by Viz Media,[13] which published the first volume in January 2009.[14] Seven volumes from the series were published from January 2009 to January 2010. These editions are thematic compilations (and include stories from across the timeline), making the English editions effectively a best of the "best of." These volumes are:

    Reception

    In the 1980s, Japan had an upsurge in popularity in the gurume movement, called the "gourmet boom." Iorie Brau, author ofOishinbo’s Adventures in Eating: Food, Communication, and Culture in Japanese Comics, said that this was the largest factor of the increase in popularity of gurume comics. The series's first volume sold around one million copies. The popularity of Oishinbo the comic lead to the development of the anime, the live action film and many fansites. The fan-sites chronicle recipes that appeared in the manga.[3]

    Tetsu Kariya, the writer of Oishinbo, said in a 1986 interview that he was not a food connoisseur, and that he felt embarrassed whenever food experts read the comic.[3]

    Controversy regarding Fukushima episodes

    In April 2014, Oishinbo featured a story about the Fukushima nuclear accident called "The Truth of Fukushima". In this story, characters who visited the nuclear plant suffer nosebleeds that don't stop, and they conclude that the government should help people move away from the area because of the radiation. This prompted an intense backlash, both from local governments in Fukushima and across Japan; even Shinzo Abe weighed in, calling the claims "baseless rumors". The publisher had included statements along with the story from the Fukushima prefectural government and radiation expert Ikuro Anzai, objecting to the story for misleading people and noting that discrimination against Fukushima residents and products was doing far more harm than any radiation in the area. Despite these statements, Kariya stood by the story in the midst of the controversy, saying he had researched Fukushima for two years and could "only write the truth," but noted that he was not expecting such a strong reaction from the public.[22] The following month, Shogakukan Inc. put Oishinbo on hiatus, its last appearance being the May 12, 2014, edition in the weekly Big Comic Spirits.[5] Although the halt of publication coincided with the controversy, the editorial staff claimed they had scheduled the hiatus beforehand.[23]

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Alverson . Brigid . 7 Mouthwatering Manga About Food . . December 5, 2019 . December 8, 2016.
    2. Web site: The Official Website for Oishinbo . Viz Media . December 7, 2017.
    3. Oishinbo's Adventures in Eating: Food, Communication, and Culture in Japanese Comics . Lorie . Brau . . Fall 2004 . 4 . 4 . 34–45 . 10.1525/gfc.2004.4.4.34. 10.1525/gfc.2004.4.4.34 .
    4. Web site: Oishinbo Cuisine Manga to Resume in Japan Next Week . Anime News Network . March 1, 2009.
    5. http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201405170047 'Oishinbo' manga on hold after criticism of Fukushima episodes
    6. Web site: Hanasaki Akira 花咲アキラ . The Ultimate Manga Guide . June 13, 2008.
    7. Web site: お探しのページは移動もしくは削除された可能性があります。. October 2, 2020. PR TIMES . April 24, 2021 . ja.
    8. Web site: http://comics.shogakukan.co.jp/mangasho/rist.html . ja:小学館漫画賞: 歴代受賞者 . Shogakukan . ja . June 13, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100109115811/http://comics.shogakukan.co.jp/mangasho/rist.html . January 9, 2010 .
    9. Web site: 美味しんぼ (1996). allcinema.
    10. Web site: Tetsu Kariya Plans Oishinbo Manga's End After Returning From Hiatus. Blyden. Jabulan. April 4, 2016. Anime News Network. April 28, 2019.
    11. L. Brau, Oishinbo's Adventures in Eating: Food, Communication, and Culture in Japanese Comics, Gastronomica. The Journal of Food and Culture 4 (2004), p. 34-45, at p. 39.
    12. Kariya, Tetsu and Akira Hanasaki. Oishinbo à la Carte Izakaya: Pub Food. 269. Viz Media.
    13. Web site: Amazon: Viz Adds Gaba Kawa, Heaven's Will, Oishinbo. Anime News Network. June 13, 2008.
    14. Web site: Viz Media Satisfies Hungry Manga Fans with the Release of Oishinbo. January 23, 2009. Anime News Network. January 24, 2009.
    15. Web site: Oishinbo: Japanese Cuisine, Vol. 1. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    16. Web site: Oishinbo: Sake, Vol. 2. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    17. Web site: Oishinbo: Ramen and Gyoza, Vol. 3. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    18. Web site: Oishinbo: Fish, Sushi and Sashimi, Vol. 4. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    19. Web site: Oishinbo: Vegetables, Vol. 5. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    20. Web site: Oishinbo: The Joy of Rice, Vol. 6. Viz Media. September 3, 2010.
    21. Web site: Oishinbo: Izakaya--Pub Food, Vol. 7. Viz. April 28, 2019.
    22. https://web.archive.org/web/20140520105509/https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/19/japan-manga-fukushima_n_5351361.html Manga Comic Forces Japan To Discuss Radiation After Fukushima Disaster
    23. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2014-05-16/oishinbo-manga-goes-on-hiatus-after-fukushima-controversy 'Oishinbo Manga Goes on Hiatus After Fukushima Controversy