Template:Short description Template:Expand Japanese Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Footer Template:Nihongo is a Japanese sports manga series written by Ikki Kajiwara and illustrated by Noboru Kawasaki. It was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine from 1966 to 1971. It is about the actual baseball team Yomiuri Giants using fictional characters. It was launched by the "Yomiuri Group" which at the time owned not only the actual baseball team, but the TV network Nippon Television, the newspaper Yomiuri Shimbun, as well as Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation. It was adapted into an anime television series broadcast in Japan in 1968.[1] It later spawned two anime sequels and different anime films. In total there were Template:Sum episodes.
Story
The story is about Hyūma Hoshi, a promising young baseball pitcher who dreams of becoming a top star like his father Ittetsu Hoshi in the professional Japanese league. Ittetsu was once a 3rd baseman until he was injured in World War II and was forced to retire; now an impoverished and bitter widower, he's raised Hyūma and his older sister Akiko in a very severe environment. The boy would join the ever popular Giants team, and soon he realized the difficulty of managing the high expectations. From the grueling training to battling the rival Mitsuru Hanagata in the Hanshin Tigers, Hyūma would have to take out his best pitching magic to step up to the challenge.
Characters
- Hyūma Hoshi: Tōru Furuya
- Ittetsu Hoshi: Seizō Katō
- Akiko Hoshi: Fuyumi Shiraishi
- Ban Chūta: Jōji Yanami
- Mitsuru Hanagata: Makio Inoue
- Kawakami Tetsuharu: Tadashi Nakamura
- Masaichi Kaneda: Teiji Ōmiya
- Kyōko: Reiko Mutō
- Hosaku Samon: Shingo Kanemoto
- Mina Hadaka: Yoshiko Matsuo
Media
Manga
Anime
Beginning in 2001, the series was re-released on DVD format. In June 2013, a five set Blu-ray release was released.
Films
The first Star of the Giants movie debuted on July 26, 1969, as part of the vacation anime festival on large screen theatres in color. The draw was that most people had black and white TVs at the time. The Star of the Giants vs. Mighty Atom TV special reached the United States and was renamed to Astro Boy vs. the Giants.[1]
Japanese name | English name | Release date | Type | Run time |
---|---|---|---|---|
Star of the Giants vs. Mighty Atom | June 9, 1969 | TV special | 30 mins | |
巨人の星 | Star of Giants: The Movie | July 26, 1969 | Film | 90 mins |
巨人の星 行け行け飛雄馬 | Star of Giants: Ike Ike Hyuma | December 20, 1969 | Film | 75 mins |
巨人の星 大リーグボール | Star of Giants: Big League Ball | March 21, 1970 | Film | 70 mins |
巨人の星 宿命の対決 | Star of Giants: Shukumei no Taiketsu | August 1, 1970 | Film | 60 mins |
新巨人の星 | New Star of Giants | October 1, 1977 | TV series | 52 episodes |
新巨人の星 | New Star of Giants: The Movie | December 1, 1977 | Film | |
新巨人の星II | New Star of Giants II | April 14, 1979 | TV series | 23 episodes |
Stars of Giants Special Edition: Fierce Tiger Mitsuru Hanagata | October 23, 2002 | OVA | 13 episodes |
Video games
Kyojin no Hoshi (The Anime Super Remix) was released for the PlayStation 2 by Capcom on June 20, 2002. There were also a number of other games on the same platform.
Reception and legacy
On TV Asahi's Manga Sōsenkyo 2021 poll, in which 150,000 people voted for their top 100 manga series, Star of the Giants ranked 38th.[2]
The anime series ranked fifteenth on TV Asahi's Top 100 Anime 2005 poll.[3]
Professional baseball player Ichiro Suzuki used Star of Giants as a reference to his grueling childhood baseball training.Script error: No such module "Footnotes".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The anime was remade in India in 2012 as Suraj: The Rising Star where cricket was substituted for baseball.[4] Episode 18 of Kyatto Ninden Teyandee (dubbed and released in North America as Samurai Pizza Cats) includes a pitcher named Puma Pochi, voiced by Tōru Furuya, as a direct parody of Hyūma Hoshi. In English, the character is renamed Fernando Curtainzuela.[5]
References
External links
- Star of Giants Template:Webarchive - official anime site by Tokyo Movie Shinsha Template:In lang
- Template:Anime News Network
Template:Weekly Shōnen Magazine - 1960–1989 Template:Yomiuri Giants Template:TMS Entertainment Template:TMS Entertainment films
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Clements, Jonathan. McCarthy Helen. [2006] (2006). The Anime Encyclopedia: Revised & Expanded Edition. Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press. .
- ↑ Template:Cite web
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- ↑ Template:Cite book