Toggle menu
Toggle preferences menu
Toggle personal menu
Not logged in
Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits.

Fist of the Blue Sky

From CartoonWiki

Template:Short description Template:Infobox animanga/Header Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Print Template:Infobox animanga/Video Template:Infobox animanga/Footer

Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tetsuo Hara, with plot supervision by Buronson. It was serialized in Weekly Comic Bunch from 2001 to 2010, with the chapters collected into 22 tankōbon volumes by Shinchosha. It is a prequel to the popular 1980s manga Fist of the North Star, which Hara originally illustrated with Buronson writing. Set primarily in Shanghai during the 1930s, the series centers on the 62nd successor of the Hokuto Shinken martial arts style, Kenshiro Kasumi, the namesake and predecessor of Kenshiro from Fist of the North Star. The manga was adapted into a 26-episode anime series that aired on TV Asahi from 2006 to 2007.

A continuation of the manga, titled Template:Nihongo4, began serialization in the December 2017 issue of Comic Zenon. It is written by Hiroyuki Yatsu and illustrated by Hideki Tsuji with the additional involvement of Tetsuo Hara. An anime series of the same name began airing from April 2 to December 17, 2018 with oversight by Tetsuo Hara.

Plot

Template:Seealso The main protagonist of this story is Kenshiro Kasumi, better known as "Yan Wang" or "The King of Hell". Kenshiro is a laid back and chain-smoking Tokyo professor who is secretly the successor of the deadly Chinese assassin martial art Hokuto Shinken. He travels to Shanghai after hearing that his Triad friend Pan Guang-Lin and love interest Pan Yu-Ling are in trouble.

In Shanghai, Kenshiro fights the three Hokuto families, the Hokuto Sankaken (based on the royal families of Romance of the Three Kingdoms). At the same time he helps Pan's Qīng Bāng triad against their rivals, the immoral Hóng Huá Huì, in gaining territory and influence in Shanghai.

Production

Many of the plot points mentioned in the comic contain real historical facts, such as how Shanghai was controlled by the foreign concessions (the story focus mainly on the French settlement) during the 1930s. Also seen are Jewish refugees who escaped from Nazi persecution in Europe, and the invasion of China by the Japanese Army. Chiang Kai-shek and some historical Kuomintang figures appear in the story as well.

Tetsuo Hara wanted the fights in the manga to look more like traditional Chinese martial arts, so the action is somewhat faster and more detailed than those in Fist of the North Star. Hara went to Shanghai in person to get his inspiration. Tetsuo Hara describes the protagonist Kenshiro Kasumi as a combination of the strength of Kenshiro, the good nature of Keiji Maeda from Hana no Keiji and the sarcastic attitude of the title character of Nakabo Rintaro.

Media

Manga

Illustrated by Tetsuo Hara with supervision from Buronson, Fist of the Blue Sky was serialized in Weekly Comic Bunch throughout the magazine's entire history. Beginning in its first issue with the cover date of May 29, 2001,[1] the chapters were published irregularly until the final issue in August 2010. Publisher Shinchosha collected the chapters into 22 tankōbon volumes.

An English version of Fist of the Blue Sky was serialized in the now-defunct manga anthology Raijin Comics published by Gutsoon! Entertainment from 2002 to 2004. Four collected volumes were published by Gutsoon under their Raijin Graphic Novels imprint before the company went out of business and ceased publication of all their titles.

A continuation of the manga, titled Template:Nihongo4, began serialization in the December 2017 issue of Comic Zenon. It is written by Hiroyuki Yatsu and illustrated by Hideki Tsuji.[2] Original manga creators Buronson and Tetsuo Hara supervised the series' art and scripts.[3][4]

Volumes
Vol. Release date[5] ISBN English release date English ISBN
01 2001-10-09 Template:ISBNT 2003-06-18 Template:ISBNT
02 2001-11-09 Template:ISBNT 2003-09-09 Template:ISBNT
03 2002-05-09 Template:ISBNT 2003-11-18 Template:ISBNT
04 2002-08-09 Template:ISBNT 2004-03-17 Template:ISBNT
05 2003-01-09 Template:ISBNT Unpublished Template:ISBNT
06 2003-05-09 Template:ISBNT
07 2003-09-09 Template:ISBNT
08 2004-01-09 Template:ISBNT
09 2004-05-09 Template:ISBNT
10 2004-08-09 Template:ISBNT
11 2004-12-09 Template:ISBNT
12 2005-03-09 Template:ISBNT
13 2005-07-09 Template:ISBNT
14 2006-01-09 Template:ISBNT
15 2006-07-09 Template:ISBNT
16 2007-02-09 Template:ISBNT
17 2007-09-08 Template:ISBNT
18 2008-03-08 Template:ISBNT
19 2008-10-09 Template:ISBNT
20 2009-03-09 Template:ISBNT
21 2009-12-09 Template:ISBNT
22 2010-11-09 Template:ISBNT

Anime

Template:Seealso A weekly anime series based on Sōten no Ken aired on Japan's TV Asahi on Thursdays at 2:40am from October 4, 2006 to March 14, 2007. The series lasted only 26 episodes, but four of the episodes (16-18, and 21) did not air during the original run. The complete series has been released on DVD in Region 2 format by Universal Entertainment Japan, including unaired episodes and uncensored content. The series adapts the storyline from the beginning and up to vol. 8. The Opening theme is Template:Nihongo by Rina Aiuchi while the ending themes are Template:Nihongo by doa and "Kissing til i die" by Jun Manaka.

On October 24, 2017, a sequel to the first anime titled Sōten no Ken: Re:Genesis, which aired from April 2 throughout June 18, 2018 on Tokyo MX and other channels.[6][7] The opening is "Souten no Hate ni" by AK-69 while the ending theme is "Inori no Hoshizora" by Sumire Uesaka.[8] The second opening theme is "Soul Seeker" by Crossfaith while the second ending theme is Template:Nihongo by Hiroya Ozaki. A second season premiered from October 1 to December 17, 2018.

Despite sharing the same title, Sōten no Ken: Re:Genesis is not a direct adaptation of the manga of the same name, but instead picks up from where the 2006 anime series left off and mixes plot elements from the unadapted latter half of the original Sōten no Ken manga and the ongoing Re:Genesis manga.

Notes

Template:Notelist

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Fist of the North Star Template:Comic Bunch Template:Monthly Comic Zenon Template:A.P.P.P. Template:Polygon Pictures