Mashin_Hero_Wataru

<i>Mashin Hero Wataru</i>

Mashin Hero Wataru

Japanese anime television series


Mashin Hero Wataru (Japanese: 魔神英雄伝ワタル, Hepburn: Mashin Eiyū Den Wataru, lit. 'Magic God Hero Legend Wataru')[1] is a mecha multimedia franchise originally created by Sunrise and Red Entertainment. The first series aired on April 15, 1988, replacing the 17:00–17:30 timeslot used for Transformers: The Headmasters. Sunrise credited "Hajime Yatate" for the storyline and Shuji Iuchi directed the series.[2] The series uses elements from both Chinese and Japanese mythology, in terms of themes and settings.

Quick Facts 魔神英雄伝ワタル (Mashin Eiyū Den Wataru), Genre ...

Story

The story is about a 9-year-old boy named Wataru Ikusabe (戦部 ワタル, Ikusabe Wataru) who is magically transported to a magical realm by a magical dragon named Ryujinmaru (龍神丸, Dragon God Round) - this magical realm is known as Soukaizan (創界山, Sōkaizan), which he is supposed to save from an evil, magical, demonic ruler.

The series incorporates many elements of RPG games including dungeon levels and quests for magical objects. Soukaizan itself is represented as a series of magical tiered platforms each floating magically above the one beneath it in a rough pyramid shape. In order to progress to the next tier where he will meet the series' ultimate magical villain, the show's heroes must complete some task on the one beneath. In addition to these, he has to defeat the magical ruler of each level along with his many magical henchmen. Each level he completes, rejuvenates one color of the magical gray rainbow over Soukaizan.

In his quest to save the magical realm, Wataru manages to transform a clay sculpture into a somewhat autonomous and small magical Super Robot. He also befriends many of the magical Soukaizan natives, and forms some very strong friendship bonds. The term Sou-kai-zan can be broken down to its three parts: "Sou" (creation), "Kai" (realm, space, world, or universe), and "Zan" (hill or mountain), representing the pyramid shape of the magical world's level.

Cast

Episode list

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Interpretations

The first section of the title's kanji is a pun: the super-deformed mecha of the series are called "Magic Gods" (Kanji: 魔神, Romaji: mashin) - while written with the kanji for "magic" being shortened from "魔法" (mahō) to "魔" (ma) and "god" (神, shin) ("Shin" is the onyomi reading of this kanji while the kunyomi is "kami"), "mashin" is also the katakana spelling of English loanword "machine" (マシン, mashin). The kanji for "legend", 伝説 (densetsu) is shortened to "伝" (den) before being written alongside "hero" (英雄 Eiyū). A freer translation of the title would be "Legend of the Spirit Wataru."

Wataru and his friends Shibaraku and Himiko each represent different elements of ancient Japan: Wataru with his magatama and association with dragons represents the pre-Yamato Watari clan. Shibaraku represents samurai. Himiko represents ninja.

Cultural impact

The anime series was a huge hit in Japan, later being imported into Taiwan, Mainland China, South Korea, France, Monaco and Hong Kong (the latter was shown on TVB Jade). Chinese translations were provided. The show became one of the most famous Japanese anime shows in China during the mid-1990s.

Spin-offs

The franchise has spawned three TV series (Mashin Hero Wataru, Mashin Hero Wataru 2, Super Mashin Hero Wataru), four radio shows, five OVAs, five novels, five video games, and assorted other merchandise. One of the video games was the original pack-in game for the PC Engine, and was renamed in the United States as Keith Courage in Alpha Zones when localized on TurboGrafx-16.

The latest anime, Mashin Hero Wataru: The Seven Spirits of Ryujinmaru, was released online on April 10, 2020. On April 24, 2020, it was announced that the anime would be on a hiatus due to COVID-19.[5] On June 12, 2020, it was announced the anime would resume on June 19, 2020.[6]

Wataru's success prompted Bandai to copy the super-deformed mecha and multi-tiered world concepts in a science fiction setting with Sunrise's 1989 Madō King Granzort TV series.[citation needed]

A manga adaptation drawn by Hideaki Fujii began serialization in Shogakukan's Corocoro Aniki manga magazine in July 2020.[7]

A new anime television series, titled Mashin Genesis Wataru (Japanese: 魔神創造伝ワタル, Hepburn: Mashin Sōzōden Wataru, lit. 'Magic God Genesis Legend Wataru'), was announced by Sunrise on January 13, 2024.[8]

Music

Wataru

  • Opening: "Step" by achi-achi
  • Ending: "Achi-achi Adventure" by achi-achi

Wataru 2

  • Opening 1: "Step by Step" by Takahashi Yumiko
  • Ending 1: "Kimi ni Tomaranai - MY GIRL, MY LOVE" by Takahashi Yumiko
  • Opening 2: "Fight" by Takahashi Yumiko
  • Ending 2: "Niji no Kanata" by Takahashi Yumiko

Cho Mashin Hero Wataru

  • Opening 1: "Hitotsu no Hāto de" (ひとつのハートで, lit. "With One Heart") by Hitomi Mieno
  • Ending 1: "BOYS BE AMBITIOUS" by Hitomi Mieno
  • Opening 2: "POWER OF DREAM" by Hitomi Mieno
  • Ending 2: "Ganbatte" by Hitomi Mieno

References

  1. "Mashin Hero Wataru (TV series)". Sunrise International.
  2. "Majin Hero Wataru Archived 2009-08-12 at the Wayback Machine" [sic]. Sunrise Animation. Retrieved on January 20, 2009.
  3. Sherman, Jennifer (July 15, 2020). "New Mashin Eiyūden Wataru Anime Gets Manga". Anime News Network. Retrieved July 15, 2020.

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