What Is The Anime Where People Control Their Blood
Deadman Wonderland | |
デッドマンワンダーランド ( Deddoman Wandārando ) | |
---|---|
Genre |
|
Manga | |
Written past | Jinsei Kataoka |
Illustrated past | Kazuma Kondou |
Published by | Kadokawa Shoten |
English publisher | NA
|
Magazine | Shōnen Ace |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | May 2007 – Baronial 2013 |
Volumes | 13 |
Anime television receiver series | |
Directed by | Kōichirō Hatsumi |
Produced by |
|
Written by | Yasuyuki Mutō |
Music by | NARASAKI |
Studio | Manglobe |
Licensed past | AUS Madman Amusement NA Funimation United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland Manga Amusement |
Original network | tvk, GBS, TVQ, Sun, TVS, Tokyo MX, MTV, CTC, BS Nittele |
English network | United states Adult Swim (Toonami), Funimation Channel |
Original run | Apr 17, 2011 – July 3, 2011 |
Episodes | 12 + OVA |
Deadman Wonderland (Japanese: デッドマンワンダーランド, Hepburn: Deddoman Wandārando ) is a Japanese manga serial written by Jinsei Kataoka and illustrated by Kazuma Kondou, who also wrote and illustrated the Eureka Seven manga, and published in Shōnen Ace since 2008. Tokyopop acquired the licensing rights to distribute the manga in English and released the first 5 volumes of the manga before the company shut down its North American Publishing sectionalisation in 2011.[3] Viz Media appear that it had licensed the series for English language release in North America on July 7, 2013, and released the outset volume on February eleven, 2014; new volumes were released every two months thereafter.[4]
An anime adaptation aired between April and July 2011, pulling content from the offset 21 chapters of the manga.[5] The anime is licensed past Funimation and aired on Developed Swim's newly revived Toonami programming block between May and Baronial 2012.
Plot [edit]
A massive anomaly acquired a swell earthquake that ravaged Japan's mainland and destroyed most of Tokyo, sinking three-quarters of the city into the Pacific Ocean.
Ten years later, the story shifts to Ganta Igarashi, a seemingly ordinary 9th grader attention Nagano Prefecture's middle school. As an escapee, a survivor of the great earthquake, Ganta has no memories of the tragedy and has lived a normal life. This all changes when a strange person covered in blood and crimson armor floats through his classroom windows. Smile madly, the "Red Man" massacres Ganta'south entire class. Instead of killing him, the "Red Man" embeds a red crystal shard in Ganta's chest. Within days of the massacre, Ganta is placed on trial equally a doubtable. Due to the testify rigged against him, he is sentenced to death at Deadman Wonderland, a prison that doubles as a theme park and is run by the warden Tsunenaga Tamaki (who posed as Ganta's lawyer and was secretly responsible for the rigged evidence against him).
Arriving at the prison, Ganta is fitted with a special neckband which monitors his location and vital signs. A lethal poisonous substance is constantly injected into his bloodstream through the neckband, but it tin exist neutralized by consuming a peculiar processed-similar medicine every 3 days, which tin can be acquired through various activities in the prison, e.k. performing for audiences, working backstage and purchasing with Cast Points (a course of currency amidst inmates at Deadman Wonderland). To gather Cast Points, an inmate must perform in the facility's lethal games and survive. Fortunately for Ganta, he is aided by a mysterious albino girl named Shiro who apparently knows Ganta but whose existence is unknown to the other prisoners.
While trying to survive as an inmate on decease row, Ganta intends to find the "Reddish Man" to articulate his name. In a bizarre twist, Ganta begins to develop the ability to manipulate his own blood, to the point of turning it into a weapon. Unknown to Ganta, he has get one of the prison's "Deadmen," an isolated group of prisoners possessing the Branches of Sin which is an ability which makes them capable of controlling their blood for their own uses. After his power is discovered, Ganta is forced to participate in brutal gladiatorial death matches known as Carnival Corpse, whose anonymous spectators pay large amounts of money to watch. In his long struggle to survive, he manages to befriend some of those he fought off in the arena and with their help, Ganta continues his quest to uncover the identity of the 'Cherry-red Homo', why he turned into a Deadman, and the dark secrets the prison regime are hiding.
Most Deadman Wonderland [edit]
Deadman Wonderland is Japan'southward only privately operated prison, congenital after the Peachy Tokyo Earthquake on ground zero. Deadman Wonderland was founded by Rinichirō Hagire and run by Tsunenaga Tamaki. It gathers prisoners from all over Nihon and raises money for the revival of the destroyed metropolis. To the public and the tourists that visit daily, Deadman Wonderland is a massive theme park-like facility run by the prison house population. Unbeknownst to the full general population, most of the prison'southward attractions involve cruel games of survival where many inmates lose their lives or are maimed for the entertainment of an oblivious public. The prison guards are also granted autonomy over how to punish the prisoners, which ofttimes results in bloodshed.
Each prisoner is fitted with a collar that functions as a life monitor, locator, and stunner. The prisoners on death row receive poisonous substance injections through their special neckband and must eat a special antidote candy every three days. Their collars contain countdown timers that warn the wearer with blinking and beeping when time is running depression. When the timer reaches aught, the neckband displays the word "DEAD" and the inmate immediately succumbs to the toxicant and dies. Afterwards, the collar unlocks allowing it to be removed. The collars can also be removed by key cards used by the prison house guards.
While the threat of violence is constant at the prison, most prisoners enjoy a great deal of liberty within Deadman Wonderland. Utilizing Cast Points, the prison's unique course of currency, prisoners can purchase a wide variety of items from ordinary lunches, luxurious furniture for their rooms, and even years off of their sentences. However, Cast Points can't exist used to buy the freedom of a Deadman. Those on death row likewise use Cast Points to purchase their life-saving candies.
Despite its identity every bit a prison and theme park, Deadman Wonderland houses a much darker clandestine. Hidden abroad from the eyes of tourists and the general prison house population is a massive underground facility known as "M Block". This is where the prison keeps their Deadmen secluded and where the Carnival Corpse arena is located. G Block likewise houses numerous laboratories and rooms where experiments on humans are performed and where scientists are attempting to harness the powers of the Deadmen for monetary and political gain.
Eventually, Ganta and his Deadman allies received the assistance of Makina, the master of the prison guards, to defeat Tsunenaga Tamaki. Rinichirō Hagire in Toto Sakagami's body assumed command of Deadman Wonderland while Tamaki committed suicide. After Deadman Wonderland was airtight, the necklaces were removed from the inmates. Most of the remaining inmates were transferred to different prisons where some of them were allowed a retrial.
Makina later rallies the Deadmen on a mission to infiltrate Deadman Wonderland and actuate the Mother Goose Program to completely seal the Wretched Egg (another name for the Crimson Man), with the resulting boxing destroying most of Deadman Wonderland.
Carnival Corpse [edit]
Deadman Wonderland runs a secret gladiator-like game chosen the Carnival Corpse (also referred to as the Funfair of Corpses), where wealthy anonymous donors pay to watch death-matches betwixt the prison house's Deadmen. The viewers of the Carnival Corpse also place their bets on who would win. The winner is awarded a large number of Cast Points, life-saving candies, and other prizes.
Deadmen who are defeated yet survive the game have a role of their anatomy surgically removed for scientific inquiry which is broadcast every bit part of the Corpse Carnival Post-Game Show. In a savage twist, the doctor spins a bird-shaped macabre slot machine to make up one's mind which part of the loser's trunk will exist removed (with the show being broadcast live to the other prisoners) by the doctor with the parts ranging from the eye (the correct 1 was removed from Senji), song cords (which were removed from Nagi), and the kidney, part of the breadbasket, and pilus (which were removed from Minatsuki). Other parts listed on the slot machine are hand, tongue, lip, nose, leg, molar, nail, heart, lungs, and brain.
When Tamaki unveiled the Forgeries in the Carnival Corpse, the arena was wrecked past a powerful assail from Ganta during a match between the Deadmen and the Forgeries.
Media [edit]
Manga [edit]
No. | Original release date | Original ISBN | North American release date | North American ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 26, 2007 | 978-4-04-713974-9 [6] | Feb 2, 2010 (Tokyopop) February 11, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-781741-ix (Tokyopop)[vii] 978-1-42-155548-5 (Viz Media)[viii] |
| ||||
2 | Dec 26, 2007 | 978-4-04-715014-0 [9] | June 1, 2010 (Tokyopop) April viii, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-781742-6 (Tokyopop)[10] 978-1-42-156410-4 (Viz Media)[eleven] |
| ||||
three | May 26, 2008 | 978-iv-04-715065-two [12] | September 28, 2010 (Tokyopop) June x, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-781743-3 (Tokyopop)[thirteen] 978-one-42-156411-1(Viz Media)[xiv] |
| ||||
4 | October 24, 2008 | 978-iv-04-715126-0 [15] | February ane, 2011 (Tokyopop) August 12, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-one-42-781744-0 (Tokyopop)[16] 978-1-42-156412-8 (Viz Media)[17] |
| ||||
five | April 25, 2009 | 978-iv-04-715207-6 [18] | June 22, 2011 (Tokyopop) October xiv, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-i-42-781790-vii (Tokyopop)[19] 978-1-42-156413-5 (Viz Media)[20] |
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6 | August 26, 2009 | 978-four-04-715279-3 [21] | December 9, 2014 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-156414-2 (Viz Media)[22] |
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seven | Jan 26, 2010 | 978-4-04-715365-three [23] | February x, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-ane-42-156415-9 (Viz Media)[24] |
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8 | Baronial 26, 2010 | 978-4-04-715506-0 [25] | April xiv, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-one-42-156416-half dozen (Viz Media)[26] |
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9 | March 26, 2011 | 978-four-04-715652-4 [27] | June 9, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-156417-three (Viz Media)[28] |
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x | May 26, 2011 | 978-iv-04-715699-9 [29] | August xi, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-one-42-156418-0 (Viz Media)[30] |
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11 | September 26, 2011 | 978-four-04-715802-3 [31] | October 13, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-156528-6 (Viz Media)[32] |
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12 | May 25, 2013 | 978-four-04-120730-seven [33] | December 8, 2015 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-156420-3 (Viz Media)[34] |
| ||||
13 | August 22, 2013 | 978-4-04-120777-2 [35] | February 9, 2016 (Viz Media) | 978-1-42-156419-seven (Viz Media)[36] |
|
Anime [edit]
On July 30, 2009, a retailers' solicitation canvas reported that an anime adaptation had been dark-green-lit.[37] It is animated past Manglobe and aired in Japan from April 17 to July three, 2011. An original video blitheness episode was released on October 8, 2011, aslope the eleventh manga book.[38] The opening theme is "One Reason" by DWB feat. Fade and the catastrophe theme is "Shiny Shiny" by Nirgilis. The serial is licensed past Funimation Entertainment and is now available on DVD and Blu-ray.[39] The anime was broadcast on the revived Toonami block from May 27 to August 12, 2012. The anime aired in Northward America on the Funimation Aqueduct on December 1, 2012.[40]
Music [edit]
Two pieces of theme music are used for the episodes: 1 opening theme and one ending theme. The opening theme is "1 Reason" by Deadman Wonder Ring (DWB) feat. Fade, while the ending is "Shiny Shiny" by DWB feat. NIRGILIS. The ii themes are used in all 13 episodes. Certain characters as well have their ain epitome songs: Ganta, Shiro, Genkaku and Minatsuki all have songs; these songs are created by DWB and NIRGILIS, with each character'south voice actor serving every bit vocaliser.
Communist china ban [edit]
On June 12, 2015, the Chinese Ministry of Civilization listed Deadman Wonderland among 38 anime and manga titles banned in Red china.[44]
Legacy [edit]
Shiro's costume is featured in the video game Lollipop Chainsaw.[45] It can exist unlocked during gameplay, by using the coins at the closet menu.[46]
References [edit]
- ^ a b "The Official Website for Deadman Wonderland". Viz Media. Retrieved Oct 28, 2017.
- ^ "Deadman Wonderland Returns to North America as Viz Media Release". Viz Media via Anime News Network. January thirty, 2014. Retrieved May thirteen, 2020.
DEADMAN WONDERLAND RETURNS TO North AMERICA AS VIZ MEDIA RELEASES Post APOCALYPTIC MANGA Series SET IN A BIZARRE FUTURISTIC PRISON
- ^ "Tokyopop to Close Northward American Publishing Partition". Anime News Network. 2011-04-15. Retrieved 2013-07-07 .
- ^ "Viz Media Adds Deadman Wonderland". Anime News Network. 2013-07-07. Retrieved 2013-07-07 .
- ^ Dong, Bamboo (October 22, 2012). "Shelf Life - Deadman Walking". Anime News Network . Retrieved October 11, 2015.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (one). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047139742.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 1. Tokyopop. two February 2010. ISBN978-1427817419.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland - Book ane. Viz Media. 11 February 2014. ISBN978-1421555485.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (2). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047150142.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. two. Tokyopop. June 2010. ISBN978-1427817426.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland - Volume 2. Viz Media. eight April 2014. ISBN978-1421564104.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (iii). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047150657.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland - Book 3. Tokyopop. 28 September 2010. ISBN978-1427817433.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. three. Viz Media. 10 June 2014. ISBN978-1421564111.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (4). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047151262.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland - Volume iv. Tokyopop. Feb 2011. ISBN978-1427817440.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 4. Viz Media. 12 August 2014. ISBN978-1421564128.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (5). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047152072.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland - Volume five. Tokyopop. 3 May 2011. ISBN978-1427817907.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. five. Viz Media. 14 October 2014. ISBN978-1421564135.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (6). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 404715279X.
- ^ Deadman Wonderland, Vol. half dozen. Viz Media. 9 Dec 2014. ISBN978-1421564142.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (7). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047153656.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (ten February 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 7. ISBN978-1421564159.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (8). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047155063.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (14 April 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. eight. ISBN978-1421564166.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (9). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4047156523.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (nine June 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 9. ISBN978-1421564173.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (10). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 404715699X.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (xi August 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. ten. ISBN978-1421564180.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (xi). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 404715802X.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (13 October 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 11. ISBN978-1421565286.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (12). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4041207304.
- ^ Kataoka, Jinsei (8 December 2015). Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 12. ISBN978-1421564203.
- ^ デッドマン・ワンダーランド (13). Kadokawa Shoten. ASIN 4041207770.
- ^ "Deadman Wonderland, Vol. 13". Amazon.com . Retrieved July 27, 2015.
- ^ "Deadman Wonderland Manga Gets Anime Green-Lit". Anime News Network. 2009-07-30. Retrieved 2010-ten-20 .
- ^ "Deadman Wonderland (11) Original Anime DVD Limited Edition" オンライン ショッピング 通販 | 角川書店・角川グループ (in Japanese). Kadokawa.co.jp. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved xix October 2016.
- ^ "Funimation Adds Deadman Wonderland, Steins;Gate and More". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2 July 2011.
- ^ "Funimation Week 49 of 2012". Funimation Amusement. 20 November 2012. Archived from the original on 2013-01-24. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ a b c d デッドマン・ワンダーランド (in Japanese). Web Newtype. Archived from the original on March thirteen, 2011. Retrieved May 3, 2011.
- ^ a b c d デッドマン・ワンダーランド (in Japanese). Web Newtype. Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
- ^ a b c d デッドマン・ワンダーランド (in Japanese). Web Newtype. Archived from the original on July 2, 2011. Retrieved June 10, 2011.
- ^ "China bans 38 anime & manga titles including Attack on Titan". Special Broadcasting Service. 2015-06-12. Retrieved 2018-08-31 .
- ^ Saabedra, Humberto (March six, 2012). "New Japanese "Lollipop Chainsaw" Costume DLC Goes Anime". Crunchyroll . Retrieved July 29, 2015.
- ^ Luster, Joseph (May ten, 2012). "Full N American "Lollipop Chainsaw" Outfit Listing Revealed". Crunchyroll . Retrieved July 29, 2015.
External links [edit]
- Deadman Wonderland (manga) at Anime News Network'due south encyclopedia
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deadman_Wonderland
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