Karasu Tengu Kabuto

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Karasu Tengu Kabuto
Cover of the Taiwanese edition of volume 2 of the manga Karasu Tengu Kabuto
鴉天狗カブト
GenreHistorical fantasy[1]
Manga
Written byBuichi Terasawa
Published byShueisha
English publisherComicsOne
MagazineFresh Jump
DemographicShōnen
Original run19871988
Volumes2
Anime television series
Directed byGen Fukuda
Takashi Watanabe
Written byHideki Mitsui
StudioTerasawa Production
Original networkNHK
Original run July 29, 1990 June 30, 1991
Episodes39 (26 episodes to cover the manga with 13 episodes to new additions on re-used episodes as specials)
US Renditions
(defunct)
ReleasedJuly 24, 1992
Runtime45 minutes

Karasu Tengu Kabuto (鴉天狗カブト, lit. "Crow Goblin Kabuto") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Buichi Terasawa in 1987.

Plot

Those who have the blood of the Karasu

Genbu (Black Snaky Tortoise), Suzaku (Red Phoenix), Seiryu (Blue Dragon), Byakko (White Tiger), Karasu Tengu Kabuto
fights against the evil god Kuroyasha (Black Night Demon) Dôki and his underlings such as Junin-shu (Top Ten Warriors). Their battle continues through generations: in the second volume of the manga, Kabuto's son makes an appearance as the second Karasu Tengu.

Media

Manga

The manga has been serialized in Shueisha's Fresh Jump in 1987–1988, and later published in the United States by ComicsOne (as Kabuto in 2001),[2]

Anime

The manga was later adapted into the 39-episode anime series written by Hideki Mitsui and directed by Gen Fukuda and Takashi Watanabe in 1990–1991, premiering on NHK BS-2 on July 29, 1990. There were also six special episodes.

Episodes 14 to 26, which tell an anime-original storyline, have never been released on home video, even in Japan. Episodes 1 to 13, which cover Volume 1 of the manga, & Episodes 27 to 39, which cover Volume 2, were released on VHS & LD, both in their original episode forms & via four compilation movies, but the middle portion of the anime only ever aired on TV.

Original video animation

An

US Renditions in 1992.[3]

References

  1. ^ Ross, Carlos. "Raven Tengu Kabuto: The Golden-Eyed Beast". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  2. ^ Kabuto, Volume 1
  3. ^ Kabuto the Golden Eye Monster (VHS)

External links