Kimba the White Lion

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Kimba the White Lion
Artwork from the Kimba Ultra Edition DVD set
ジャングル大帝
(Janguru Taitei)
Manga
Written by
Jippi English Comics (bilingual)[1]
MagazineManga Shōnen
DemographicShōnen
Original runNovember 1950April 1954
Volumes3
Anime television series
Directed by
Cartoon Network
  • Original run October 6, 1965 September 28, 1966
    Episodes52[2]
    Anime film
    Directed byEiichi Yamamoto
    StudioMushi Production
    ReleasedJuly 31, 1966
    Runtime74 minutes
    Anime television series
    • Leo the Lion
    Anime television series
    Released1991
    Runtime51 minutes
    Anime film
    Anime film
    Jungle Emperor Leo: Hon-o-ji
    Directed byFumihiro Yoshimura
    Produced byMinoru Kubota
    Written byMayumi Morita
    StudioBeijing Sharaku Art
    Media.Vision
    ReleasedMarch 18, 2000
    Runtime9 minutes
    Anime television film
    Jungle Taitei: Yūki ga Mirai wo Kaeru
    Directed byGorō Taniguchi
    Written byOsamu Suzuki
    Music byTakefumi Haketa
    StudioTezuka Productions
    Licensed by
    Original networkFuji TV
    ReleasedSeptember 5, 2009
    Runtime96 minutes

    Kimba the White Lion, known in Japan as Jungle Emperor (Japanese: ジャングル大帝, Hepburn: Janguru Taitei), is a Japanese shōnen manga series written and illustrated by Osamu Tezuka which was serialized in the Manga Shōnen magazine from November 1950 to April 1954. An anime based on the manga was created by Mushi Production and was broadcast on Fuji Television from 1965 to 1967. It was the first color animated television series created in Japan.[3] It began airing in North America from 1966. The later series was produced by Tezuka Productions.[4][5]

    A TV special premiered September 5, 2009, on Fuji TV. Produced in commemoration of Fuji TV's 50th anniversary, it was directed by Gorō Taniguchi, written by novelist and drama writer Osamu Suzuki, and featuring character designs from illustrator Yoshitaka Amano.

    Plot

    In Africa during the mid-20th century, as mankind encroaches, the white lion Panja (Caesar in the English dub) gives the jungle's wild animals a safe haven. However, he angers nearby villagers by stealing their cattle and their food to feed the jungle carnivores (in the English dub he merely frees the cattle). A professional hunter, Ham Egg (Viper Snakely in the English dub), is called in to stop these raids. He avoids directly attacking Panja. Instead, he records the sounds of Panja and uses them to trap his pregnant mate, Eliza, who then becomes bait in a trap for Panja. Panja is killed for his hide (but not before asking Eliza to name their child Kimba), and Eliza is put on a ship, destined for a zoo.

    Kimba (Leo in Japanese[b]) is born on the ship. Eliza teaches him his father's ideals. As a huge tropical storm nears, she urges her cub out through the bars of her cage. The storm wrecks the ship and Kimba starts to drown in the ocean. The fish help him learn to swim. As he begins to despair, the stars in the sky form the face of his mother, who encourages him. Guided by butterflies, he makes it to land. Kimba lands far from his ancestral home and is found and cared for by some people. He learns the advantages of human culture, and decides that when he returns to his wild home he will bring culture to the jungle and stand for peace like his father. The show follows Kimba's life after he returns to the wild, still a young cub, and how he learns and grows in the next year. Kimba soon learns that only communication and mutual understanding between animals and humans will bring true peace.

    Media

    Manga

    In 1950, the original Jungle Emperor story started in Manga Shōnen (Comic Boy) magazine.

    The first manga volume has been released bilingually (Japanese-English) as Jungle Emperor Leo – Leo Edition.[7][8]

    Anime

    1965 series

    Image of Kimba from the anime Kimba the White Lion

    The animated series was first broadcast in Japan on Fuji Television from October 6, 1965, to September 28, 1966.[9] It was the first color TV anime series.[citation needed]

    Other than the original broadcast in Japan in 1965, the series has been broadcast in many countries around the world.

    In Asia, it was broadcast in

    Saudi TV and in Sri Lanka on ART TV.[citation needed
    ]

    In Europe, it was broadcast in

    ]

    In North America, it was broadcast in Canada on Knowledge; in Mexico on

    Paul J. Zaza. In 2012 Bayview Entertainment/Widowmaker releases "Kimba the White Lion: The Complete Series" 10 DVD box set of the original 1965 series.[11] It was broadcast several times in the United States: on KHJ-TV (1965–1967; Billie Lou Watt dub), on NBC (1965–1977, re-runs until 1980; Billie Lou Watt dub), on syndication (1965–1977; Billie Lou Watt dub; 1993, re-runs until 1995; Yvonne Murray dub), on Kids & Teens TV (1993 re-runs; 2005–2009) and on Inspiration Life TV (1993 re-runs; 2005–2009).[citation needed
    ]

    In Oceania, it was broadcast in Australia on

    31 Brisbane and Access 31 and on the NZBC in New Zealand.[citation needed
    ]

    1966 film

    The theatrical version of Jungle Emperor, directed by Eiichi Yamamoto, was released in Japan on July 31, 1966.[12]

    1966 series

    A sequel series,

    Jungle Taitei: Susume Leo! (Jungle Emperor: Onward, Leo!) first aired in Japan on Fuji Television from October 5, 1966, to March 29, 1968,[13] featuring Leo (Kimba) as an adult. It aired in the United States in 1984 as Leo the Lion on CBN Cable Network.[citation needed
    ]

    1989 series

    In 1989, Dr. Osamu Tezuka died at age 60 on February 9. A

    Pioneer Family Entertainment. It features the voice of Brad Swaile as Kimba.[citation needed
    ]

    1991 OVA film

    In 1991, an original video animation film was created,[15] using the Symphonic Poem for its audio.[citation needed]

    1997 film

    A new Jungle Taitei theatrical film, Jungle Emperor Leo, was released in Japan on August 1, 1997.[16] Directed by Hiro Takeuchi, it is based on the second half of Dr. Tezuka's original manga story; it is not entirely faithful, however. It was dubbed into English and released on DVD in 2003 under the name Jungle Emperor Leo by Anime Works. The film was later released on Blu-ray and DVD by Discotek. In 1997 Julian Grant the head of the Fant-Asia film festival received a Cease-and-Desist from the Disney company to attempt to keep the Jungle Emperor Leo film from showing at the festival. Despite the order, the film screened to a full house. However, this is the last North American screening the film would ever receive.

    The film had a distribution income of ¥430 million ($5.39 million) at the Japanese box office in 1997.[17]

    2000 short film

    A 9-minute anime short was released in Japan on March 18, 2000 titled Jungle Emperor Leo: Hon-o-ji. It was shown at a theater at Tezuka Osamu World in Kyoto.[citation needed]

    2009 television film

    A television film, Jungle Taitei – Yūki ga Mirai wo Kaeru (ジャングル大帝 勇気が未来をかえる), aired in Japan on September 5, 2009,[18] with a completely new story, different from both the previous TV shows and the original manga. The setting was an artificially created jungle in 20XX Earth. In this movie, Panja and his mate, Eliza, are still alive; Coco is an unspecified female bird; and Sylvester, the black panther, serves as an antagonist until he changes his ways when a young boy mends his leg.[19]

    In 2019, the Japan Foundation produced an English dub of the film which was released on RetroCrush in July 2020.

    An earlier English dub of the film premiered on Cartoon Network in the Philippines on November 19, 2010.[20]

    Other media

    The music video for the song "A Boy" by Leo Ieiri, which has an animated part made by Tezuka Productions,[21] features an anime version of the singer (based on Kimba and modeled after the singer) which meets other characters from the Kimba the White Lion series.[22]

    Jungle Emperor (ジャングル大帝 Jungle Taitei) is a cancelled 1990 eight-bit platform action game that was in development by Taito for the

    E3 1998, Mr. Miyamoto mentioned that the project is in a bit of trouble and may take longer to complete than originally expected, due to inexperience. It was unfortunately soon followed by the cancellation.[citation needed
    ]

    Jungle Emperor characters have cameos in the GBA game Astro Boy: Omega Factor, as well as a chapter from the Black Jack manga and Naoki Urasawa's Pluto.[citation needed]

    In the sixth episode of Season 2 of the Fox TV series Fringe, Earthling, Kimba had a cameo in one of the episodes.[citation needed]

    Music

    The series uses several themes. The 1966 Japanese version uses an opening theme and a closing theme. The opening is called "Jungle-Taitei" (ジャングル大帝, Janguru-Taitei, "Jungle Emperor"). The end song is "Leo no Uta" (レオのうた, Reo no Uta, "Leo's Song"). For the Japanese remake, the opening song is "Savanna o Koete" (サバンナを越えて, Sabanna wo Koete, "Past the Savanna") sung by Ichiro Mizuki, and the ending is "Yūbae ni Nare" (夕映えになれ) sung by Tomoko Tokugai.

    The American theme was written by Bernie Baum, Bill Giant and Florence Kaye and sung by Bill Giant. The opening song for the sequel series is "Go Ahead Onward Leo!" written by Isao Tomita and sung by Mieko Hirota. The US-English theme song known as "Leo the Lion" was written by Mark Boccaccio and Susan Brunet of Miami, Florida's SONIC-Sound International Corporation in 1984. Jungle Emperor Symphonic Poem (by Isao Tomita) was released on LP in 1966.

    Claims of resemblance to The Lion King

    Screenshot from an early presentation reel of The Lion King that shows a white lion cub and a butterfly

    After the 1994 release of

    story resembling those of Kimba.[23] Fred Ladd, the English-language producer, referred to the parallels as "stunning".[24] Similarities in visual sequences have also been noted, most comprehensively by animation historian Fred Patten who published an essay on the subject.[23] Patten would later go on to say that allegations that The Lion King was "simply [an] imitation" of Kimba were "not true",[25] and that many fans who had not seen the show since childhood—or at all—had "exaggerated the similarities".[26] Matthew Broderick, the voice actor for the adult Simba, recalled in an interview back in 1994 that he once believed that he was cast in a project about Kimba, bringing up memories of watching the series as a child.[27]

    Upon the release of The Lion King in Japan, multiple Japanese cartoonists signed a letter urging The Walt Disney Company to acknowledge due credit to The Jungle Emperor in the making of The Lion King.[28] 488 Japanese cartoonists and animators signed the petition, which drew a protest in Japan, where Tezuka and Kimba are cultural icons.[29][30]

    Addressing alleged similarities between characters, The Lion King director Roger Allers stated it was "not unusual to have characters like a baboon, a bird, or hyenas" in films set in Africa.[31] Additionally, the word simba is simply the Swahili word for 'lion',[32] which Fred Ladd acknowledges could account for the similarly-named protagonists;[33] in fact, Leo (the protagonist's original name) was initially going to be changed in the English dub to "Simba", but an NBC executive changed the protagonist's name to Kimba during development.[32] According to Ladd, this was because the executive found Simba "too common", which would make it difficult to maintain rights over the character's name.[33]

    Tezuka's family and Tezuka Productions have never pursued litigation against The Walt Disney Company for copyright infringement. Yoshihiro Shimizu, the company's director, stated that many of their employees saw resemblances between the two properties, but "any similarities in their plots are based in the facts of nature and therefore are two different works".[33] In his book, Makoto Tezuka states that the controversy started in America and people inflated the issue because of their opposition to Disney's business practices. He also states that he refuses to participate in this denunciation of Disney and that he does not want to see his father's works being turned into a weapon for those people. Tezuka acknowledges that Kimba and The Lion King are two different stories with different themes, and if the latter was about a white lion who spoke with humans, then he would not be able to pardon the similarities.[34]

    Reception

    In 1967, the Jungle Emperor theatrical feature was awarded the St. Mark's Silver Lion Award at the 19th Venice International Film Festival.[citation needed]

    Commercial use

    In 1978, the adult Leo character, designed by Tezuka himself, became the mascot for the Seibu Lions (current

    Frederick L. Schodt makes the argument that by the 1980s, Leo the lion could hardly escape the notice of foreign visitors to the city.[37]

    Image from the Jungle Emperor manga appears on shirts made by Lacoste in cooperation with Tezuka Productions for their "Lacoste Live" capsule collection "Tezuka Collection", edition Fall/Winter 2013/2014.[39]

    See also

    Notes

    1. Nozomi Entertainment
      .
    2. MGM lion.[6]

    References

    1. Jippi English Comics
      . December 26, 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2019.
    2. ^ "Which Is The Real Kimba?". Animation World Network.
    3. ^ "Kimba Boxed Set : DVD Talk Review of the DVD Video". Dvdtalk.com. Retrieved November 28, 2012.
    4. ^ "Kimba the White Lion Dub.DVD – Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved March 21, 2012.
    5. ^ "Tezuka Lion King | 'Lion King' recalls beast of another reign". Baltimore Sun. San Francisco Chronicle. July 12, 1994. Archived from the original on February 10, 2015. Retrieved February 21, 2015.
    6. ^ Schweizer & Schweizer (1998), p. 172.
    7. .
    8. ^ "Bilingual Manga: Comics for language learners young and old". MetropolisJapan. April 22, 2014.
    9. ^ ジャングル大帝. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    10. ^ "Kimba The White Lion: History of the original series". Kimbawlion.com. Retrieved July 19, 2014.
    11. ^ "Kimba the White Lion: The Complete Series". Amazon. July 9, 2013.
    12. ^ ジャングル大帝. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    13. ^ ジャングル大帝進めレオ!. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    14. ^ ジャングル大帝. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    15. ^ アニメ交響詩ジャングル大帝. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    16. ^ ジャングル大帝 劇場版(1997). Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    17. ^ "1997年邦画作品配給収入". Kinema Junpo (1998年(平成10年)2月下旬号). キネマ旬報社: 168. 1998.
    18. ^ ジャングル大帝-勇気が未来をかえる-. Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved April 10, 2015.
    19. ^ "TAF 2009: Osamu Tezuka's "Kimba the White Lion" to be renewed in summer 2009 – GIGAZINE". En.gigazine.net. March 19, 2009. Archived from the original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2012.
    20. ^ "Cartoon Network Philippines - free online games & videos". Cartoon Network Philippines. Archived from the original on November 13, 2010. Retrieved September 18, 2020.
    21. ^ "Leo Ieiri Makes Jungle Emperor/Kimba the White Lion Music Video". Anime News Network. February 18, 2014. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
    22. ^ "Crunchyroll – VIDEO: Leo Ieiri Collaborates with Osamu Tezuka's "Jungle Emperor" in the Latest PV". Crunchyroll. Retrieved March 13, 2014.
    23. ^
    24. ^ Chronicle, San Francisco (July 12, 1994). "'Lion King' recalls beast of another reign". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved September 29, 2021.
    25. ^ Patten (2003): "...And this made it look, uh, to fans who didn't know the full story, as additional proof that The Lion King was simply a, uh, imitation of, uh, the 1960s, uh, Kimba TV series, which was not true."
    26. ^ Patten (2003): "Now, a lot of the American fans had not seen Kimba themselves, or if they had it was only when they were young children, because it hadn't been on American television since the late 1970s. So they were not that familiar with the details themselves, and some of them, uh, exaggerated the similarities between Kimba and Disney's movies."
    27. ^ "Was 'The Lion King' Copied from a Japanese Cartoon? Here's the Real Story". January 27, 2015.
    28. Tokyo, Japan
      . Retrieved January 6, 2015.
    29. .
    30. ^ "Japanese animator protests 'Lion King'". United Press International. August 18, 1994.
    31. ^ Welkos, Robert W. (July 13, 1994). "A 'Kimba' Surprise for Disney : Movies: 'The Lion King' is a hit, but reported similarities to the Japanese-created American cartoon of the '60s are raising some questions". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
    32. ^ a b "Emperor of the Jungle". April 22, 1998. Retrieved May 2, 2022.
    33. ^
      ISSN 0190-8286
      . Retrieved November 25, 2020.
    34. .
    35. ^ a b "Seibu reo māku yunifōmu ni hatsu tōjō! Oyagaisha 100 shūnen kinen" 西武レオマーク ユニホームに初登場!親会社100周年記念. Sponichi Annex. December 19, 2013.
    36. ^ "Jungle Emperor appears on the uniform of Seibu Lions! : News : TezukaOsamu.net(EN)". TezukaOsamu.net. Archived from the original on July 30, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2014.
    37. ^ a b Schodt (2014), p. 272.
    38. ^ "Designer Hiroaki Ohya Speaks on LACOSTE L!VE x Osamu Tezuka Collaboration". lifeandtimes.com. Retrieved March 24, 2014.

    Bibliography

    External links