Kiteretsu Daihyakka
This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Article need more general cleanup to comply with MOS:A&M. The anime section itself needs to be completely reorganized to discuss the anime series and not be a cast & staff listing. (April 2015) |
Kiteretsu Daihyakka | |
Volume 1 of the Kiteretsu Daihyakka manga.
|
|
キテレツ大百科 | |
---|---|
Manga | |
Written by | Fujiko Fujio |
Published by | Family Light Association |
Demographic | Children |
Magazine | Kodomo no Hikari |
Original run | April 1974 – July 1977 |
Volumes | 3 |
Manga | |
Shin Kiteretsu Daihyakka | |
Written by | Fujiko Fujio |
Illustrated by | Michiaki Tanaka |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Demographic | Children |
Magazine | CoroCoro Comic |
Original run | May 1988 – February 1994 |
Volumes | 6 |
Live-action television film | |
Network | Fuji TV |
Released | November 2, 1987 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Hiro Katsuoka Keiji Hayakawa |
Music by | Shunsuke Kikuchi |
Studio | Studio Gallop |
Network | Fuji TV |
Original run | March 27, 1988 – June 9, 1996 |
Episodes | 331 |
Game | |
Kiteretsu Daihyakka: Bouken Ouedo Juraki | |
Publisher | Video System |
Genre | Action |
Platform | Game Boy |
Released | July 15, 1994 |
Game | |
Kiteretsu Daihyakka: Chōjikū Sugoroku | |
Developer | Fill in Cafe |
Publisher | Video System |
Genre | Boardgame |
Platform | Super Famicom |
Released | January 27, 1995 |
Kiteretsu Daihyakka (キテレツ大百科?) (Also known as Kiteretsu Encyclopedia or only Kiteretsu) is a science fiction manga series by Fujiko Fujio aka Hiroshi Fujimoto which ran in the children's magazine Kodomo no Hikari from April 1974 to July 2000. The manga was later made into a 331-episode anime TV series which ran on Fuji TV from March 27, 1988 to June 9, 1996. This series is currently airing worldwide on Hungama TV, Disney XD, Cartoon Network Korea and Pogo TV as of 2014.
Contents
Plot[edit]
The show is set in the fictional Hyōno-chō, which is set in an ambiguous location featuring a rural-style train station, a department store, and a shopping district. The fictional neighboring town of Urano-chō is where Miyoko's aunt lives. In the anime, Miyoko speaks in Toyama dialect which attributed to that town.
The fictional Hyakujōshima is the location of the Tongari family's vacation home. A family of kabocha farmers lives there and takes care of the place. The island is sparsely populated because many people move from it. It is accessible from Tokyo via airplane and ferry.
Two fictional schools are mentioned in the series: Hyōno Elementary and Takao University. Hyōno Elementary is the public school Kiteretsu and his friends attend. During summer vacation, one of the lunch ladies uses the school to teach piano lessons. There is also a rumor that the school is haunted.
Benzō-san was able to enter the university after attempting it six times during the series. Ten years from the time period of the series beginning, Kiteretsu, Miyoko, and Tongari enter this university to study further.
Characters[edit]
- Eiichi Kite
- Eiichi Kite aka. 'Kiteretsu' is a 10-year-old boy who lives in Tokyo city. He usually wears a light blue T-shirt and a dark blue trouser. He also wears a green shoes, white socks and a red-yellow themed cap with K written on it. He is weak in sports. He reads the Daiyhakka and invents gadgets from past
- Korosuke
- Korosuke is Kiteretsu's assistant who usually ends his sentences with ~nari . He usually wears an artificial samurai sword . He is an invention in the encyclopedia.
- Miyoko Nonohana
- Miyoko Nonohana is one of Kiteretsu's best friends. She is an intelligent girl, admired by boys.
- Kaoru Kumada
- Kaoru Kumada (nicknamed Butagorira) is one of Kiteretsu's friends. He is a Typical Bully but in progress, he becomes comic relief.
- Tongari
- Tongari is one of Kiteretsu's best friends. He is easily frightened, and a best friend of Butagorira (Kaoru Kumada)
Media[edit]
Manga[edit]
- Kiteretsu Daihyakka vol. 1–3 (Tentōmushi Comics, Shogakukan, 1977)
- Kiteretsu Daihyakka vol. 1–4 (Fujiko Fujio Land, Chūō Kōron Shinsha, 1984)
- Kiteretsu Daihyakka vol. 1–2 (Shogakukan Koro Koro Bunko, Shogakukan, 1984)
- My First BIG Kiteretsu vol. 1–2 (Shogakukan, 2003)
Television drama[edit]
In January 2002, NHK aired a two-hour one-shot live action drama featuring a CGI Korosuke voiced by Mami Koyama. It was originally aired on NHK Educational TV on January 1, 2002.
Games[edit]
- On February 23, 1990, Epoch released an action game for the Famicom.
- On July 15, 1994, another action game, Kiteretsu Daihyakka: Bouken Ouedo Juraki, was released by Video System for the Game Boy.
- A board game titled Kiteretsu Daihyakka: Chōjikū Sugoroku was released on January 27, 1995 by Video System for the Super Famicom.
- Another game was made for the Sega Pico.[citation needed]
Anime[edit]
Cast[edit]
- Eiichi Kite (Kiteretsu): Toshiko Fujita
- Korosuke: Mami Koyama→Kazuko Sugiyama
- Miyoko Nonoka: Yuriko Yamamoto→Mayumi Shō→Chieko Honda
- Miyoko's mother: Kimie Hangai→Yuka Ōno→Miyako Endō
- Miyoko's father: Yūki Satō
- Akihiko Nonoka: Keiichi Nanba→Hiroshi Kamiya
- Bhuta Gorilla (Kaoru Kumada): Hiroshi Ōtake→Naoki Tatsuta
- Kumahachi Kumada: Takeshi Aono
- Sayuri Kumada: Noriko Uemura
- Kōji Togari (Tongari): Ryū Manatsu→Yūji Mitsuya
- Kōichi Togari: Sanshirō Niita→Hirohiko Kakegawa→Masato Hirano
- Takako Togari: Yuka Ōno
- Benzō Karino (Benzō-san): Kaneta Kimotsuki
- Michiko Kite: Yuri Nashiwa→Sumi Shimamoto
- Kiteretsu Kite: Kaneta Kimotsuki→Yusaku Yara (adult: Katsuji Mori; youth: Daisuke Sakaguchi)
- Eitarō Kite: Hideyuki Tanaka→Yusaku Yara
- Sasaki-sensei: Masaharu Satō→Masato Hirano
- Otonashi: Chie Satō→Yumi Touma
- Takako Segawa: Miyoko Aoba→Kimie Hangai
- Vice-Principal: Michihiro Ikemizu
- Sasaki-sensei's wife: Miyoko Aoba
- Kazuma Sasaki: unknown
- Kimiko Uehara (Yūki Uehara in the anime): Naho Yoshida→Miyako Endō
- Konchi: Noriko Uemura→Chie Satō
- Taeko Sakurai: Mayumi Seto→Yūka Koyama→Aya Hisakawa
- Satsuki Hanamaru: Wakana Yamazaki
- Yone Karino: Keiko Yamamoto→Haru Endō→Michiyo Yanagisawa
- Osugi: Hiroko Emori
- Heikichi: Kinpei Azusa→Ryōichi Tanaka
- Yoshie Sakurai: Chiyoko Kawashima→Sumi Shimamoto
- Kikunojō Hanamaru: Bin Shimada→Yukimasa Kishino
- Ikue Hanamaru: Sumi Shimamoto
- Ben: Hiroshi Ōtake→unknown
- Mōretsu Toki: unknown
- Mōretsu Kazu: Yūsuke Numata
- Koronoshin: unknown
- Mamekoro: Naoko Watanabe→Fushigi Yamada
Staff[edit]
- Planning: Taihei Ishikawa→Kenji Shimizu (Fuji TV), Yoshirō Kataoka (Asatsu)
- Producers:
- Kenji Shimizu→Minoru Wada→Yoshihiro Suzuki (Fuji TV)
- Yoshio Kataoka→Kazuhiko Ishikawa→Tateshi Yamazaki→Yutaka Sugiyama (Asatsu)
- Akio Wakana (Gallop)
- Tetsuo Kanno (Staff 21)
- Script: Shun'ichi Yukimuro, Takashi Yamada, Toshiyuki Aoshima, Satoshi Namiki, Tadaaki Yamazaki
- General Animation Directors: Tsukasa Tannai, Kazuyuki Kobayashi, Hajime Watanabe, Nobuyuki Tokinaga, Shōjurō Yamauchi
- Art Director: Shichirō Kobayashi→Satoshi Shibata
- Background Artists: Masahide Katayama, Akio Shimada, Makoto Shiraishi, Satoshi Shibata, Naoko Osakabe
- Backgrounds: Kobayashi Production, Studio Kanon
- Finish Animation: Sendai Gallop, Toy House, Studio Killy→Dōtomo Dōga
- Director of Photography: Shigeo Sugimura (credited as Yasuhiro Shimizu for part of it)→Hiroaki Edamitsu
- Photography ·Animation Work: Gallop
- Film: Eastman→Fujifilm→Kodak Color Film
- Music Director: Nobuhiro Komatsu
- Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Director: Hiro Katsuoka→Keiji Hayakawa
- Special Effects: Norimichi Yoshino→Yoshitaka Shishikai
- Editors: Shūichi Kakesu, Yoshiyuki Wada→Kazuhiko Seki, Yūji Itō
- Film Developing: Imagica
- Audio Recording: Sadashi Kuramoto
- Titles: Maki Pro
- Executive Producer: Mikio Wakana
- Communications Desk: Hideo Adachi
- Planning Support: Staff 21
- Sound Production: Seiji Kikaku
- Sound Producer: Yōsuke Kuroda
- Sound Effects: Yōzō Kataoka
- Theme Song: Shigeru Miyashita
- Publicity: Yumiko Shigeoka→Kyōko Nasugawa→Yoshiko Kawasaki→Masahide Takahashi→Momoko Konaka→Tomoko Kumagai (Fuji TV)
- Production: Fuji TV, Asatsu
Theme songs[edit]
Opening theme songs[edit]
Listing includes the song title followed by the episodes and the singer in parentheses.
- Kiteretsu Daihyakka no Uta (90-minute special on November 2, 1987, Mitsuko Horie)
- Oyome-san ni Natte Agenaizo (ep. 1–24, Kaori Moritani)
- Body dake Lady (ep. 25–60, Junko Uchida)
- Yumemiru Jikan (ep. 61–86, Megumi Mori)
- Hajimete no Chū (ep. 87–108, Anshin Papa)
- Suimin Fuskou (ep. 109–170, Chicks)
- Oryōri Kōshinkyoku (ep. 171–331, Yuka)
Ending theme songs[edit]
Listing includes the song title followed by the episodes and the singer in parentheses.
- Korosuke Machi wo Yuku (90-minute special, Kyōko Yamada)
- Magical Boy Magical Heart (ep. 1–16, Kaori Moritani)
- Race no Cardigan (ep. 17–24, Kaori Sakagami)
- Korosuke Rock (ep. 25–60, Junko Uchida)
- Felt no Pencase (ep. 61–86, Megumi Mori)
- Merry ha tada no Tomodachi (ep. 87–108, Toshiko Fujita)
- Hajimete no Chū (ep. 109–170, 213–290, 311–331, Anshin Papa)
- Happy Birthday (ep. 171–212, Yuka)
- Uwasa no Kiss (ep. 291–310, TOKIO)
Reception[edit]
The anime was ranked 31st on a list published by TV Asahi in 2005 of the top 100 anime.[1]
References[edit]
- ^ "TV Asahi Top 100 Anime Part 2". Anime News Network. September 23, 2005. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
External links[edit]
- Official Tokyo MX website
- Official Cartoon Network Korea page
- Kiteretsu Daihyakka (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
|
- Manga series
- 1974 manga
- 1988 manga
- Japanese television specials
- 1988 anime television series
- 1987 television specials
- 1988 Japanese television series debuts
- 1996 Japanese television series endings
- Children's manga
- CoroCoro Comic
- Fujiko Fujio
- Fuji Television shows
- Tokyo Metropolitan Television shows
- Japanese children's television series
- Japanese television dramas based on manga
- Shogakukan manga
- Shunsuke Kikuchi