When Does Jojo Become About Fashion

Japanese manga serial by Hirohiko Araki and its franchise

JoJo's Bizarre Adventure
JoJo no Kimyou na Bouken cover - vol1.jpg

Volume 1 tankōbon cover of Phantom Claret, featuring Dio Brando (left), Jonathan Joestar (center right), and Danny (bottom right)

ジョジョの奇妙な冒険
( JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken )
Genre Hazard, fantasy, supernatural[1]
Manga
Written by Hirohiko Araki
Published past Shueisha
English publisher

NA

Viz Media (parts 1–6)

Imprint Leap Comics
Magazine
  • Weekly Shōnen Spring
  • (1987–2004)
  • Ultra Jump
  • (2005–nowadays)
Demographic Shōnen, seinen
Original run January 1, 1987 – present
Volumes 131 (List of volumes)
Manga parts
  1. Phantom Claret (1987–1988)
  2. Battle Trend (1988–1989)
  3. Stardust Crusaders (1989–1992)
  4. Diamond Is Unbreakable (1992–1995)
  5. Golden Wind (1995–1999)
  6. Stone Ocean (2000–2003)
  7. Steel Ball Run (2004–2011)
  8. JoJolion (2011–2021)
Anime
  • JoJo'south Baroque Adventure (OVA series)
  • Phantom Blood (movie)
  • JoJo's Baroque Hazard (Tv series)
Related media
  • JoJo's Bizarre Adventure video games
  • JoJo's Bizarre Adventure low-cal novels
  • JoJo's Baroque Run a risk 1-shots
  • JoJo's Baroque Gamble: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter I (live-activity film)
Wikipe-tan face.svg Anime and manga portal

JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken ) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated past Hirohiko Araki. It was originally serialized in Shueisha'due south shōnen manga mag Weekly Shōnen Spring from 1987 to 2004, and was transferred to the monthly seinen manga magazine Ultra Leap in 2005. The series is divided into nine story arcs, each post-obit a new protagonist bearing the "JoJo" nickname. JoJo'southward Baroque Adventure is Shueisha's largest ongoing manga series past book count, with its chapters collected in 130 tankōbon volumes equally of May 2021.

A 13-episode original video animation series adapting the manga'southward tertiary role, Stardust Crusaders, was produced by A.P.P.P. and released from 1993 to 2002. The studio after produced an anime movie adapting the first role, Phantom Claret, which was released in theaters in Japan in 2007. In October 2012, an anime television serial produced by David Product adapting Phantom Claret and Battle Tendency began broadcast on Tokyo MX. As of December 2021, the studio has produced five seasons adapting through the manga'due south sixth part, Rock Ocean. A alive-activity film based on the 4th part, Diamond Is Unbreakable, was released in Japan in 2017.

JoJo'due south Bizarre Take a chance is well-known for its art style and poses; frequent references to Western popular music and style; and battles centered around Stands, psycho-spiritual manifestations with unique supernatural abilities. The series had over 120 million copies in apportionment as of December 2021, making it one of the best-selling manga series in history, and it has spawned a media franchise including one-shot manga, light novels, and video games. The manga, TV anime, and live-activeness film are licensed in North America by Viz Media, which has produced various English-language releases of the series since 2005.

Plot

The universe of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is a reflection of the real globe with the added existence of supernatural forces and beings.[ii] In this setting, some people are capable of transforming their inner spiritual power into a Stand up ( スタンド , Sutando ); another significant form of energy is Hamon ( 波紋 , "Ripple"), a martial arts technique that allows its user to focus bodily free energy into sunlight via controlled breathing. The narrative of JoJo'due south Bizarre Adventure is split into parts with contained stories and different characters. Each of the series' protagonists is a fellow member of the Joestar family unit, whose mainline descendants possess a star-shaped birthmark to a higher place their left shoulder blade and a name that tin can exist abbreviated to the titular "JoJo".[a] The first six parts take identify within a unmarried continuity whose generational conflict stems from the rivalry betwixt Jonathan Joestar and Dio Brando, while the latter two parts take place in an alternate universe where the Joestar family tree is heavily contradistinct.

Part 1: Phantom Blood ( ファントムブラッド , Fantomu Buraddo )
Volumes one–five, 44 chapters. In tardily 19th-century England, Jonathan Joestar, the young son of a wealthy landowner, meets his new adopted blood brother Dio Brando, who loathes him and plans to usurp him as heir to the Joestar family. When Dio's attempts are thwarted, he transforms himself into a vampire using an aboriginal Rock Mask and destroys the Joestar estate. Jonathan embarks on a journey, meets new allies, and masters the Hamon ( 波紋 , "Ripple") martial arts technique to stop Dio, who has fabricated earth domination his new goal.
Part 2: Battle Tendency ( 戦闘潮流 , Sentō Chōryū )
Volumes 5–12, 69 capacity. In 1938, a German trek discovers and awakens a Pillar Man, a powerful humanoid whose race created the Stone Mask. The Pillar Man kills the researchers and escapes to awaken the other Colonnade Men and then that they may regain say-so over humanity by obtaining the Carmine Rock of Aja. Joseph Joestar, Jonathan's grandson, unites with new allies and masters Hamon to defeat the Pillar Men.
Part 3: Stardust Crusaders ( スターダストクルセイダース , Sutādasuto Kuruseidāsu )
Volumes 13–28, 152 chapters. In 1989, Dio Brando (now referred to as "DIO") awakens later on his tomb is salvaged from the ocean. Because Dio had managed to capture Jonathan's body, Stands ( スタンド , Sutando ) awaken in Jonathan'due south descendants, consisting of Joseph, his daughter Holly Kujo, and grandson Jotaro Kujo. Holly, yet, is unable to cope with her ain Stand, and has only 50 days to live. Jotaro, Joseph, and their new allies set out to defeat Dio earlier this deadline expires, and come across Dio's henchmen forth the way.
Part 4: Diamond Is Unbreakable ( ダイヤモンドは砕けない , Daiyamondo wa Kudakenai )
Volumes 29–47, 174 capacity. In 1999, the Joestar family learns that Joseph has an illegitimate son, Josuke Higashikata,[b] who lives in the fictional Japanese town of Morioh. Josuke learns of a mystical Bow and Arrow that bestows Stands upon those struck by its arrowheads. Equally they hunt downward the Bow and Pointer, Josuke and his allies meet a serious threat in the form of the Stand-using serial killer Yoshikage Kira.
Part 5: Aureate Wind ( 黄金の風 , Ōgon no Kaze )
Volumes 47–63, 155 chapters. In 2001, in Naples, Italy, Giorno Giovanna is the son of Dio, conceived while he was in possession of Jonathan Joestar's torso. Giorno seeks to become a mafia boss in gild to eliminate drug dealers who sell their wares to children. His team, which consists of Stand users, must confront the mafia boss Diavolo and protect his daughter Trish Una, whom Diavolo intends to kill in gild to hibernate his identity.
Part 6: Rock Sea ( ストーンオーシャン , Sutōn Ōshan )
Volumes 64–fourscore, 158 capacity. In 2011, near Port St. Lucie, Florida, Jotaro Kujo's daughter Jolyne Cujoh is framed for murder and sent to prison. She works together with other Stand-using prisoners and her father to chase down prison chaplain Father Enrico Pucci, loyalist to Dio, who seeks the creation of a new universe shaped to his and Dio'southward will.
Part 7: Steel Ball Run ( スティール・ボール・ラン , Sutīru Bōru Ran )
Volumes 81–104, 95 chapters. In an alternate timeline's 1890, Us President Funny Valentine holds a cross-land equus caballus race with a $50 million reward to the winner. Valentine intends to utilize the race to gather the scattered parts of a holy corpse for his own nationalistic ends. Racers Gyro Zeppeli and Johnny Joestar uncover Valentine's ploy and must defend themselves from his hired assassins.
Part eight: JoJolion ( ジョジョリオン , Jojorion )
Volumes 105–131, 110 capacity. Set in the same universe as Steel Ball Run, in 2012, the town of Morioh has been devastated by the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, which has caused mysterious faults colloquially known equally the "Wall Eyes" to appear in town. Local higher student Yasuho Hirose discovers a fellow cached in the rubble and nicknames him "Josuke". Suffering from amnesia, Josuke tries to uncover the surreptitious of his past every bit he is besides confronted with the activities of a local criminal offense syndicate, which sells the fruit of a mysterious Locacaca tree, capable of healing people and and then "taking" something in render.
Role ix: JOJOLANDS ( ジョジョランズ , Jojoranzu ) (Tentatively titled)
In the September 2021 issue of Ultra Jump, Araki confirmed that office ix of the serial, tentatively titled JOJOLANDS, would begin following a brusque break.[3]

Production

Araki is inspired by western art, such as this piece by Paul Gauguin which inspired him to use unusual colors in his own art.[4] [5]

For JoJo'south Bizarre Take chances, Araki wanted to use a classical method as a base earlier introducing modern elements. As an example, he often draws in a realistic style simply uses surreal colors. Araki has been aiming to draw real spirits in JoJo resulting in him going to the Kappa River in Tōno, Iwate, to get a better understanding of the concept.[6] Araki claims to exist inspired from the art of the 1980s, shading techniques in Western fine art, and classical paintings; the manga coloring is based on calculations rather than consistency, with Araki citing artists like Paul Gauguin as inspiration.[4] He also claims mystery is the central theme of the manga, every bit he was fascinated past it as a child. Furthermore, Araki wanted to explore superpowers and energy in JoJo's Bizarre Take a chance resulting in diverse concepts such as Hamon and Stands.[four] He said that the supernatural basis of the fights in his series evened the battlefield for women and children to match up against strong men.[seven] For Stardust Crusaders in particular, Araki was influenced by part-playing games in designing the characters' skills.[4] In creating the manga'due south generational story, Araki thought much about expiry and the legacy people leave behind in their lives for their descendants, after the decease of his grandpa. He took inspiration from Roots: The Saga of an American Family and E of Eden. Araki focused on Roots for its family-centric story,[eight] and he took the idea of intertwined destiny and rivalry between ii families from East of Eden. He thought highly of stories that were well-received after changing protagonists, which influenced Araki's determination to kill Jonathan Joestar and write a generational story, passing on his "Spirit" to his own descendants.[9]

The characters had no models, except Jotaro Kujo, who was based on Clint Eastwood. Araki stated that he wanted to try a unlike type of main character for every role; for example, Role 1's Jonathan Joestar was a serious and honest person, whereas Part 2's Joseph Joestar was a trickster.[10] Although their personalities are different, the two share a concrete resemblance in order to have some continuity because information technology was unheard of in the 1980s for a main grapheme to die in a Weekly Shōnen Leap serial.[11] Araki's consequent focus on the Joestar family was intended to requite a feeling of pride also equally the wonder and mystery surrounding the lineage.[10]

Araki originally planned the series as a trilogy, with the final confrontation taking place in present-24-hour interval Nippon. However, Araki did non want Function 3 to exist a tournament affair, which was popular in Weekly Shōnen Leap at the time, and therefore decided to arrive a "road moving picture" inspired by Around the World in Eighty Days.[12] With Part 4, Araki said that he moved away from "muscle men" as they vicious out of popularity with readers and he wanted to focus more on fashion. When designing his characters' outfits, Araki considers both everyday way and "cartoonish, bizarre vesture that would be impractical in existent life".[13] For Part half-dozen, Araki wrote a female protagonist for the commencement time which he plant complicated, merely also interesting due to the humanity she could possess.[14] He afterwards described Part 2's much before supporting character Lisa Lisa as fresh and "unheard of" in both manga and society in general for its fourth dimension, and said information technology was exciting to challenge people's expectations with the female person warrior-blazon.[7] Having non specifically set out on creating a disabled graphic symbol, Araki explained that Part 7's paraplegic Johnny Joestar was a natural issue of wanting to bear witness a graphic symbol who could abound, both physically and mentally, during a race where "he would be forced not only to rely on other people, but horses equally well."[thirteen]

Araki uses unique onomatopoeia and poses in the series, which he attributes to his love for heavy metallic and horror films.[15] The poses, which are known in Nippon as JoJo-dachi ( ジョジョ立ち , lit. "JoJo standing"), are iconic on his book covers and panels, and were inspired by Araki'southward trip to Italy in his 20s and his studies of Michelangelo'southward sculptures.[16]

Media

Manga

Hirohiko Araki, the author of JoJo's Baroque Adventure

Written and illustrated by Hirohiko Araki, JoJo'southward Bizarre Take a chance began serialization in Weekly Shōnen Jump 'due south combined issue #one–ii of 1987, published in Nippon past Shueisha on Jan 1, 1987.[17] The series is divided into eight story arcs, each following the adventures of a new protagonist begetting the "JoJo" nickname. The kickoff part, titled Phantom Blood, was serialized until October 1987 and collected in five tankōbon volumes; the second, Battle Tendency, was serialized from November 1987 to March 1989 and collected in seven volumes. Stardust Crusaders, the third office, was serialized from March 1989 to April 1992 and collected in 16 volumes. Diamond Is Unbreakable, the fourth part, was serialized from April 1992 to Nov 1995 and collected in eighteen volumes; information technology was followed by the fifth part, Aureate Wind, which was serialized from Nov 1995 to Apr 1999 and collected in 17 volumes.

Subsequently volume 63 (the last volume of Golden Wind), the tankōbon numbering for each subsequent part restarts from one. Stone Ocean, the sixth part, was serialized from January 2000 to April 2003 and collected in 17 volumes. The first 23 capacity of the 7th part, Steel Ball Run, were serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump from January to October 2004; in March 2005, the series was transferred to the monthly seinen manga magazine Ultra Jump. It ran until April 2011, and was nerveless in 24 volumes. JoJolion, the eighth part, was serialized from May 2011 to August 2021 and collected in 27 volumes. In the September 2021 issue of Ultra Spring, Araki confirmed in the writer's notes that function ix of the series, tentatively titled "JOJOLANDS", would begin following a short break.[iii]

Between 2002 and 2009, the outset six parts in the series were re-released by Shueisha in bunkoban format;[18] Steel Brawl Run was re-released in the format in 2017 and 2018.[19] A sōshūhen motorcoach serial recreating the get-go 4 parts every bit they originally appeared in Weekly Shōnen Jump (including colour pages, promotional text, and next affiliate previews) was published betwixt 2012 and 2016.[20] Since 2012, all eight parts in the serial have been digitally colored and distributed past Shueisha for smartphones and tablet computers under the brand name "JOJO-D".[21] A premium hardcover release of the first three parts was published under the brand "JoJonium" between 2013 and 2015.[22]

In the early on 1990s, Viz Media reportedly had plans for an English-language release of JoJo'southward Bizarre Adventure in North America as The Foreign Adventures of Jojo;[ii] in 2002, the series was unsuccessfully considered for release as monthly comic books.[2] Between Nov 2005 and December 2010, Viz published Stardust Crusaders, the well-nigh well-known office in the series, in 16 volumes.[23] [24] Even so, the company changed the names of several characters and Stands due to copyright concerns and censored sure scenes, including scenes of animal violence redrawn by Araki himself.[two] In 2013, Viz expressed further interest in localizing the series, but explained its difficulties in doing so due to Araki's numerous references to real musicians and way designers.[25] Viz began publishing the JoJonium release of Phantom Blood digitally in September 2014, with a three-volume hardcover print edition following throughout 2015.[26] Battle Tendency was published in iv volumes in 2015 and 2016,[27] and Stardust Crusaders was published in ten volumes from 2016 to 2019.[28] Viz continues to publish the serial in their own digital and hardcover editions that emulate the JoJonium edition; Diamond Is Unbreakable was published in nine volumes from 2019 to 2021,[29] while Golden Current of air began in August 2021.[30]

Spin-offs

Araki has also authored several manga spin-offs of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. The get-go, "Episode 16: At a Confessional", was published equally a one-shot in Weekly Shōnen Bound in July 1997.[31] It follows Rohan Kishibe from Diamond Is Unbreakable, and is the starting time entry in the Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan series. Expressionless Human's Questions [c] follows Yoshikage Kira from Diamond Is Unbreakable; information technology was published every bit three chapters in the magazine Allman in June and July 1999.[32] Both one-shots were later published in Nether Execution, Under Jailbreak,[d] a collection of short story manga past Araki published in 1999.[33] "Oingo Boingo Brothers Adventure",[due east] a i-shot featuring the title characters from Stardust Crusaders, was released in October 2002;[34] it is fatigued in the style of Boingo's Stand up Tohth, a fortune-telling comic book. Between January 2008 and February 2018, six chapters of Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan were published in various magazines. A tankōbon volume was published by Shueisha in November 2013, collecting the stories "At a Confessional", "Mutsu-kabe Hill", "Millionaire Village", "Poaching Seashore", and "Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci".[35] "Mochizuki Family Moon Viewing" was published digitally in September 2014 during the debut of Shueisha'south Shōnen Leap+ website;[36] a second tankōbon volume collecting the episode and the stories "Monday, Sunshower", "D.N.A", and "The Run" was published in July 2018.[37]

In the September 2021 issue of Ultra Jump, information technology was announced that JoJo's Baroque Adventure is receiving a spin-off manga written by Kouhei Kadono and illustrated by No Guns Life writer Tasuku Karasuma.[3]

Anime

Studio A.P.P.P.

A 13-episode original video blitheness adaptation of Role 3, Stardust Crusaders, was produced by A.P.P.P. The showtime set of six episodes, which begin during the middle of the arc, were released past Pony Canyon on VHS and Laserdisc from 1993 to 1994. The series was released by Klock Worx on DVD and VHS from 2000 to 2002, starting with seven newly-produced prequel episodes adapting the beginning of the arc. Super Techno Arts produced an English language-linguistic communication dub of all thirteen episodes in North America every bit a six-volume DVD serial between 2003 and 2005, with the episodes also arranged in chronological order.[38] A.P.P.P. likewise produced JoJo's Baroque Take a chance: Phantom Claret, a characteristic pic adaptation of the manga's kickoff arc; information technology was released theatrically in Nihon on February 17, 2007.[38]

David Production

At a July 2012 printing briefing celebrating the 25th anniversary of the series, Araki appear that an anime adaptation of JoJo'southward Baroque Gamble was in production and would premiere in October 2012.[39] The 26-episode first season, which covers the Phantom Blood and Battle Tendency arcs, aired weekly on Tokyo MX between October 2012 and April 2013.[xl] [41] Although teased in the post-credit scenes of the finale,[41] a 2d flavour adapting Stardust Crusaders was officially appear in Oct 2013.[42] Information technology aired on Tokyo MX in ii halves for a total of 48 episodes; the first from April to September 2014, and the second from Jan to June 2015. At an event for the anime in October 2015, a third season adapting Diamond Is Unbreakable was announced.[43] It premiered in April 2016 and concluded in December 2016, for a total of 39 episodes. A fourth season of the anime adapting Gilded Wind was appear at an Araki art exhibition in June 2018.[44] The kickoff episode debuted at Anime Expo in July, and the flavour aired in 39 episodes from October 2018 to July 2019 on Tokyo MX.[44] At a special event for the anime series on April 4, 2021, an adaptation of Stone Sea was appear.[45] Unlike the previous seasons, it debuted worldwide on Netflix in December 2021, earlier receiving a Japanese telly broadcast in January 2022.[46]

An original video animation (OVA) based on the "Millionaire Village" episode of the Thus Spoke Kishibe Rohan spin-off manga was distributed in 2017 to those who purchased every DVD or Blu-ray volume of Diamond Is Unbreakable.[47] [48] A second OVA adapting the "Mutsu-kabe Hill" episode was released with a special edition of the manga'due south second volume in July 2018.[49] Two more OVA episodes adapting the "At a Confessional" and "The Run" episodes were screened in Japanese theaters in December 2019 and released on DVD and Blu-ray in March 2020.[l]

With the 2014 premiere of Stardust Crusaders, American-based website Crunchyroll began streaming the anime series for viewers outside Japan i 60 minutes after the episodes aired.[51] Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, who holds the DVD rights to the series, released the first season of the anime in September 2015, with an included English dub.[52] In July 2016, Viz Media announced it acquired the Blu-ray rights to the series; it released the first three seasons with dubs between August 2017 and January 2020.[53] In Oct 2016, American cable block Adult Swim began ambulation the anime on its Toonami cake.[52]

Other media

Drama CDs

From 1992 to 1993, a drama CD adaptation of Part 3 was released in three volumes, titled JoJo's Bizarre Chance Book 1: Meet Jotaro Kujo,[f] JoJo's Bizarre Take chances Book 2: The Death of Avdol,[g] and JoJo'due south Bizarre Adventure Book 3: The World of Dio.[h] [54] [55] [56] They starred Kiyoyuki Yanada as Jotaro, Kenji Utsumi (volumes 1 & 3) and Gorō Naya (volume 2) as Joseph Joestar, Akio Ōtsuka as Avdol, Shō Hayami as Kakyoin, Ken Yamaguchi equally Polnareff, Keiichi Nanba every bit Hol Horse, Shigeru Chiba as J. Geil, and Norio Wakamoto as DIO.

A drama CD adaptation of Role 4 was released from 2016 to 2017 in ii parts. The beginning was titled A Ghost Story from Budogaoka Loftier [i] and the second After-schoolhouse Talk: At Buffet Deux Magots.[j] They were merely available with the express edition Blu-ray release of David Production's Diamond Is Unbreakable anime adaptation, and starred Yūki Ono equally Josuke, Wataru Takagi as Okuyasu, Yūki Kaji as Koichi, Hiroki Shimowada as Toshikazu, Yuko Lida as Junko, and Takahiro Sakurai equally Rohan.[ commendation needed ]

Video games

Several video games based on the series take been created. A titular office-playing video game based on Part 3 was released for the Super Famicom in 1993, and several fighting games have been released, including JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Heritage for the Future in 1998, JoJo'south Baroque Hazard: All Star Battle for the series' 25th anniversary in 2013, and JoJo's Baroque Adventure: Eyes of Heaven in 2015.[39] Characters from JoJo'south Bizarre Adventure have also been featured in various Weekly Shōnen Bound cross-over games.

Low-cal novels

Several lite novels based on the manga have been written, each by a unlike author, but all including illustrations past Araki. The outset, based on Office 3, was just titled JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, released on November 4, 1993, and written by Mayori Sekijima and Hiroshi Yamaguchi.[57] Le Bizzarre Avventure di GioGio II: Gilt Heart/Golden Band,[g] written by Gichi Ōtsuka and Miya Shōtarō and based on Function 5, was released on May 28, 2001.[58] Both novels received Italian translations and releases; the first in 2003 with the subtitle The Genesis of Universe,[59] and the second in 2004.[60] In 2000, it was announced that Otsuichi was writing a novel based on Role four. It proved hard to consummate; in Kono Mystery ga Sugoi! 2005, Otsuichi claimed to accept written over 2000 pages, but thrown them all out.[61] His piece of work, The Book: JoJo's Bizarre Adventure 4th Some other Day, was released on November 26, 2007.[62] In April 2011, information technology was appear that Nisio Isin, Kouhei Kadono, and Ōtarō Maijō were each writing light novels in celebration of the series' 25th anniversary.[63] Kadono's, titled Purple Haze Feedback,[l] was released on September 16, 2011 and based on Part five.[64] Nisio's, titled JoJo's Bizarre Gamble Over Heaven, was released on December 16, 2011 and based on Office 3.[65] Maijō's novel, Jorge Joestar, was released on September 19, 2012.[66] Information technology features characters from and inspired past nearly every office of the series.

Art books

Araki has released several books containing original artwork he has produced for JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. JoJo6251 was released on Dec 10, 1993, and features artwork, story details, and behind the scenes data for Parts 1 through iv. It was followed by JoJo A-Go! Go! on February 25, 2000, which features original artwork focusing on Parts three to v. On September 19, 2013, he released JoJoveller, a multimedia set that includes a book featuring original artwork for Parts half-dozen through 8; a volume detailing the history of the publications; and a book detailing every Stand featured since Stardust Crusaders.[67]

Live-action film

In 2016, it was announced that Toho and Warner Bros. were partnering to produce a live-activeness motion picture based on Diamond Is Unbreakable. The film was directed by Takashi Miike, stars Kento Yamazaki as Josuke, and was released in Japan on August four, 2017. Both studios were planning for worldwide distribution and are hoping to create sequels.[68] [69]

Reception

Manga

Sales

JoJo's Bizarre Take chances had over 100 one thousand thousand copies in circulation every bit of Dec 2016;[70] information technology had over 120 million copies in apportionment as of Dec 2021.[71] It is one of the best-selling Weekly Shōnen Leap serial of all-time.[72] The first volume of JoJolion was the second best-selling manga for its debut week, its second volume was number 3 and its third was number two.[73] [74] [75] All iii volumes were some of the acknowledged manga of 2012.[76] [77] All three volumes of Viz Media'due south release of Phantom Blood and all four volumes of Battle Tendency reached the acme vii positions on The New York Times Manga Best Seller list.[78] According to ICv2, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure was the 8th acknowledged manga franchise of autumn 2021 (September–Dec) in the United States.[79]

Disquisitional reception

Reviewing the outset book, IGN named JoJo'due south Bizarre Adventure a "must read," declaring the artwork of "a standard almost unseen in most manga produced today."[80] Otaku USA 's Joseph Luster called the serial "fun equally hell" and noted how the beginning is not filled with activeness like most Weekly Shōnen Bound series, but instead has the tension of horror and thriller films.[81] Rebecca Silverman of Anime News Network wrote that the first book "combines a fighting story with a solid emotional background, and will absolutely put pilus on your chest." She called Dio an first-class villain that the readers can enjoy antisocial. Notwithstanding, she criticized the anatomy of characters, proverb "bodies are often twisted into incommunicable positions."[82] Comics & Gaming Mag 'due south Cole Watson also strongly praised Dio equally the highlight character of Part 1, stating that his eyes were glued to the folio whenever he appeared, and described him every bit "the literal embodiment of Satan in manga course." Watson gave Phantom Blood a 7.five out of 10, writing that while there is a lot to enjoy, it primarily serves as Dio's origin story and there are some moments that are "agonizingly slow."[83]

Silverman described Part two every bit "less urgent" than Part 1, which allows for more humor and insanity, while still letting the reader go attached to the characters.[84] She felt positively about how strikingly unlike the protagonist Joseph is from Part 1's Jonathan.[85] Notwithstanding, she wrote that Araki'south art had gotten even more than "physically improbable," making information technology difficult to distinguish torso parts.[85] When discussing his views on having characters die in a serial, writer Gen Urobuchi cited Battle Tendency 's Caesar Zeppeli as a character who became "immortal" thanks to his death.[86]

Reviewing Stardust Crusaders, Silverman enjoyed seeing Part 2's Joseph team upward with new protagonist Jotaro and was impressed that Araki was able to continue Dio out of Part 2 completely, only to bring him dorsum for Role 3.[87] She initially called the replacement of Hamon with Stands both understandable and a flake of a disappointment, since the "insane physical abilities and contortions" caused by the former were a big source of the fun in the first 2 parts.[87] Silverman later on described Stand battles every bit heady and creative in subsequent reviews.[88] [89]

Anime News Network had both Silverman and Faye Hopper review the commencement volume of Role 4. Silverman called the beginning slower and non every bit instantly engrossing as the previous parts, just felt this allowed Josuke, whom she and Hopper both described every bit kinder than the previous protagonists, to develop every bit a character. Hopper stated that Diamond Is Unbreakable is sometimes criticized for a "lack of a stiff narrative throughline" in comparison to other parts, merely argued that this is 1 of its greatest strengths every bit it allows the chief characters to "simply be, lending them an amiable humanity that none of the over-the-superlative archetypes in the offset 3 Parts always had."[90]

Both Screen Rant'southward Steven Blackburn and Jordan Richards of AIPT Comics called Golden Wind a breath of fresh air for JoJo's Bizarre Adventure by deviating from the bones formula and following Giorno, son of villain Dio Brando, as he looks to cement a reputation and build a criminal empire.[91] [92] Jenni Lada of Siliconera also praised the protagonist Giorno and said the first volume of Part 5 shows how skilled Araki is at getting people apace invested in a grapheme and story. She wrote, by giving readers a look at Giorno's past and insights into the person he is now, it emphasizes why he is compelling; "We're introduced to his dream and see him accept his starting time steps toward information technology."[93] Despite calling the supporting cast a memorable bunch, Richards felt they were underdeveloped equally of the start volume, but noted they had potential.[92]

Heidi Kemps, too of Otaku Us, was mostly positive in her review of Rohan at the Louvre, praising the art for being fatigued in full-color by paw, although noted that readers new to JoJo'south Baroque Adventure might not fully sympathise the ending due to at that place being but a brief explanation of Rohan'south Stand power.[94]

Accolades

For the 10th ceremony of the Japan Media Arts Festival in 2006, Japanese fans voted JoJo's Bizarre Adventure second on a list of the Meridian 10 Manga of all time.[95] The serial ranked 10th in a 2009 survey by Oricon on what manga serial people want to see receive a alive-activeness adaptation.[96] The 2013 edition of Kono Manga ga Sugoi!, which surveys people in the manga and publishing industry, named JoJolion the twelfth best manga series for male person readers.[97] JoJolion won the one thousand prize for manga at the 2013 Japan Media Arts Festival.[98] In November 2014, readers of Media Factory'southward Da Vinci mag voted JoJo's Bizarre Adventure number five on a list of Weekly Shōnen Jump 's greatest manga series of all fourth dimension.[99] On Television receiver Asahi's Manga Sōsenkyo 2021 poll, in which 150.000 people voted for their height 100 manga serial, JoJo'southward Bizarre Take a chance ranked 10th.[100] [101]

Anime

The start ready of OVAs was given three out of 5 stars by Eric Gaede of THEM Anime Reviews. He praised the fight scenes as more believable than those from other series such as Dragon Brawl and the characters' personalities, although felt the villains resorted to clichés when they are about to be defeated. However, he called the story "disjointed" and the animation "drab and colorless".[102]

The JoJo's Bizarre Adventure anime tv series was named one of the best of 2012 by Otaku USA.[103] It was added to the listing by Joseph Luster, however, in his review he cited David Product having a small upkeep for several of his problems with the serial, stating some portions of the animation are a "butt hair above move comic standards," but that it usually makes upward for information technology in "sheer manner."[104] Michael Toole of Anime News Network had like views, writing that the bear witness'south practiced writing, art direction, and pacing were "sometimes obscured by grade-Z animation."[38]

At the 2013 CEDEC Awards, the anime's opening sequence won in the Visual Arts division.[105] Several critics have credited the success of the anime adaptation for bringing most a surge of popularity for the JoJo'southward Bizarre Adventure franchise amongst Western audiences.[38] [106] In 2018, Danni Wilmoth of Crunchyroll included the serial on her list of "The xx Series Every Anime Fan Needs to Lookout".[107] In 2019, Polygon named the serial equally one of the best anime of the 2010s.[108]

Gadget Tsūshin listed "Pesci, Pesci, Pesci, Pesci yo!", a quote from the fifteenth episode of Golden Air current, in their 2019 anime buzzwords list.[109]

Controversy

In May 2008, both Shueisha and studio A.P.P.P. halted manga/OVA shipments of JoJo's Bizarre Take chances later a complaint had been launched against them from bearding online Egyptian Islamic fundamentalists, subsequently noticing a scene in the OVAs that has the villain, Dio Brando, reading a book depicting pages from the Qur'an.[ii] [110] This recall afflicted the English language-language releases as well, causing Viz Media and Shueisha to end publication for a year. Fifty-fifty though the manga did not characteristic that specific scene, Shueisha had Araki redraw scenes that depicted characters fighting on pinnacle of, and destroying, mosques for later printings of the series.[2] Viz resumed publication a yr later, with the eleventh book being published on April 7, 2009. Jason Thompson subsequently included Shueisha'southward changes to the manga on a listing of "The Greatest Censorship Fails" in manga.[111]

Legacy and collaborations

The September 2007 issue of Jail cell had a cover drawn past Hirohiko Araki with a ligase represented as a JoJo's Bizarre Gamble Stand up.[112] He likewise contributed artwork towards the restoration of Chūson-ji following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[113] Araki contributed JoJo-inspired art for Sayuri Ishikawa's 2012 album X -Cantankerous-, where she performs one of the serial' iconic poses and is drawn wearing jewelry from the manga.[114] JoJo-style artwork has also been produced for other literature, such as for a 2008 collection featuring Yasunari Kawabata's brusk story "The Dancing Girl of Izu"[115] and a 2012 reprint of Tamaki Saitō's Lacan for Surviving.[116]

In 2009, Araki's was one of five artists featured in the Louvre's Le Louvre invite la bande dessinée ("The Louvre Invites Comic-Strip Art") exhibition for his artwork of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. To commemorate this honour, he wrote Rohan at the Louvre ( 岸辺露伴 ルーヴルへ行く , Kishibe Rohan Rūvuru east Iku ), a 123-page full color story starring Rohan Kishibe visiting the Louvre and discovering a cursed painting tied to his family.[117] [118] [119] The following year it was published in France and ran in Ultra Jump, and in February 2012 was translated and released in Due north America by NBM Publishing.[120]

From July 19 to Baronial 18, 2019, the Tower Records shop in Shibuya held an exhibit celebrating the finale of the fifth part of the series, Golden Wind, and to promote the release of two games, JoJo's Baroque Adventure: Pitter Patter Pop! and JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Last Survivor.[121] [122] The exhibit showed various concept fine art pieces from the serial' artists also as scripts from the show. Visitors could receive gratuitous items such as stickers, folders, and cards upon completion of diverse tasks, such every bit answering a quiz or buying a sure amount of items.[123] Each flooring of the Tower Records building had a character on brandish, as a paper-thin cutout and on the lift doors. On August fourteen, 2019, a panel was held with directors Hideya Takahashi and Yasuhiro Kimura, and producer Kasama.[124]

Several video game characters, such as Street Fighter 'due south Guile and Tekken 's Paul Phoenix, were inspired by JoJo 's Polnareff.[125] When they discovered a new species of Neostygarctus in 2013, scientists Shinta Fujimoto and Katsumi Miyazaki named it Neostygarctus lovedeluxe later on a Stand from Diamond Is Unbreakable.[126] The song "Don't Bite the Dust" by heavy metal band Lovebites was influenced by and named later a Stand from Diamond Is Unbreakable.[127]

Gucci

A Gucci store display in 2013, featuring JoJo'southward Bizarre Adventure characters Bruno Bucciarati and Jolyne Kujo.

From September 17 to October 6, 2011, the Gucci shop in Shinjuku hosted the Gucci x Hirohiko Araki ten Spur "Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci" Exhibition, a collaboration betwixt the luxury Italian clothing brand, Araki, and the Japanese fashion magazine Spur.[128] The exhibit celebrated the 90th ceremony of Gucci and featured a life-size figure of Rohan Kishibe, besides every bit numerous illustrations by Araki that included bodily pieces of the brand'south own 2011–2012 fall/wintertime collection and his own original style designs.[128] The October 2011 issue of Spur featured some other i-shot manga titled Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci ( 岸辺露伴 グッチへ行く , Kishibe Rohan Guchi e Yuku ), in which Rohan goes to a Gucci manufactory to discover the secret behind a magical handbag with the characters wearing and using Gucci products.[129] [130] This was followed by some other collaboration in the February 2013 consequence of Spur with Jolyne, Fly High with Gucci ( 徐倫、GUCCIで飛ぶ , Jorīn, Gutchi de Tobu ), starring Jolyne Cujoh from Function 6.[131] [132] A free English translation of the latter was previously available on Gucci's Facebook page. Again, Araki's artwork was featured in Gucci's storefront displays effectually the world.[133] [134]

25th anniversary

There were several fine art exhibitions in 2012 in Japan for the manga'south 25th anniversary. The first was in Sendai, Araki's birthplace, where a Lawson shop was remodeled to expect like the "Owson" store that appears in Diamond Is Unbreakable and JoJolion.[135] [136] [137] [138] The store was opened from July 28 to September 30, and independent exclusive goods with the Owson name. The second exhibition was held in Tokyo from October 6 to November 4 and hangouts were held on Google Plus to allow fans to view the gallery at nighttime through the lens of Remote Romance ( リモートロマンス , Rimōto Romansu ), an original "Stand" Araki and his squad created for the event.[139] [140] The showroom was taken to Italy from June 28 to July fourteen, 2013, and shown at the Gucci showroom in Florence.[139] [141]

The October 2012 issue of Ultra Bound independent a special booklet titled 25 Years With JoJo that also celebrated the anniversary; information technology featured messages and tribute art from well-known manga artists such as Akira Toriyama, Yoshihiro Togashi, Eiichiro Oda, Clamp, and 18 others.[142] [143] During the 25th anniversary celebrations, a special smartphone with a JoJo'south Bizarre Adventure-inspired UI was released.[144]

To celebrate the release of the All Star Battle video game created for the 25th anniversary, a special JoJo-themed train traveled the Yamanote Line in Tokyo from August 29 to September nine, 2013. Illustrations and advertisements of the serial littered the interior, with videos of the game shown on displays, while the exterior had 33 characters as livery.[m] [145]

Notes

  1. ^ The suke ( ) in the Japanese name Josuke Higashikata tin can also be pronounced as "Jo", and the Italian proper name Giorno Giovanna is abbreviated as "GioGio", which is pronounced (/dʒodʒo/).
  2. ^ The kanji for suke in his name can be read in the on'yomi form equally jo.
  3. ^ Japanese: デッドマンズQ, Hepburn: Deddomanzu Kuesuchonzu
  4. ^ Japanese: 死刑執行中脱獄進行中, Hepburn: Shikei Shikkōchū Datsugoku Shinkōchū
  5. ^ Japanese: オインゴとボインゴ兄弟大冒険, Hepburn: Oingo to Boingo Kyōdai Daibōken
  6. ^ Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険第1巻 空条承太郎見参の巻, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Dai 1-kan Kūjō Jōtarō Kenzan no Maki
  7. ^ Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険第2巻 アヴドゥル死すの巻, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Dai 2-kan Avuduru Shisu no Maki
  8. ^ Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険第3巻 DIOの世界の巻, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Dai three-kan DIO no Sekai no Maki
  9. ^ Japanese: ぶどうヶ丘高校の怪談, Hepburn: Budō Gaoka Kōkō no Kaidan
  10. ^ Japanese: 放課後トーク カフェ ドゥ・メゴにて, Hepburn: Hōkago Tōku Kafe Du Mego nite
  11. ^ Japanese: ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 II ゴールデンハート/ゴールデンリング, Hepburn: JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Tsū Gōruden Hāto/Gōruden Ringu
  12. ^ Japanese: 恥知らずのパープルヘイズ, Hepburn: Hajishirazu no Pāpuru Heizu
  13. ^ Noun, third definition

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External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata (in Japanese)
  • JoJo'southward Baroque Run a risk at Viz Media
  • JoJo'southward Bizarre Adventure (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

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