From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Battle Royale (バトル・ロワイアル, Batoru
rowaiaru
?) is a serialized manga, written by Koushun Takami and
Masayuki Taguchi. It is based on the novel of the same name, and was published
in Japan by Akita Publishing. The manga consists of 15 volumes and
is distributed in English by Tokyopop. There is a manga sequel called
Battle Royale II: Blitz Royale. At October 2007, a new
special edition of the manga will be released.
The manga follows the plot of the novel fairly closely, but also
expands on the backstory of each of the students. It is also far
more sexually graphic than the novel and film versions, and is also
noted for its intense, gory violence. The name of the main
character is transliterated as Shuya Nanahara in this version.
Also, the English adaptation of manga changes the time that the
story is set in by almost 10 years, using the term 'in the near
future', but on Shogo Kawada's profile, it references the program
2005 season; he says his last program was a year ago, leading to
the assumption that the manga sets the story in 2006. In volume one
of the English language version, Shinji Mimura and the news channel
reporter mentions the 2007 record of three days, seven hours and
twenty-two minutes. In volume 14 Kamon refers to the 2009 season,
which is presumably the 2009 one. None of those dates are mentioned
in the original Japanese edition. Apparently they were devised by
Keith Giffen
during the adaptation (see below)
along with many other details non-existent in the original.
The manga revolves around seven main characters, including the
righteous Shuya Nanahara, the gentle and caring Noriko Nakagawa, the hardened veteran Shogo
Kawada, the athletic hacker Shinji Mimura, the
kind-hearted kung fu master Hiroki Sugimura,
the troubled Mitsuko Souma, and the cold, merciless Kazuo Kiriyama. As of January 2006, all 15
volumes have been released in Japan. In the US and UK all 15 of the
volumes have been released as of April 2006.
Characters
- Shuya Nanahara (七原 秋也, Nanahara Shūya
?) is a fictional Japanese student and
one of the three main protagonists. Shuya, who is nicknamed "Shu",
lives in the fictional town Shiroiwa in Kagawa
Prefecture.
- Noriko Nakagawa (中川 典子, Nakagawa Noriko
?) is the main female protagonist of the
series. She is one of the class of third-year students in Shuya's
school. Noriko has a crush on Shuya, whom she admired for his music
and song-writing.
- Shogo Kawada (川田 章吾, Kawada Shōgo
?) is a transfer student and the winner
of the previous Program. At the very beginning he meets Shuya and
Noriko and joins up with the two of them.
- Kazuo Kiriyama (桐山 和雄, Kiriyama Kazuo
?) is the main antagonist, who tries to
win the Program and kills a lot of students.
- Mitsuko Souma (相马 光子, Souma Mitsuko
?) is the secondary antagonist,
considered one of the most beautiful girls in the program, she is
also the most deranged, and the female with the most kills,
succeeding in using her feminine wiles and ability to feign
emotions to manipulate then kill her classmates. It is later
revealed that these psychological issues stem from a loss of her
father at an early age, and the subsequent abuse she received from
her surviving family.
History
The manga was serialized in Young Champion Magazine for
five years.[2]
Development
Writing
style
At first the creators of the original version of the Battle
Royale manga kept the story close to the original Japanese
novel. As publication increased, Taguchi took increasing liberties
with the story. Takami said that he looked forward to new
installments of Taguchi's story and Taguchi said that he more
strongly "cared" about the characters. Takami liked how Taguchi
"distributed" the time among characters; Takami said that in the
manga the characters changed and grew as the story progressed,
unlike in the original novel. Taguchi said that in the manga
version he modeled "most" of Takami's characters after people he
personally knew. Takami describes Taguchi's stance as closer to his
own than the stance of Kinji Fukasaku, the director of the
film. Takami describes the manga as containing the feeling of "a
general, nonjudgmental love for humans."[2]
Art style
Taguchi said that many people describe his art style as
"reminiscent of "gekiga", or
that it's realistic." Taguchi disagrees with the descriptions,
instead characterizing faces in his works as "manga faces" since he
feels that it is "really easy to put my own emotions into the
faces." Taguchi said that when he shows sadness in characters, he
locates the characters' eyebrows "down as far as possible." Takami
describes Taguchi's art as "directly descended from Osamu Tezuka" and
"manga-esque." Takami described the style as "easy to overlook"
because the art contains "clean lines." Takami believed that the
art style fit the Battle Royale story. In the beginning
Taguchi said that he felt that all of the characters had to "look
like middle
school students." Taguchi said that as the story progressed for
many of the characters he began to draw them "more naturally" and
add "specific expressions for certain things they would say."
Takami describes the newer style as "more grown-up looking." [2]
TOKYOPOP
Version
An English-language adaptation of the publication, published in
the United
States, Canada, and United Kingdom in
a multi-volume format by TOKYOPOP, was extensively rewritten by Keith Giffen, whose
script does not completely follow the original comic.[3]
The major difference between the Japanese and TOKYOPOP version
is that Giffen rewrote the BR program as a Reality TV show program,
rather than keeping it in tune with the BR Act, which leaves
plotholes through the panels of the manga, especially in Volume
#15. This can be partially attributed to the fact that when
TOKYOPOP had released Volume #1, the Japanese Battle Royale was up
to Volume #9 at that point, thereby not giving TOKYOPOP or Giffen
ample material to prove that their rewrite would backfire.
According to TOKYOPOP editor Mark Paniccia, in the Newsarama
article:
'For adapting the work, Giffen was given a tight
Japanese-to-English translation of the story, but his assignment
was by no means just to tweak a translation. "I told him to do what
he felt he had to do", Paniccia said. "I told him to Giffenize
it."'
To which Giffen responds:
'"It's a good story that Takami is telling", Giffen said. "What
I do is go in and make bad scenes that much worse. I loved the
movie of Battle Royale, and also love the manga. I just
wanted to do it right. I wanted to do justice to it, and I knew I
couldn't get away with doing a straight translation, because it
would be horrifyingly bad."'
In April 2006, Tim Beedle, a former associate editor of
Battle Royale, stated on the TOKYOPOP Messageboard the
reasoning behind the decision to have a fairly loose
adaptation:
'Prior to starting work on the first volume of Battle
Royale, its editor (Mark Paniccia, who has since left
TOKYOPOP) made a decision to hire Keith Giffen, a well-known
American comic book writer, to provide a much looser adaptation
than usual. He made this decision for a variety of reasons, but two
seemed to be more prominent than the rest. First, due to BR's
extreme content and M rating, it was going to be a tough sell.
(Some of the large chains refuse to carry M-rated books.) Hiring a
known writer could help compensate for this by driving sales.
Second, more than any other book we were publishing at the time, BR
had the potential to find a crossover audience in the direct market
among American comic book readers, who often are adverse to trying
manga.'[4]
Brazilian
edition
Conrad
Editora from Brazil began publishing a Portuguese
version of the Manga at the tail end of 2006. It follows the
original 15-volume format, and it does not adapt the Giffen
"Reality Show" version (although the cover of the first edition
mentions the reality show), but instead follows the original
premise of the Novel and Manga. It was cancelled after 12
volumes.
Chapters
The following names reflect the English-language version.
| No. |
Japanese |
English |
| Release date |
ISBN |
Release date |
ISBN |
| 1 |
— |
— |
— |
ISBN 1-59182-314-5 |
- Chapter 1: The Worst Game in History
- Chapter 2: Best Friend
- Chapter 3: Shinji Mimura
- Chapter 4: The Oath
- Chapter 5: Other Side of the Door
- Chapter 6: Yoshio Akamatsu
- Chapter 7: Trust
- Chapter 8: Mitsuko Souma
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| Here we are introduced to the main characters and
how the class got kidnapped and sent to the island. Most of this
volume in set in the classroom and Yonemi Kamon's
instructions about the program. Mr. Hayashida, the class teacher,
is killed before the Program begins for resisting. Kamon shoots and
kills Yoshitoki Kuninobu for attacking him after
he, Kamon, says that he raped Anna Ryoko, the caretaker of the
orphaned Shuya and Yoshitoki. Kamon also kills Fumiyo Fujiyoshi by throwing a knife in her
head while she whispers during class. After the event begins, Yoshio Akamatsu kills Mayumi Tendo who is discovered by Shuya.
Shuya knocks out Yoshio when he threatens Noriko and runs off and
settles in the woods for the night. Yoshio is killed off by Kazushi Niida and finally, the scared Megumi
Eto is killed by the pretty, but evil Mitsuko Souma by
slicing her neck open. |
| 2 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 9: Kazuo Kiriyama (Part One)
- Chapter 10: Kazuo Kiriyama (Part Two)
- Chapter 11: Treasure
- Chapter 12: Those Who Come Forth
- Chapter 13: Shogo Kawada
- Chapter 14: Nightmare
- Chapter 15: Conditions
- Chapter 16: The Right Thing To Do
- Sidestory: Energy
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| In this volume we are introduced to Kazuo Kiriyama and his gang. It is
revealed, that due to Kazuo's apparent sociopathy, he determines whether to play
the game by the flick of a coin. This inevitably begins his killing
spree, including his entire gang, Izumi Kanai, and Yukiko
and Yumiko. Sakura Ogawa and Kazuhiko Yamamoto commit suicide. Tatsumichi Oki attacks Shuya but kills
himself by accident; Kyoichi Motobuchi
also attacks Shuya but is killed by Shogo. Shuya and Noriko meet Shogo
Kawada and team up to find more friends. |
| 3 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 17: Past
- Chapter 18: Odds
- Chapter 19: Problem Child
- Chapter 20: Acceptance
- Chapter 21: Forfeiture
- Chapter 22: Battle Plan
- Chapter 23: The Ultimate Team
- Chapter 24: Takako Chigusa
- Side Story: Fallen Angel
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| This volume is mainly about Shinji Mimura, when he finds close friend
Yutaka Sato and begins his plan to defeat the program via
implanting a worm into The Program's main computers. We also meet
Yoshimi Yahagi and Yoji Kuramoto, later
it introduces Takako Chigusa and Kazushi Niida. |
| 4 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 25: Honor
- Chapter 26: Bond
- Chapter 27: Respect and Affection
- Chapter 28: Insanity
- Chapter 29: The Right Answer
- Chapter 30: Persuasion
- Chapter 31: Everybody's Thoughts
- Chapter 32: Secret Weapon
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| This volume continues Takako's fight with Niida,
Niida is killed but Mitsuko kills Takako, Hiroki finds her dying
body and she dies in his arms. Shinji is disheartened to discover
that his plan has failed, yet it is discovered that the prodigy had
a back up plan by the way of his beloved, deceased Uncle and a well
hidden Aunt. It shows some of Shogo's past with Keiko. Until it
comes to Kaori Minami and Hirono Shimizu in a
gunfight, Kaori shoots Hirono in the arm (she escapes) and Kaori is
killed by Shogo. |
| 5 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 33: Rouse
- Chapter 34: Last Man Standing
- Chapter 35: Trap
- Chapter 36: Thirst
- Chapter 37: Existence
- Chapter 38: Set Up
- Chapter 39: Anxiety
- Side Story: Man of Justice
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| The volume introduces Sho Tsukioka and his
past and Kazuo's sneaky plan which kills Shou. It also continues
Hirono's escapades until she is killed by Toshinori Oda by
drowning in a well, Shuya, Noriko and Shogo are staying in a nearby
house while Noriko is resting from a wound. |
| 6 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 40: Sworn Friend
- Chapter 41: Flower of Courage
- Chapter 42: Parting
- Chapter 43: Raid
- Chapter 44: Hard Change
- Chapter 45: Rescue
- Chapter 46: Encounter
- Chapter 47: Departure
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| This volume shows Shuya's fight with Kazuo, Hiroki Sugimura saves Shuya's life by
jumping in the ocean with him from the crazed Kazuo. Hiroki then
finds Yukie Utsumi and her gang who offer to help
the unconscious Shuya (having received bullet wounds from Kazuo).
Shogo runs away with Noriko away from the battle |
| 7 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 48: Bug
- Chapter 49: Firing
- Chapter 50: Demolition
- Chapter 51: Team
- Chapter 52: Versus
- Chapter 53: Explosion
- Chapter 54: Bonds
- Chapter 55: Trajectory
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| In this volume, Shinji's plan is about to succeed,
but they are distracted by Keita Iijima. Shinji
argues with him (and accidentally kills him) Kazuo shows up and
kills Yutaka. Shinji then realises he must blow up the shed with
Kazuo inside to get rid of the gun shooting menace. However Kazuo
hid in a tractor and kills Shinji. |
| 8 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 56: Sixth Sense
- Chapter 57: Unfortunate
- Chapter 58: Liars
- Chapter 59: Soap Opera
- Chapter 60: Allure
- Chapter 61: Sorceress and the Bullet
- Chapter 62: Split Personalities
- Chapter 63: Traumatic Games
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| In this volume, Mitsuko Souma bumps
into Tadakatsu Hatagami and Yuichiro Takiguchi who capture her. Later
on Yuichiro talks to Mitsuko and she realises that, unlike the
other guys she's known, he doesn't want to sleep with her. Mitsuko
finds a moment of solace with Takaguchi. But when Mitsuko tries to
kill Tadakatsu after kissing him, he escapes and tries to shoot
her, Yuichiro saves her by taking the bullet, Mitsuko finishes off
Tadakatsu and rapes Yuichiro's dying body and kills him. We also
get to learn a little about Mitsuko's troubled past. |
| 9 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 64: The Well
- Chapter 65: Toshinori Oda
- Chapter 66: Surviving
- Chapter 67: From Afar
- Chapter 68: Confession
- Chapter 69: Doubt
- Chapter 70: Crevice
- Chapter 71: Collapse
|
- Students Killed
- Toshinori Oda shot in the groin multiple
times By Kiriyama.
- Yuka Nakagawa poisoned to death. Accidental
occurrence triggered by Sakaki.
- Chisato Matsui shot in the stomach multiple
times by Noda.
- Yukie Utsumi shot in the stomach and rib
cage multiple times by Noda.
- Satomi Noda shot through the eye by
Tanizawa.
- Haruka Tanizawa shot all over the right
side of her body. Eventually dies of shot wounds by Noda.
|
|
| In this volume, Hiroki continues his search for Kayoko Kotohiki, until he finds Toshinori,
Kazuo shows up and kills Toshinori while Hiroki escapes. Later,
Shuya wakes up in the lighthouse in the care of girls (one of them,
Yuko
Sakaki, witnessed the death of Tatsumichi Oki who
was accidentally killed by Shuya) and sees Shuya as a 'Demon Boy'
due to her sensitive nature and belief in the lord and the Devil.
Yuko poisons some stew that is meant for Shuya to get rid of him,
but one girl, Yuka Nakagawa eats it and dies, this is
when the girls become panicked and Satomi Noda shoots all
her friends (except Yuko) but she is finished off by a dying Haruka Tanizawa. Shuya hears the gunshots
and runs to the kitchen. |
| 10 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 72: Yuko Sakaki
- Chapter 73: Wish
- Chapter 74: Reparation
- Chapter 75: Funeral
- Chapter 76: Rain
- Chapter 77: Bleak Reunion
- Chapter 78: Message
- Chapter 79: Faith
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| Shuya finds all the girl's corpses and finds the
depressed Yuko. She runs to the top of the Lighthouse and commits
suicide by jumping off but not before finding her faith again and
forgiving Shuya. Shuya gathers the bodies together and laments
their deaths and leaves. While on his way back to Noriko and Shogo,
he stumbles across mentally deranged Mizuho Inada (she
thinks she's in some kind of Dungeons and
Dragons world). Shuya pleads with her, but to no avail, ignores
Mizuho's gun shooting and clears off. He finds the bodies of Keita,
Yutaka and Shinji and breaks down into tears while clutching
Shinji's body, though an inscribed dying message telling Shuya to
'Take the shot' from his deceased friend raises his spirits. Shuya
is then reunited with Noriko and Shogo, Mizuho creates a shrine to
speak to her God, but she is killed by Kazuo. |
| 11 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 80: Encounter
- Chapter 81: The Tidings of Happiness
- Chapter 82: Limits
- Chapter 83: The Devil's Tactics
- Chapter 84: Truth and Untruth
- Chapter 85: Proposal
- Chapter 86: Violent Fist
- Chapter 87: Devil of Nothingness
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| Most of this volume is focused on Hiroki and Kayoko
(he finds her) and we learn about how they first met. They both
travel together to get to Shuya until Kazuo arrives and it ends in
a battle between Hiroki and Kazuo, Kayoko watched helplessly, some
of Hiroki's fingers are chopped off and a blade is thrown in his
eye. |
| 12 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 88: Despair
- Chapter 89: Awakening
- Chapter 90: Transcendental
- Chapter 91: Copy
- Chapter 92: Inversion
- Chapter 93: Promise
- Chapter 94: Incubation
- Chapter 95: Reason
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| This volume continues the battle between Hiroki and
Kazuo. The injured Hiroki tells Kayoko to save herself but she
refuses to leave and stays to die with him. Kazuo shoots both of
them and leaves their corpses behind. |
| 13 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 96: Closed Off Future
- Chapter 97: Natural Born Killers
- Chapter 98: Magic Tool
- Chapter 99: Where The Gun Points
- Chapter 100: The Identity of the Heart
- Chapter 101: Rejection
- Chapter 102: Going Home
- Chapter 103: The Thinking Heart
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| Mitsuko finds Kazuo and they both get into a
gunfight, However Mitsuko tries to seduce Kazuo but she is shot in
the face by Kazuo, Later on we get to find out about Shogo's last
nightmare in the program with Keiko and how she got killed. |
| 14 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 104: The Right Path
- Chapter 105: The Final Battle
- Chapter 106: Death Race
- Chapter 107: The Pursuit
- Chapter 108: Magician
- Chapter 109: Hit
- Chapter 110: God's Child
- Chapter 111: Wishes
|
- Students Killed
|
|
| Most of this volume is a car chase between Shuya's
gang and Kazuo, it ends in a gunfight and Noriko shoots Kazuo in
the face (however he isn't dead) and we learn about Kazuo's past
and why he is silent and violent all the time. |
| 15 |
— |
— |
— |
— |
- Chapter 112: Cause and Effect
- Chapter 113: Destiny
- Chapter 114: Determination
- Chapter 115: One's Last Moment
- Chapter 116: Deception
- Chapter 117: Inference
- Chapter 118: Counterattack
- Chapter 119: Hope
|
- Students Killed
- Kazuo Kiriyama: shot through the chin by
Nanahara in a death reminiscent to Mimura's.
- Shogo Kawada (Winner): shot through the
stomach.
|
|
| In this last volume, the battle between the three
heroes and Kazuo finally comes to an end. With the visions and
remembrance of his dead classmates, Shuya finds the will to protect
Noriko and shoots Kiriyama dead. In the American adaption of the
manga, Kazuo tells Nanahara he can 'feel again' before dying. Shogo
seems to betray the two lovebirds, until an attack on the winners
boat shows that Shogo's plan to defeat The Program has succeeded.
Shogo kills Yonemi and eventually dies of unforseen gun shot
wounds. Noriko and Shuya meet up with Shinji's aunt who helps them
get to the boat, where they can begin their new life in New York. |
Battle Royale Ultimate
Edition
Koushun Takami and Masayuki Taguchi have agreed to create a
special edition of the Battle Royale Manga, it seems the first
edition was released on October 16, 2007. The first edition
contains the first three volumes of the series. The second edition
was released on February 12, 2008. It includes more details on the
characters (a discussion called 'On the Couch'), colour pages and
new cover art, a new foreword by Koushun Takami, weapon details,
and a piece where medical personnel discuss the different injuries
of the game. It has 672 pages.
See also
References
External
links