From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Kamiyadori |

First English edition of Kamiyadori, published by
Tokyopop on December 26, 2008 |
| カミヤドリ |
| Genre |
Action, Horror, Supernatural, Military, Cyberpunk |
|
Manga |
| Author |
Kei Sanbe |
| Publisher |
Kadokawa
Shoten |
| English
publisher |
Tokyopop |
|
|
| Demographic |
Shōnen |
| Magazine |
Shōnen Ace |
| Original run |
March 1,
2004 – March 25,
2006 |
| Volumes |
5 |
|
Manga |
| Kamiyadori no
Nagi |
| Author |
Kei Sanbe |
| Publisher |
Kadokawa
Shoten |
| Demographic |
Shōnen |
| Magazine |
Ace Assault (previous), Shōnen Ace |
| Original run |
December
26, 2008 – ongoing |
| Volumes |
1 |
| Anime
and Manga Portal |
Kamiyadori (カミヤドリ
?) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kei
Sanbe. It was serialised in Kadokawa Shoten's Shōnen Ace. The
manga is licensed in North America by Tokyopop, in France by Kurokawa, in Spain by Planeta DeAgostini Comics, in Italy by Play
Press and in Germany by Carlsen Comics.
The sequel, Kamiyadori no Nagi (神宿りのナギ
?), is also published by written and
illustrated by Kei Sanbe and published by Kadokawa
Shoten.
Plot
Set in a dystopian future, the world has been
ravaged by a biological disease that transforms humans into
monsters called the Kamiyadori. The Right Arms is a military
peacekeeping group whose members have been infected with a strain
of the virus, granting them superhuman strength. To prevent the
spread of the virulent disease, all the people that are infected by
the disease have to be executed. When Right Arms agents, Jil and
Vivi, cannot kill a young boy and his sister, hope is created in
the dystopian world.
Characters
- Vivi is the protagonist of the series and is a
Right Arms agent. She is gifted with the ability to mimic any
movements. Because of this, she often repeats what other people say
and is nicknamed "Gadget" by her colleagues. She often refuses to
wear clothes. She is merciless and emotionless when it comes to
killing Kamiyadoris. She possesses no common sense.
- Jillald (aka. Jil) is a Right Arms agent. He
constantly tries to keep some clothes on Vivi. He refuses to use
his right arm when he is killing Kamiyadori. He is nicknamed "Mad
Righty" because of his ruthless killings of the Kamiyadori in the
past.
- Caros is Jillalds partner whom together were
of said to have killed far over sixty infected. He is nicknamed
"Mad Dog" for his in discrimination towards all infected. He often
quotes songs and lullabies during his killings of infected (ie.
Enter Sandman)
- Alisa is the commander of the Public Safety
Headquarters.
- Rady is a public safety officer. He was forced
to work with Vivi when one of their buildings were overrun with
terrorists. Vivi criticises his skill by saying "disqualified".
When he is infected with the virus by a Kamiyadori, Vivi kills
him.
- Gato is a heavy-set Right Arms agent who hates
to appear weak in front of Jillaid.
- Kismee is a Right Arm martial arts instructor.
She was raised up by prostitutes. She is very talkative. She is
nicknamed "Scratch" for the scar across her neck, living as it it
were "just a scratch" although it reveals a dark past .
- Anita (aka. Talker) is a girl has the ability
to communicate with The Searcher, who see what happens to the Right
Arms agents during their missions. She uses this ability to report
to Alisa about what happens to her agents.
- Redona is a ruthless Right Arms Agent.
- Clevort was a former army captain before he
indiscriminately murdered 60 civilians before he fully cooperated
with the public safety officers with his arrest. He was sentenced
to death at his trial. The Public Safety Commission intervened and
Kismee took him in as her partner.
Manga
Kamiyadori is written and illustrated by Kei Sanbe. It
was serialised in Kadokawa Shoten's Shōnen Ace.
Kadokawa Shoten released the 5 bound volumes of the manga between March
1, 2004 and March 25, 2006.[1][2] Tokyopop released the 5
tankōbon of the manga between December 12, 2006 and March
11, 2008.[3][4] The
manga is licensed in North America by Tokyopop,[5] in
France by Kurokawa,[6] in
Spain by Planeta
DeAgostini Comics,[7] in
Italy by Play Press and in Germany by Carlsen Comics.[8]
As of March 2009, Kadokawa Shoten has released the first
tankōbon volume of the manga's sequel, Kamiyadori no
Nagi (神宿りのナギ
?) on December 26, 2008.[9]
Kamiyadori no Nagi was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's
Ace Assault before being transferred to Shōnen Ace in March
2009 when the Ace Assault ended in Japan.[10]
Volume
listing
| No. |
Japanese |
English |
| Release date |
ISBN |
Release date |
ISBN |
| 1 |
March 1, 2004[1] |
ISBN 978-4-04-713607-6 |
December 12, 2006[11] |
ISBN 978-1-59-816633-0 |
- 01. "No Mercy" (容赦,
"Yōsha"
?)
- 02. "Nostrum" (妙案,
"Myōan"
?)
- 03. "Noxious" (有毒,
"Yūdoku"
?)
- 04. "Novice" (初心者,
"Shoshinsha"
?)
- 05. "Notion" (概念,
"Gainen"
?)
|
|
| 2 |
August 1, 2004[12] |
ISBN 978-4-04-713652-6 |
April 10, 2007[13] |
ISBN 978-1-59-816634-7 |
- 06. "Noose" (絞首刑,
"Kōshukei"
?)
- 07. "Nostalgia" (郷愁,
"Kyōshū"
?)
- 08. "No Go" (いいえ行く, "Iie
Iku"
?)
- 09. "Nought" (ゼロ,
"Zero"
?)
- 10. "Nonage" (発達初期, "Hattatsu
Shoki"
?)
- Inner Part. 1
|
|
| 3 |
January 26, 2005[14] |
ISBN 978-4-04-713700-4 |
August 7, 2007[15] |
ISBN 978-1-59-816635-4 |
- 11. "Node" (ノード,
"Nōdo"
?)
- 12. "Nobody" (誰も, "Dare
Mo"
?)
- 13. "Nosy" (せんさく好きな, "Sensaku
Suki Na"
?)
- 14. "Nob" (ノブ,
"Nobu"
?)
- 15. "Noumenon" (本体,
"Hontai"
?)
- 16. "Now" (今は, "Ima
Ha"
?)
- 17. "Who Killed Athna?"
|
|
| 4 |
August 26, 2005[16] |
ISBN 978-4-04-713744-8 |
December 11, 2007[17] |
ISBN 978-1-59-816636-1 |
- 18. "Who killed the parents?"
- 19. "Who killed Maddocks?"
- 20. "Who killed his mind?"
- 21. "Who killed Elysion?"
- 22. "Who killed Naty?"
- 23. "Who killed Benitia?"
- Inner Part. 2
|
|
| 5 |
March 25, 2006[2] |
ISBN 978-4-04-713804-9 |
March 11, 2008[4] |
ISBN 978-1-42-780217-0 |
- 24. "Who killed Aja?"
- 25. "Who killed Caros?"
- 26. "Who killed the bird?"
- 27. "Who killed the kingdom of Rodgek?"
- 28. "Who killed Tiju?"
- 29. "No Way Back..."
- Inner Part. 2
|
|
Reception
IGN's A.E. Sparrow criticises the
artwork of the manga and "too many nude or semi-nude scenes" of the
protagonist.[18]
Mania.com's Jarred Pine criticises the manga on its uses of
"scantily clad women" and "bad ass men with even badder
weapons".[19]
ActiveAnime's Scott Campbell commends the manga by saying, "the art
is dark and grungy like the world being depicted, but can just as
quickly become quirky and funny as the story offers a bit of humour
here and there. Any humor supplied is tongue-in-cheek, making it all the more
enjoyable for its subtlety. The buildings and structures drawn into
the backgrounds are excellent and really add to the whole
atmosphere of a ruined, barely holding on world that the characters
are immersed in. The character details are just as good – everyone
looks fairly different and it’s easy to recognize who is who due to
how much actual detail has been put into each of them. It’s so
great when an artist takes the time to make each of their
characters identifiable – it’s so much more realistic and makes the
story easier to follow and therefore enjoy".[20] Jason Thompson's appendix to
Manga: The Complete Guide compares the mangaka's earlier work Testarotho with the
manga with "Sanbe focuses less on the monsters than on human-human
violence and dark moral issues. (On the other hand, there’s only so
many times you can do the “please shoot me before I turn into a
monster” routine)".[21] He
also commends "a whole cast of shady, above-the-law characters,
distinctively depicted with Sanbe’s excellent figure artwork."[21]
However, he criticises the "third-world setting" being drawn in
"too much detail" as well as lack of plot movement.[21]
References
- ^ a
b
"カミヤドリ(1)" (in Japanese).
Kadokawa
Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200312000016. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^ a
b
"カミヤドリ (5)" (in
Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200505000120. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Catalog: Kamiyadori Vol. 3 -
Kare Kano Vol. 9". Tokyopop. http://www.tokyopop.com/manga/book_catalog/browse?alphabet=K&hide_adult=Y&p=2. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^ a
b
"Catalog: Kamen Tantei Vol. 4
- Kamiyadori Vol. 4". Tokyopop. http://www.tokyopop.com/manga/book_catalog/browse?alphabet=K. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Comic-Con: Tokyopop Triple
Play". Anime News Network. 2006-07-23. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2006-07-23/comic-con-tokyopop-triple-play. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori - T1" (in
French). Kurokawa. http://www.kurokawa.fr/seinen/fiche/86/kamiyadori-t1. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori N° 01" (in
Spanish). Planetacomics.net. http://www.planetacomic.net/comics_detalle.asp?Id=17231&cat=11482. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori Band 1" (in
German). Carlsen Comics. http://www.carlsen.de/web/manga/buch?tn=175991. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"神宿りのナギ (1)" (in
Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200808000449. Retrieved
2009-03-08.
- ^
"Fanroad, Ace
Assault, Big Comic 1 Mags End in Japan" (in
German). Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2009-03-15/fanroad-ace-assault-big-comic-1-mags-to-end-in-japan. Retrieved 05 January
2010.
- ^
"Kamiyadori Volume 1 (Paperback)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598166336/. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"カミヤドリ (2)" (in
Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200406000015. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori Volume 2 (Paperback)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598166344/. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"カミヤドリ (3)" (in
Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200411000141. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori Volume 3 (Paperback)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598166352/. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"カミヤドリ (4)" (in
Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/comic/bk_detail.php?pcd=200505000119. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
"Kamiyadori Volume 4 (Paperback)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598166360/. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
Sparrow, A.E. (December 11, 2006). "Kamiyadori Vol. 1
Review". IGN. http://au.comics.ign.com/articles/750/750471p1.html. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
Pine, Jarred (November 29, 2006). "kamiyadori Vol. #01".
Mania.com. http://www.mania.com/kamiyadori-vol-01_article_83219.html. Retrieved
2009-03-07.
- ^
Campbell, Scott (April 10, 2007). "Kamiyadori (Vol.1)".
ActiveAnime. http://www.activeanime.com/html/content/view/655/57/. Retrieved
2009-07-07.
- ^ a
b
c
Thompson, Jason (November 16, 2009). "365 Days of Manga, Day 62:
Kamiyadori". Suduvu. http://www.suvudu.com/2009/11/365-days-of-manga-day-62-kamiyadori.html. Retrieved
2009-11-18.
External
links