As an anime fan in the late
1980s I felt a certain complacency; I'd seen Robotech and Captain
Harlock, Space Battleship Yamato and Bubblegum Crisis and
Dirty Pair. I'd spent all night copying VHS fansubs of Ranma 1/2
episodes and the Patlabor movie and showing the Daicon III-IV videos to
packed rooms at comic cons. Everybody wanted to see Akira or Project
A-Ko or the Macross movie over and over again. Anime fandom was becoming... dull.
the fateful Maxell |
Around that time my pal Meg
sent me a Maxell T-120, and sandwiched between an episode of Babel II
and an insane 1934 Buck Rogers short (produced for the 1933-34 Chicago
Worlds Fair!) was something that took my preconceived notions of
"Japanese animation" and kicked them to the curb. That
something was a copy of a mid-80s Japanese videotape titled "Mushi
Pro Best Series," and not only was it the first time I'd see
Astro Boy and Kimba The White Lion in their original Japanese, it was
also the first time I'd see Princess Knight and Tomorrow's Joe and
Dororo. It was my first glimpse of back-catalog oldies like Boys'
Detective Team and Animal 1, it was stunning proof that the
live-action/anime hybrid Vampire really existed, and proof somewhere
out there was an English-language version of the 1969 Animerama
feature A Thousand And One Nights. This tape took my complacent
seen-it-all anime snob world and blasted it out of existence, filling
the void with twenty five or thirty years of cartoons I'd never heard
of, that nobody I knew had ever heard of, and that I was going to
spend the rest of my time finding out about. Decades later my pal
Ryan would find the original VHS in an eBay auction and he'd send it
my way, and now I'm sharing it with you.
Mushi Production, as you'll
know if you read the book we reviewed last time, was Osamu Tezuka's
animation studio. Eventually Tezuka would divide his corporate
holdings into Tezuka Productions for his manga and intellectual
copyrights, Mushi Production for animation, and Mushi Pro Shoji as a
licensing company handling character goods, toys, and other
merchandise. As one of Japan's powerhouses of "terebi manga",
as it was called at the time, the studio hired a staff full of future
animation legends like Osamu Dezaki, Rin Taro, Gisaburo Sugii, and
Ryosuke Takahashi, and its hit series are still popular Japanese
cultural icons. Mushi Pro and Mushi Pro Shoji both took a big hit in
the early 1970s, and while Shoji didn't make it, Mushi Pro lived to
animate another day. After a few years of inactivity, Satoshi Ito
revived the studio with a smaller staff and a more fiscally
responsible focus on films and specials rather than TV series.
Mushi's latter-day productions
include firefly fairy tale "The Adventures of Pipi",
disaster film "Typhoon In Ise Bay", civil engineering drama
"Pattai Lai - Water On The South Island", the taxation
information film "I Will Show You Another World", and the wonderfully titled foreign travel safety short "Gentleman Thief Gary's
Japanese Capture Strategy!" But this VHS is Mushi's Best Series
from '63 until '84. And what are those best series?
Astro Boy has machine guns in his butt |
Astro Boy How could a Mushi
Pro Best Series Collection begin without Astro Boy? Tetsuwan Atom, or
Mighty Atom, or Astro Boy as we knew him, was the ten-thousand
horsepower robot boy created by Dr. Tenma as an android memorial to
his dead son. As a 21st century Pinocchio, Astro Boy battled evil,
went to school, dealt with a bratty robot sister, travelled through
time and space, and fought the greatest robot in the world! Based on
the popular Osamu Tezuka manga, the '63 to '66 Astro Boy series would
become Tezuka's signature creation.
spacemen with a mission, they must make a very big decision |
Wonder Three Everyone who
saw "The Day The Earth Stood Still" knows the score:
Galactic Command representatives visit Earth to see how dangerous we
are with our atom bombs. Maybe they'll squash us like
bugs before we cause any trouble. This time the Space Brothers don't
send Michael Rennie and a giant clunky robot; our current spacemen
with a mission are three aliens who, to better blend in with Earth
society, are changed into a bunny, a duck, and a horse. Befriended by
Earth boy Shinichi Hoshi, whose older brother is a super spy for the
secret Phoenix agency, the Wonder Three find themselves involved in
adventures around the world! Wonder Three aired from June '65 until
June '66 and would get an American TV release as "The Amazing
Three" that would vanish from the airwaves in the mid 70s.
Jungle Emperor Tezuka's
Jungle Emperor became Japan's first color TV animation in this
internationally successful '65-'66 series about Leo, a talking white
lion who becomes ruler of his jungle home deep in "deepest
darkest" Africa. Developed with an eye towards foreign sales, it
aired on NBC as Kimba The White Lion. NBC passed on Tezuka's more
episodic sequel, however. Jungle Emperor's vibrant colors, dramatic
storylines, and powerful Isao Tomita score made this series an
instant classic that would be seen on American TV for decades and
eventually make its way to VHS and DVD.
not to be confused with the Disney film |
Go Ahead Leo The '66-'67
continuation of Jungle Emperor featured an adult Leo and his family
as they struggle to defend the peace of the jungle. Less cartoony,
more violent, and at times experimental, Leo was exactly what NBC did
NOT want in a cartoon show, and the series would not air in America
for nearly twenty years, finally winding up on Pat Robertson's CBN network and a series of cheap public domain home video releases.
that's one crazy monkey king |
Son Goku's Great Adventure
This TV series is based on Tezuka's 1950s adventure-gag manga, in
turn based on the 16th century Chinese
novel by Wu
Cheng’en entitled
Saiyu-Ki or "Journey To The West," itself the basis for a
1959 Toei film that Tezuka was a part of and that was screened in
America as "Alakazam The Great." This particular great
adventure aired from January until September '67 and is all about Son
Goku, the monkey who gains amazing powers and uses them to get into
all kinds of trouble along with his pals Genjo Sanzo, Hakkai, Sagojo,
and Son Goku's bratty girlfriend Tatsuko. This animated series
abandoned all pretense of logic or historical accuracy and instead
series director Gisaburo "Jack And The Beanstalk" Sugii ran
rampant with cartoony gags, crazy techniques, and breaking the fourth
wall to comment to the audience. Other talent included Osamu "Golgo
13" Dezaki and Ryosuke "Votoms" Takahashi.
honey, the horse can tell |
Princess Knight A girl born
with a boy's spirit, Princess Sapphire must masquerade as a Prince
and defeat the evil schemes of her rebellious courtiers to stay on
the throne of her kingdom. Princess Knight, airing in Japan from
April 1967 until April of 1968, was pitched to US television as both
"Choppy And The Princess" and "Princess Knight."
The show aired in a few US markets as "Princess Knight" in
the 70s, and a "Choppy" compilation film made it to home video. The TV series finally appeared on North American DVD recently. The original manga and its sequel Twin Knights are also available in English.
Boys & One Girl Detective Team |
Boys Detective Team /
Wanpaku Detectives This show, based on pioneering Japanese mystery
author Edogawa Rampo's "Boys Detective Team" stories, would
be the first anime directed by Rin Taro. Boys Detective Team starred,
yes, the Boys Detective Team, sort of a Japanese Hardy Boys/Nancy
Drew gang of juvenile sleuths, battling the evil schemes of the
mysterious Twenty-Face Phantom, from February until September of '68.
The Boys Detective Team would reappear or be rebooted or updated or
whatever in the 2016 anime "Trickster".
he's an animal |
Animal 1 High schooler
Ichirou Azuma is the oldest of seven kids, a freestyle featherweight
wrestler, and star of this series that aired from April to September
of 1968. Nicknamed "Animal 1," he battles towards the '68
Mexico City Olympic Games. Loosely based on the career of Olympic
wrestler Osamu Watanabe – who won every one of the several hundred
matches in his entire career without ever giving up a single point!! –
the original manga was by Noboru "Star Of The Giants"
Kawasaki.
vampire (a show about werewolves) |
Vampire Hidden among us are
humans who can turn into animals; the scheming criminal Makube plots
to use their power to conquer the world. Can Toppei the werewolf
defeat Makube's plans? This October '68- March '69 live-action series
starred Tezuka in a cameo role (Toppei comes to Tokyo to work at
Mushi Pro) and some scenes were shot in Tezuka's front yard. The
scenes with animals and monsters were animated, leading to jarring
and unearthly effects, particularly when combined with
writing/directing talent like Hiro "Female Prisoner Scorpion
701" Matsuda. Equal parts Universal horror, French New Wave, and
Japanese cartoon, there's nothing like Vampire.
the titular Dororo, with stick |
Dororo Future anime-world
stars like Osamu Dezaki, Yoshiyuki Tomino, and Gisaburo Sugii worked
on this April-September '69 adaptation of Tezuka's swordsman vs yokai
revenge manga, the story of Hyakkimaru, the boy who must kill 48
demons to undo his father's curse and become whole again. Both the
Dororo anime and manga would eventually find their way to North
American release.
A Thousand And One Nights
Released on June 12, 1969, this ambitious adult animated film was a
big budget retelling of what over the centuries became an accretion
of Arabic legend, the earliest iteration of which dates back to the
9th century. Tezuka and Eichi Yamamoto directed this
widescreen epic, the first "Animerama" film, in a herculean
effort to drag the medium of animation into the adult world. Did this
film ever screen in English? We're still looking for evidence.
Tomorrow's Joe |
Tomorrow's Joe Tetsuya
Chiba's monumental boxing manga epic became Osamu Dezaki's signature
animated TV series, as every hallmark of Dezaki's animation career –
the freeze frames, the multiple cameras, the slow motion – bursts
forth to tell the story of Joe Yabuki, orphan prizefighter, who
battles in and out of the ring for his own destiny. Mushi's most
successful non-Astro Boy television series, Tomorrow's Joe aired from April 1970
until September of '71 and remains a touchstone of Showa-era Japanese
popular culture. This one was pitched to American TV as "Rocky
Joe", but nobody bought it.
hail, Caesar |
Cleopatra The second
Animerama feature, this ambitious, schizophrenic, anachronistic
historical epic features a blue Caesar, time travel, cameos from
Sazae-San, and a live action framing sequence starring human actors
with cartoon heads. You can literally see Mushi Production going
bankrupt with every frame of this indulgent mess. Cleopatra's Japan
release was September 1970, and the film would screen a few years
later in America with a self-imposed X rating and a harsh NYT review.
she's playing the Lee Marvin song "I Was Born Under A Wandering Star" |
Wandering Sun / Nozomi In
the Sun Switched at birth, Nozomi and Miki grow up in different
families but both become singers and their paths cross as they
compete in the entertainment world for success and romance. Wandering
Sun aired from April to September '71 and the animation staff
included Yoshiyuki "Gundam" Tomino and Yoshikazu "also Gundam"
Yasuhiko. This series was the first cartoon to depict the
entertainment world ("The Archies" don't count) and the
first shojo series to deal with realistic teenagers as opposed to
magical girls or princesses. Wandering Sun was based on the manga by
Keisuke Fujikawa (writer) and Mayumi Suzuki (artist), originally
serialized in Shogakukan's "Weekly Shojo", and which in
turn was inspired by the real life singer Fuji Keiko.
rock you like a hurricane |
Hurricane Kunimatsu Blazing
transfer student Ishida Kunimatsu arrives at a new school and his
boisterous fighting spirit causes all kinds of trouble. However, the
school principal wisely channels Kunimatsu's youthful energy into
various school sports teams by promising Kunimatsu all-you-can-eat
lunches! This remake of P Productions' "Harris's Whirlwind"
– yes, the same P Productions behind Space Giants and Spectreman -
got a name change because the sponsor Kanebo Harris dropped out, and
aired October '71 until September 1972, and was based on the original
Tetsuya Chiba manga. A Hurricane Kunimatsu short film appeared in
72's Manga Matsuri film festival alongside Hellhound Liner 0011!
Belladonna Of Sadness People
have been using the phrase "animation for grownups" since
Akira first hit Blockbuster shelves, but Belladonna Of Sadness was
Japan's first truly adult animated film, a challenging,
hallucinogenic watercolor nightmare unlike anything seen before, or
since. Belladonna Of Sadness is based on French historian Jules
Michelet's La Sorciere (1862), a seminal work portraying medieval
witchcraft practices as rebellion against church and state. Today La
Sorciere is seen as historically inaccurate, but on the other hand
Michelet is the guy who invented the term 'Renaissance' so he must
have had something going on somewhere. Largely abandoned after its
June 1973 release, Belladonna of Sadness resurfaced recently with a 4K re-release to disturb a whole new audience.
those cute polar bears |
Adventures of The Polar Cubs
After a long interregnum, Mushi returned with more practical
management and started delivering more socially acceptable animation,
like this kid-friendly film about two polar bear cubs (July '79
release) and their adventures among their animal friends up north.
Because polar bears have friends, right? With a few songs, some
celebrity voices, and stop-motion animation, this one might as well
be one of the Rankin/Bass specials Mushi helped out on, but on its
own it's fairly undistinguished. A clearance-bin VHS release in the
States placed it in front of a lot of American kid eyeballs, though.
Yuki says "peace, man" |
Yuki Released in August of
1981, Yuki was directed by Tadashi Imai, based on a story by Ryusuke
Saito, and featured character designs by Tetsuya Chiba. In the
Muromachi Era (1336-1573), Yuki the snow goddess comes to a small
village and challenges the evil that lives both in men's hearts and
also in the volcano next door, which houses a giant Majin-style lava
monster.
Star Of Cottonland Watch
Mushi's director Shinichi Tsuji and original manga artist Yumiko
Oshima invent "moe" in this 1984 film of a sad little
kitten adopted by a handsome young man – the twist being the sad
little kitten is shown as a doll-like cat-human hybrid in frilly
Victorian dress. Will Chibi-neko ever become a real girl and marry
her "husband", or will she instead become a real cat and
pee on the couch? Will legions of gothic lolita fashion designers
take their visual cues from this production? And didn't 2001's
Magical Meow Meow Taruto shamelessly steal everything from this?
Of course, this videotape
doesn't cover everything Mushi Pro ever produced. Both pre and post
bankruptcy they worked on a wide variety of domestic and
international animation, including Lensman, Rayearth, Initial D,
Pokemon, Moomin, Panzer World Galient, Robot Carnival, Princess Nine,
Sgt. Frog, Vickie the Viking, Trigun, Wansa-kun, Barefoot Gen, and a
host of international co-productions, including the videogame tie-in
Pole Position and lots of 60s-'70s TV for Rankin/Bass, including a
bizarre special starring the Marx Brothers, WC Fields, and Flip
Wilson called "The Mad Mad Mad Comedians."
We'd still be talking about
Mushi today if only for their hit '60s TV shows. But as this VHS
time capsule shows, Mushi was much more than Astro Boy and Kimba and
Princess Knight, much more than a Tezuka-only production team; Mushi
was a studio that embraced the vision of other manga artists and
worked hard to push the boundaries of what animation could do and
where animation could go. Even in failure Mushi fascinates, and as
the 4K restoration of Belladonna Of Sadness proves, one generation's
supposed misstep is another generation's lost masterpiece.
that time Osamu Dezaki animated Flip Wilson |
Thanks again to Meg E. and
Ryan J. for putting this tape in my hands, and to Osamu Tezuka and
Mushi Pro for making this all happen in the first place.
-Dave Merrill
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