Eat-Man
Eat-Man | |
Cover of Vol. 1 | |
イートマン (Īto Man) | |
---|---|
Genre | Action, adventure, science fiction |
Manga | |
Written by | Akihito Yoshitomi |
Published by | MediaWorks |
English publisher | |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Magazine | Dengeki Comic Gao! |
Original run | December 13, 1996 – September 27, 2002 |
Volumes | 19 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Koichi Mashimo |
Written by | Atsuhiro Tomioka |
Music by |
Yuki Kajiura Tomomasa Yoneda |
Studio | Studio Deen |
Licensed by | |
Network | TV Tokyo |
Original run | January 9, 1997 – March 27, 1997 |
Episodes | 12 |
Anime television series | |
Eat-Man '98 | |
Directed by | Toshifumi Kawase |
Written by | Atsuhiro Tomioka |
Music by | Yu Imai |
Studio | Studio Deen |
Licensed by | |
Network | TV Tokyo |
Original run | October 8, 1998 – December 23, 1998 |
Episodes | 12 |
Eat-Man (Japanese: イートマン Hepburn: Īto Man) is a Japanese manga series created by Akihito Yoshitomi in 1996 which was serialized by MediaWorks monthly in 19 volumes until 2002 manga magazine Dengeki Comic Gao!. In 1997 Studio Deen adapted the manga into a 12 episode anime television series which was broadcast in Japan from January 9 to March 27, 1997 on TV Tokyo. A sequel, Eat-Man '98, was also animated by Studio Deen and ran from October 8 to December 23, 1998. Both anime series are licensed in North America by Bandai Entertainment and the manga series was licensed by Viz Communications before it was dropped.
Story
Eat-Man is a series of short, episodic stories about an "explorer" (a type of mercenary job) named Bolt Crank, who has the ability to eat virtually anything, and can then produce from his body at will any object he has consumed. Eat-Man's world is a mix of high tech futurist (See Cyberpunk) and fairy tale styles. The episodes take place in various worlds and in undefined times.
About Bolt Crank
Bolt Crank is the best "explorer" in the world. "Explorer" in the manga is a kind of mercenary. Although mercenaries in the manga do any job, even assassinations, the explorers were employees with principles.
Bolt has a bizarre power, the ability to eat anything inorganic and then later recreate it (even fixing the item ingested) from any part of his body. The item usually comes out from his arms and hands, but sometimes can be created in other body areas, like his head, chest, or legs.
In the manga, it was implied that inside Bolt's body was actually a void of space. Objects that he has consumed float around in a seemingly endless space, much like the inside of Doraemon's fourth-dimensional pocket.
He is a man of few words and doesn't show his feelings. Always acting cool, his cynical personality and his "always get the job done" attitude can make him seem like a very cold and dark character. But in the end, he always finds a way to do the right thing. He never appears to look back at the past, never regretting it.
Although Bolt's past remained a mystery in all the series, some stories gave clues about his past, including some characters that appeared in various episodes. In the end of the manga series revealed a lot about who and what Bolt is, but his exact identity still remains a mystery.
Here are some hints in the series:
- Bolt never ages, but the end of the manga series revealed that he is biological immortal (he doesn't age but may be hurt and killed).
- There is a character identical to Bolt called Leon. His creations include an android woman (Stella) with human feelings who loved him (an antagonist of Bolt in various episodes, trying to transform all living things in machines) and a weird robot capable of assimilating any mechanical part (it has a parasitic relationship with Bolt and keeps annoying him in various episodes from inside his body). It is implied that Bolt is his clone, or he is a clone from Bolt.
- Other possible origins are shown in other stories, where Bolt "worked" in a research center that performed tests with human beings and created humans with odd powers, like an immortal woman (with instant regeneration), a girl that turns into a monster, and another girl that generates electricity. Bolt's job there remained unexplained, suggesting he was just another test subject.
- The series suggests he had been created before the beginning of mankind. In a story about the downfall of two old winged races before mankind arrived (white and black winged from the same species, one called Angels and the other Demons, with the Demons ruling the world), there is a prophecy that say that, with a union of an Angel and a Demon, the world will be free from the rule of darkness, and be guided by "the one who eats" until the end of times.
- The final chapter heavily implies that he may actually be God himself, "the creator" as he is seen throughout his final adventure in the last volume consuming orbs of light given to him by a mysterious angel, which each contain the elements necessary to create a world. Life, light, etc., and at the end, he consumes death to complete the necessary ingredients, (who had taken physical form to hunt him down and kill him due to his agelessness being "unnatural") and at the end of the manga, creates a doorway in the middle of the desert and walks through it, ending the series as he walks into a void new universe.
Recurring characters
The adventures in Eat-Man are usually unrelated. However, a few characters are recurring, especially in later volumes.
- Aimie: An old detective friend of Bolt. She is immortal, and at childhood was a successful superhuman experiment in a laboratory at which Bolt worked. She investigated a series of murdered scientists, which turned out to be her quest for revenge against those who "created" her.
- Elena: A girl with the power to generate electricity. She was Rivette's sister. She was once a girlfriend of Leon.
- Hard: Another explorer with a strong sense of justice. The mysterious ways of Bolt sometimes made him distrustful, believing Bolt to be his rival and enemy. Nevertheless, Hard admired Bolt as the greatest explorer, and tried to follow in his steps.
- Leon: Bolt lookalike. Leon suggests that he lived very long. There is nothing to suggest that Leon has any of Bolt's abilities. Leon fell in love with Stella. After his death, he planned and succeeded to use Bolt to resurrect himself as a machine, in order to live with Stella for the eternity. To do this, he created Teromea to parasite Bolt and convince him to eat and recreate him.
- Rain Boyer: Granddaughter of a famous explorer named Boyer, and heir to the all-powerful Boyer Sword. She dreamed of becoming an explorer like her father. She is shown as a young girl with little experience searching for the sword in volume one. Later in volume eight she appeared as an adult and a very skilled explorer with a little crush on Bolt.
- Rivette: A skilled explorer with the power to generate electricity. She was cynical and interested only in money, at least on the surface. She was actually looking for her sister Elena, who was kidnapped when Rivette was only a child.
- Shadow: An assassin with much resentment toward Leon. He thought that Bolt was Leon, and wanted to make Bolt suffer, no matter what. He dressed as Bolt and killed people, defaming his name and making Bolt wanted in various countries. He had some psychic powers. He was in love with Stella and hated Leon because of that.
- Stella: A woman who was madly in love with Leon. She was actually an android created by him, but got mad and perverted when he killed himself. She planned to convert all the humans to machines, as her plan to end mortality. She did some twisted experiments to achieve that. She ultimately ended up living with a resurrected Leon as a machine for all eternity.
- Teromea: A parasite machine created by Leon. It tricked Bolt into eating him, and then lived in Bolt's body as a parasite, annoying him. His ultimate objective was to resurrect Leon, and convince Bolt to do his part in that plan. The resurrection involved Teromea eating Leon and using Bolt's powers to recreate him. He later dies due to Bolt completing his mission of stopping Stella. It have similar powers of Bolt, eating and recreating machines.
- Eurydice A hacker girl, entitled herself as the "number one computer specialist" (Vol 11 page 4). She helped Bolt in many adventures, obtailing information and linking Bolt through virtual-reality networks.
The anime series
A 12 episode anime series was released by TV Tokyo in 1997 and was written and directed by Koichi Mashimo and animated by Studio Deen. The series featured music by Yuki Kajiura and was the first time Kajiura and Mashimo worked together and would work together for several more projects over the next several years. The series was very loosely based on the manga featuring Bolt Crank, played by Masashi Ebara, as the main character and keeping the fictional currency of Lido. The following year a second 12 episode series, Eat Man '98 was released, once again animated by Studio Deen and with Ebara reprising his role as Bolt Crank, but under new direction by Toshifumi Kawase.
Reception
Although the manga series was a success, the 12-episode anime series released by Studio Deen was highly criticized by fans of the manga because of the great differences between the plots of the manga and the anime.
Almost all fantasy elements were removed from the anime, leaving a futuristic world. Bolt Crank's personality was very different from the manga. This Bolt showed more feelings, hated his explorer life, and desired to be a normal person. The series is episodic and mysterious. The magic crystal that appeared in the opening, the glass monoliths, the ever-floating ship known as "LAVION", and the afterlife dream in the 11th episode are never explained, creating a very bizarre and abstract atmosphere. Most of the episodes ended with unanswered questions.
Due to the fans' dissatisfaction, a new season was released as Eatman '98 one year after. Almost all the stories were directly based on stories from the manga, making it very true to the manga.
Later appearance
The character of Bolt Crank made a guest appearance in Akihito Yoshitomi's later creation, Ray. The story is included under a special chapter, "Drop in", in Ray volume 5 from pages 167 to 190.
See also
External links
- Eat-Man (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia