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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Story of Inuyasha - overall

Inuyasha Anime & Manga - The Background Information
Story Outline:

Set in the Sengoku Period of Japan (a period of domestic turmoil about 500
years ago), INUYASHA is a time travel fantasy adventure based on the
hit comic book series by the same name.

Kagome discovers that she can travel back and forth between the present and
the Sengoku Period through a well at the shrine near her house. As she is
drawn to another time, she is also drawn into a quest with Inuyasha for a
powerful, sacred stone. However, many enemies hinder their way to success,
and Inuyasha himself must often be controlled by Kagome. Not to mention that
the stone is broken into pieces, making their job all the more difficult... Kagome
discovers powers within herself that she never imagined existed. And she may
owe these powers to her predecessor, the sorceress Kikyo. In the meantime,
Inuyasha discovers that he has feelings for Kagome as they search for the stone
together.

©TAKAHASHI Rumiko/Shogakukan YOMIURI TV SUNRISE 2000
Source: Japan YTV

Official Review from the company that licensed Inuyasha in America - VIZ:

Rumiko Takahashi walks on the wild side in a manga tale of demons,
monsters, and medieval Japan.

First serialized in Shogakukan's weekly manga magazine for teens and
young adults, SHÔNEN SUNDAY, in 1996, Inu-Yasha tells the story of
a modern-day Japanese girl named Kagome whose family lives in an old
shrine. On the shrine grounds, there is an old covered well, about which there
is a legend, as well as an ancient Go-Shinboku God-Tree, and her grandfather's
shop selling mystical trinkets...in fact, nearly everything about the house
has a legend of some sort attached to it. Kagome has grown up thinking that the
legends are simple superstitions, but when a monster reaches ott of the
ancient "Bone-Eater's Well" one day and drags her into Japan's distant past,
she has to quickly come to terms with the magic of another era.

That era is Japan's medieval past, the Sengoku-jidai, typically referred to as
the "Warring States" era of Japan's Muromachi period (approximately
1467-1568 CE). During this time, rival warlords fought over territories with
their private armies and built fortified castles to protect their conquests.
Inu-Yasha takes place against this backdrop, and warlords and their armies
frequently appear in its pages, often as the hapless victims of demonic attacks.

When Kagome arrives in the past, she's hailed by the local people as the
reincarnation of their village's long-deceased priestess, Kikyo, who
"killed" the demon Inu-Yasha by a mystical arrow before she died. This claim
would seem to be the truth, as not only is Kagome the very image of the dead
woman, but when she is wounded by an attacking centipede-demon, a glittering
jewel emerges from the wound. This is the Shikon Jewel, or the "Jewel of Four
Souls," which Kikyo died to protect. Kagome also proves to have special powers,
including the ability to see magical objects. She may have even more powers, but
Takahashi is content to reveal them gradually as the story unfolds.

Kagome quickly acquires a partner of sorts in her travels in the past-Inu-Yasha,
the demon Kikyo mystically trapped (not killed) with her arrov. A half-breed,
Inu-Yasha owes his demonic strength to his father, a legendary wolf-demon, but
his mother was a mortal woman. Thus, Inu-Yasha has the outward appearance
of a full demon, including doglike ears and claws, but his strength does not compare
to a full demon's powers. For this reason, Inu-Yasha wants the Shikon Jewel, which
has the power to transform him into a full-fledged monster. But he's not the only
one who wants it-the jewel can increase anyone's powers with its magic, and over the
course of the series, humans and ddmons alike are seduced by the the jewel's power.

The search for the Shikon Jewel becomes the center of Inu-Yasha's story when
the jewel is shattered into multiple shards during an early battle. From that point,
Inu-Yasha and Kagome have the unenviable task of tracking down all the
shards, and piecing them back together again, and the story takes the form of a
quest, with each episode introducing a new menace that has acquired a jewel
shard. Interestingly, these travels aren't confined to the past. Kagome can use
the well to travel back to her own time-which she frequently does to fetch supplies,
as her schoolbooks, snacks, and a bicycle-and the pair even discover jewel shards
that have been passed down over the centuries.

However, Inu-Yasha isn't just a horror tale-there's even a bit of romance.
As the saga continues, the relationship between Kagome and her dog-demon
companion develops and becomes more complex. When Kagome first frees
Inu-Yasha from Kikyo's spell, his first thought is to destroy the woman he
quickly identifies as his "killer" by her smell, but an enchantment cast upon
him by Kikyo's baby sister, Kaede (now an old woman and the village leader),
enables Kagome to control Inu-Yasha with a word. That word, thought up by
Kagome on the spur of the moment, is a typical bit of Takahashi humor-"sit,"
as one would say to a dog. (The spell is contained in the necklace of prayer
beads around Inu-Yasha's neck which he is powerless to remove.) Inu-Yasha
says he hates Kagome, but from the start, the reader suspects that there was
more to his relationship with the priestess, Kikyo, than he's telling
(a suspicion later confirmed). Over time, Inu-Yasha reveals more about himself
and his half-human nature, and protects Kagome from danger, even when
he has no particular reason to. Likewise, Kagome proves to be much stronger
than he ever suspected she could be, standing up to their monstrous and
supernatural opponents to protect others, even at great risk to herself.

As their travels continue, new companions join in the journey-Myoga,
Inu-Yasha's flea-demon servant; Shippo, a fox-demon; and Miroku, a
Buddhist monk. Each additional character subtly alters the situation,
bringing out new aspects to Inu-Yasha and Kagome's relationship.


Basic Stat Info

Japanese name: Inuyasha
Dates: October 16, 2000-
August 31, 2002- (United States)
Number of episodes: 90+
Animation Studio: Sunrise
Broadcaster: Nihon TV
Creator(s):<.td> Rumiko Takahashi (manga)
Series Director: Masashi Ikeda
Producer(s): Michihiko Suwa, Hideyuki Tomioka
Planning: Michihiko Suwa, Masuo Ueda
Art Director: Shigemi Ikeda
Character Designer(s): Yoshihito Hishinuma
Voice Actors
(regular characters):
Kappei Yamaguchi (Inuyasha), Satsuki Yukino (Kagome)
Genre(s): fantasy, time travel, horror, demons, comedy, romance, historical, Japan
Home Video
information:
Japan: DVD (AVBA 14149, 14156, 14174, 14187, 14212, 14229, 14241, 14256, 14275, 14300, 14314, 14347, 14366, 14379, 14400, 14427, partial)
United States: DVD (announced)

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