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GeGeGe no Kitarō (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎) is a manga series created in 1960 by mangaka Shigeru Mizuki. It is best known for its popularization of the folklore creatures known as yōkai, a class of spirit-monster to which all of the main characters belong. It has been adapted for the screen several times, as anime, live action and video games. A new anime series has been made every decade since 1968.

The title of the original story is Hakaba no Kitarō (å¢"場の鬼太郎), literally meaning "Kitarō (of the) Graveyard". This story was an early 20th-century Japanese folk tale performed on kamishibai. The name "Ge Ge Ge..." was applied to Mizuki's particular telling of the Kitarō story when a Toei Animation series based on the characters of his comic was created. In January, 2008, the original comic was finally adapted into an animated series, running in Fuji TV's Noitamina slot.

Characters


GeGeGe no Kitarō
Kitarō (鬼太郎, Kitarō)
Kitarō is a yōkai boy born in a cemetery and, aside from his mostly decayed father, the last living member of the Ghost Tribe (幽霊族, yūrei zoku). He is missing his left eye, but his hair usually covers the empty socket. He fights for peace between humans and yōkai, which generally involves protecting the former from the wiles of the latter. When questioned in the 2007 movie, Kitarō responds that he is three hundred and fifty years old.
Kitarō has an assortment of strange weapons at his disposal, including:
  • remote-controlled geta sandals
  • a detachable hand, also remote-controlled
  • a magic chanchanko vest which can protect its wearer from danger; it occasionally seems to act of its own accord, wrapping around enemies or aiding friends, even when Kitarō is not available to command it
  • spiny hairs which can be shot like arrows
  • another hair which can serve as an antenna for detecting spirit activity
  • longer locks of his hair can be used as a spear or sword
  • a magical ocarina (usually used for calling Ittan Momen), which contains a baton, a whip and occasionally music which has the power to damage certain ghosts.
  • the power of electrocution, usually employed when an enemy has pinned or restrained him and he can no longer kick or use other weapons
Medama-oyaji (目玉のおやじ, or 目玉親父, Lit. "Eyeball Father")
Medama-oyaji is Kitarō's father. Once a fully formed adult ghost, he perished of a disease, only to be reborn out of his decayed body as an anthropomorphic version of his own eyeball. He looks small and fragile, but has a strong spirit and a great love for his son. He is also extremely knowledgeable about ghosts and monsters. He enjoys staying clean, and is often seen bathing in a small bowl. He has a great love for sake.
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, he is referred to as Daddy Eyeball.
Nezumi Otoko (ねずみç"·, "Rat Man")
Nezumi Otoko is a rodent-like yōkai-human halfbreed. He has been alive for three hundred and sixty years, and in that time has almost never taken a bath, rendering him filthy, foul-smelling, and covered in welts and sores. While he is usually Kitarō's friend, Nezumi Otoko will waste no time cooking up vile schemes or betraying his companions if he thinks there's money to be had or a powerful enemy to side with. He claims to be a college graduate of the University of the Bizarre (怪奇大学, Kaiki Daigaku). He can immobilize even the strongest yokai that accost him with a pungent flatulence attack. And akin to cats and mice, he and Nekomusume cannot stand being around each other.
Nezumi-Otoko first appears in the story The Lodging House (Rental manga version) as Dracula IV's minion.
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, he is referred to as Ratman.
Neko Musume (猫娘 or ねã"娘, "Cat Girl")
A normally quiet yōkai girl, who transforms into a frightening cat monster with fangs and feline eyes when she is angry or hungry for fish. Predictably, she does not get along well with Nezumi Otoko. She seems to harbor a slight crush on Kitarō, who sees her only as a friend. In recent iterations (possibly due to the recent anime phenomenon of fanservice), she is very fond of human fashion and is seen in different outfits and uniforms. She bears some resemblance to the bakeneko of Japanese folklore.
Neko-Musume first appears in the story Neko-Musume and Nezumi-Otoko (Weekly Shōnen Magazine version), however another cat-girl named Neko (猫) appears in the earlier stories The Vampire Tree and the Neko-Musume and A Walk to Hell (Rental version).
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, she is referred to as Catchick.
Sunakake Babaa (砂かã'婆, "Sand-throwing hag")
Sunakake Babaa is an old yōkai woman who carries sand which she throws into the eyes of enemies to blind them. She serves as an advisor to Kitarō and his companions, and manages a yōkai apartment building. The original sunakake-baba is an invisible sand-throwing spirit from the folklore of Nara Prefecture.
Sunakake-babaa first appears in a cameo as one of many yōkai attending a sukiyaki party in the story A Walk to Hell (Rental version) before making a more prominent appearance in The Great Yōkai War (Shōnen Magazine version).
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, she is referred to as The Sand Witch.
Konaki Jijii (子泣き爺, "Child-crying Old Man")
Konaki Jijii is a comic, absent-minded old yōkai man who attacks enemies by clinging to them and turning himself to stone, increasing his weight and mass immensely and pinning them down. He and Sunakake Babaa often work as a team. The original konaki jijii is a ghost which is said to appear in the woods of Tokushima Prefecture in the form of a crying infant. When it is picked up by some hapless traveller, it increases its weight until it crushes him.
Konaki-jijii first appears in a cameo as one of many yōkai attending a sukiyaki party in the story A Walk to Hell (Rental version) before making a more prominent appearance in The Great Yōkai War (Shōnen Magazine version).
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, he is referred to as Old Man Crybaby.
Ittan Momen (一反木綿, "Roll of Cotton")
Ittan Momen is a flying yōkai resembling a strip of white cloth. Kitarō and friends often ride on him when traveling. The original ittan-momen is a spirit from Kagoshima Prefecture myth which wraps itself around the faces of humans in an attempt to smother them.
Ittan Momen first appears in the story The Great Yōkai War (Shōnen Magazine version).
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, he is referred to as Rollo Cloth.
Nurikabe (ぬりかべ, "Plastered Wall")
Nurikabe is a large, sleepy-eyed wall-shaped yōkai, who uses his massive size to protect Kitarō and his friends. The original Nurikabe is a spirit which blocks the passage of people walking at night.
Nurikabe first appears in a cameo as one of many yōkai attending a sukiyaki party in the story A Walk to Hell (Rental version) before making a more prominent appearance in The Great Yōkai War (Shōnen Magazine version).
In the 2002 Kodansha International Bilingual Comics edition, he is referred to as Wally Wall.
Nurarihyon (ぬらりひょã‚")
Kitaro's old rival,he is depicted as an old man who comes at other people's houses and drink their tea. He is also a member of the Gazu Hyaki Yako, Nurarihyon has a member he always uses named Shu no Bon.

Media


GeGeGe no Kitarō

Kamishibai

The Kitarō story began life as a kamishibai in 1933, written by Masami Itou (伊藤正美). Itou's version was called Kitarō of the Graveyard (Hakaba no Kitarō), and is generally written in katakana to distinguish it from Mizuki's version of the tale. It is said to be a loose reinterpretation of the similar Japanese folktale called the Ame-Kai Yurei ("The Candy-Buying Ghost.") In 1954, Mizuki was asked to continue the series by his publisher.

Manga

The work Hakaba Kitarō was published as a rental manga in 1960, but it was considered too scary for children. In 1965, renamed to Hakaba no Kitarō, it appeared in Shōnen Magazine and ran through 1970. The series was renamed GeGeGe-no-Kitarō in 1967 and continued on Shōnen Sunday, Shōnen Action, Shukan Jitsuwa and many other magazines.

In 2002 GeGeGe-no-Kitarō was translated by Ralph F. McCarthy and compiled by Natsuhiko Kyogoku for Kodansha Bilingual Comics.

  • Volume 1 ISBN 4-7700-2827-X
  • Volume 2 ISBN 4-7700-2828-8
  • Volume 3 ISBN 4-7700-2829-6

In 2013, "Kitaro," a compilation of classic Sixties manga episodes, was released by Drawn and Quarterly, with English translation by Jocelyne Allen and an introduction by Matt Alt.

TV series

Gegege no Kitarō was broadcast on Fuji Television in five different iterations:

  1. 1968-1969
  2. 1971-1972
  3. 1985-1988
  4. 1996-1998
  5. 2007-2009

All of the above were animated by Toei Animation.

Music

The opening theme to all five series is "Gegege no Kitarō". It has been sung by Kazuo Kumakura (1st, 2nd), Ikuzo Yoshi (3rd), Yūkadan (4th), and Ichirou Mizuki (5th).

In January 2008, an all new anime (also produced by Toei) premiered on Fuji TV during the late night hours in the Noitamina block. This anime uses the original manga title (Hakaba Kitarō), and unlike the usual anime versions, it is closer to the original manga and is not part of the existing remake canon. It also features a completely different opening ("Mononoke Dance" by Denki Groove) and ending theme song ("Snow Tears" by Shoko Nakagawa).

Movies

Anime

  • July 21, 1968: Gegege no Kitarō (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎) (Retelling of Anime 1, Episodes 5~6)
  • July 12, 1980: Gegege no Kitarō: The All Seeing Eye (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 地相眼,, Gegege no Kitarō Chisōme) (Retelling of Anime 2, Episode 37)

Based on the third anime, the following have original plots:

  • December 21, 1985: Gegege no Kitarō
  • March 15, 1986: Gegege no Kitarō: The Great Yōkai War (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 妖怪大戦争,, Gegege no Kitarō Yōkai Dai Sensō)
  • July 12, 1986: Gegege no Kitarō: Strongest Yōkai Corps!Dismebark to Japan!! (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 最強妖怪軍団! 日本上陸!!,, Gegege no Kitarō Saikyō Yōkai Gundan! Nihon Jōriku!!)
  • December 20, 1986: Gegege no Kitarō: Crash!! The Great Rebellion of the Multi-Dimensional Yōkai (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 激突!! 異次元妖怪の大反乱,, Gegege no Kitarō Gekitotsu!! Ijigen Yōkai no Dai Hanran)

Based on the fourth anime, the following have original plots:

  • July 6, 1996: Gegege no Kitarō: The Great Sea Beast (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 大海獣,, Gegege no Kitarō Dai KaijÅ«)
  • March 8, 1997: Gegege no Kitarō: The Obake Nighter (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 お化ã'ナイター)
  • July 12, 1997: Gegege no Kitarō: Yōkai Express! The Phantom Train (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 妖怪特急! まぼろしの汽車,, Gegege no Kitarō Yōkai TokkyÅ«! Maboroshi no Kisha)

Based on the fifth anime:

  • December 20, 2008: Theater Edition GeGeGe no Kitarō: Japan Explodes!! (劇場版 ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 日本爆裂!!, Gekijōban GeGeGe no Kitarō Nippon Bakuretsu)
  • In 2009, William Winckler Productions produced two all new English dubbed movie versions edited from the 1996 TV series, titled Kitaro's Graveyard Gang and Kitaro's Graveyard Gang 2. Producer William Winckler, known for Tekkaman the Space Knight, wrote, produced and directed the English films, which are seen on broadband in Japan. Actor Butch Patrick who portrayed "Eddie Munster" on the classic TV series The Munsters provided one of the voices.

Live-action

2007 movie

The first live-action movie released in 2007 was simply titled GeGeGe no Kitarō (ゲゲゲの鬼太郎).

  • Kitarō: Eiji Wentz
  • Mika Miura: Mao Inoue
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Yo Oizumi
  • Neko Musume: Rena Tanaka
  • Sunakake Babaa: Shigeru Muroi
  • Konaki Jijii: Kanpei Hazama
  • Rokurokubi: You
  • KÅ«ko: Satoshi Hashimoto
  • Tsurubebi: Shinichi Karube
  • WanyÅ«dō: Toshiyuki Nishida
  • Tenko: Koyuki
  • Great Tengu Judge: Shido Nakamura

CG Character Voices

  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nurikabe: Hikaru Ijuin
  • Ittan Momen: Shingo Yanagisawa
  • Neppefuhofu: Kitarō
  • Miage NyÅ«dō: Yoshizumi Ishihara
  • Betobeto-san: Kazuhisa Ishii
  • Bakezōri: Shinosuke Tatekawa
  • Kasa-obake: Dave Spector

Yokais of Gegege no Kitarō

  • Kitarō: Eiji Wentz
  • Kaede Hiramoto: Kii Kitano
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Yo Oizumi
  • Neko Musume: Rena Tanaka
  • Sunakake Babaa: Shigeru Muroi
  • Konaki Jijii: Kanpei Hazama
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka (voice only)
  • Ittan-Momen: Shingo Yanagisawa (voice only)
  • Nurikabe (Yokai): Hikaru Ijuin (voice only)
  • Tomoko: Rei Okamoto
  • Eri: Sachi Natsuo
  • Tsurube-Bi: Shinichi Karube
  • Makura-Gaeshi: Minako Nakano
  • Kido Leader: Natsuhiko Kyogoku
  • Elder: Sakae Umezu
  • Enma-Daiou: Masane Tsukayama (voice only)
  • Biwabokuboku: Junichi Kōmoto (Jichō Kachō)
  • Tanuki: Brother Tom, Aki Hoshino
  • Chii: Bin Shimada
  • Fuguruma-Youbi: Shōko Nakagawa
  • Ito-Sennin: Takashi Sasano
  • Nurarihyon: Ken Ogata
  • Yaksha: So Ji-sub
  • Jakotsu Babaa: Shirō Sano
  • Satori: Yusuke Kamiji
  • Umito: Masato Hagiwara
  • Nure Onna (Nami): Shinobu Terajima.

Video games

  • Gegege no Kitarō: Youkai Dai Makyou for the Famicom (1986, Bandai)
  • Gegege no Kitarō 2 for the Famicom (1987, Bandai)
  • Gegege No Kitarō: Fukkatsu! Tenma Daiou for the Super Famicom (1993, Bandai)
  • Gegege no Kitarō for the Game Boy (1996, Bandai)
  • Gegege No Kitarō: Gentōkaikitan for the Sega Saturn (1996, Sega)
  • Gegege No Kitarō: Youkai Donjara for the Super Famicom (1996, Bandai) (requires Sufami Turbo)
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Noroi no Nikuto Katachi Tachi for the PlayStation (1997, Bandai)
  • Hissatsu Pachinkostation now 5 Gegege No Kitarō for the PlayStation (2000, Sunsoft)
  • Gegege no Kitarō for Microsoft Windows (2003, Unbalance)
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Ibun Youkaitan for the PlayStation 2 (2003, Konami)
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Kiki Ippatsu! Youkai Rettou for the Game Boy Advance (2003, Konami)
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Gyakushuu! Youkai Daichisen for the PlayStation (2003, Konami)
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Youkai Daiundoukai for the Wii (2007, Namco Bandai)
  • Gegege no Kitarō Pachislo slot machine made by Sammy
  • Gegege no Kitarō: Youkai Daigekisen for the Nintendo DS (2008, Bandai)

Cast

1968â€"1969

  • Kitarō: Masako Nozawa
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Chikao ÅŒtsuka
  • Sunakake-baba: Yoko Kogushi
  • Konaki-Jijii: Ichirō Nagai, Kunihiko Kitagawa (ep. 7 only), Kōsei Tomita (ep. 29 only)
  • Ittan-momen: Kōsei Tomita (7 episodes)
  • Nurikabe: Kenji Utsumi (6 episodes)

1971â€"1972

  • Kitarō: Masako Nozawa
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka, Hiroshi ÅŒtake (ep. 4 only, although he was credited only as a guest and Tanonaka was still credited for the role)
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Chikao ÅŒtsuka
  • Neko Musume: Yoko Kogushi (credited for every episode, though she did not appear in eps. 3, 9, 16, 20, 21, 36, & 44)
  • Sunakake Babaa: Yoko Kogushi (ep. 2 only), Keiko Yamamoto
  • Shinigami: Takazō Kamiyama (ep. 30, 34, 38, 42, 45)
  • Konaki Jijii: Kōji Yada, Sanji Hase (ep. 29 only)

1985â€"1988

  • Kitarō: Keiko Toda
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Kei Tomiyama
  • Neko Musume: YÅ«ko Mita
  • Yumeko Tendou: Kyoko Irokawa
  • Konaki Jijii: Ichirō Nagai
  • Sunakake Babaa: Hiroko Emori
  • Ittan Momen: Jōji Yanami
  • Nurikabe: Yusaku Yara
  • Shisa: Keiko Yamamoto (ep. 73 and on)
  • Hoshirō Tendō: Makoto Kōsaka
  • Masao Tendō: Masaharu Satō
  • Yuuko Tendō: Yōko Kawanami
  • Wakasugi-sensei: Kazumi Amemiya, Chiyoko Kawashima, Yumiko Shibata
  • Yobuko: Kazuko Sugiyama, Seiko Nakano (stand-in)
  • Kawauso: Kiyoshi Komiyama
  • Maruge: Yoku Shioya
  • Abura-sumashi: Michitaka Kobayashi, Kōzō Shioya (Jigoku-hen)
  • Akaname: Noriko Tsukase, Keiichi Nanba (giant)
  • Kamaitachi: Hiroshi ÅŒtake, Masashi Hironaka (stand-in)
  • Kasa-obake: Masato Hirano
  • Daruma: Junpei Takiguchi
  • Ido-sennin: Takeshi Aono
  • Enma-Daiō: Daisuke Gōri
  • Back Beard: Hidekatsu Shibata
  • Jakotsu Babaa: Keiko Yamamoto
  • Jigoku Douji: Ryō Horikawa
  • Shu no Bon: Michitaka Kobayashi
  • Nurarihyon: Kōichi Chiba (ep. 4 only), Takeshi Aono

1996â€"1998

  • Kitarō: Yōko Matsuoka
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Shigeru Chiba
  • Neko Musume: Chinami Nishimura
  • Sunakake-babaa: Keiko Yamamoto
  • Konaki-Jijii: Kōzō Shioya
  • Ittan-momen: Naoki Tatsuta
  • Nurikabe: Naoki Tatsuta
  • Yuuko Murakami: Konomi Maeda
  • Jun Tanimoto: YÅ«suke Numata
  • Shōta Suzuki: Mami Matsui
  • Nurarihyon: Tomomichi Nishimura
  • Shu no Bon: Daisuke Gōri
  • Yagyou-san: Hirohiko Kakegawa, Yasuhiko Kawazu, Masaharu Satō
  • Ido-sennin: Jōji Yanami
  • Noppera-bō: Kappei Yamaguchi
  • Azukiarai: Tomomichi Nishimura
  • Yobuko: Noriko Uemura, Makiko ÅŒmoto
  • Enma-Daiou: Hidekatsu Shibata

Special Appearances

  • Ikkokudou: Natsuhiko Kyogoku
  • Vampire Elite: Shirō Sano
  • Themselves: YÅ«kadan

2007â€"2009

  • Kitarō: Minami Takayama
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Wataru Takagi
  • Neko Musume: Hiromi Konno
  • Sunakake-babaa: Keiko Yamamoto
  • Konaki-Jijii: Naoki Tatsuta
  • Nurikabe: Naoki Tatsuta
  • Ittan-momen: Jōji Yanami
  • Kawauso: YÅ«ko Maruyama
  • Rokurokubi: Machiko Toyoshima
  • Amabie: Haruna Ikezawa
  • Yobuko: Sara Nakayama
  • Kuro (Neko-Musume's cat): Machiko Toyoshima
  • Aobōzu Toshio Furukawa
  • Aoi: Mie Sonozaki
  • Kurokarasu: Hikaru Midorikawa
  • Ohaguro-Bettari: Tomoko Naka
  • Kasa-obake: Katsuyuki Konishi, Yasuhiro Takato (ep. 53~100, commercials)
  • Ido-Sennin: Kōji Yada
  • Gokan-ÅŒ: Masashi Hirose
  • Makoto Washio: Takeshi Kusao
  • Miu: Masumi Asano
  • Nurikabe's Wife: Mayumi Tanaka
  • Bakerō: Hideyuki Tanaka
  • Azukiarai: Katsuyuki Konishi
  • Abura-sumashi: Masato Hirano
  • Yagyou-san: Naomi Kusumi
  • Tsurube-otoshi: Hisao Egawa
  • Yadōkai: Jōji Nakata
  • Akamata: Fumihiko Tachiki
  • ÅŒtengu: Naomi Kusumi
  • Sōteiō: Eiji Takemoto
  • Kai: Hiro Shimono
  • Nurikabe Babies: Machiko Toyoshima, Minami Takayama, Hiromi Konno (and other female cast members)
  • Tsurube-Bi: Masaya Takatsuka
  • Tofu-Kozō: Daisuke Sakaguchi
  • Enma-Daiō: Daisuke Gōri
  • Nurarihyon: Takeshi Aono
  • Shu no Bon: Katsuyuki Konishi
  • Zanbia the Witch: Ai Nonaka
  • Youaltepuztli (from Akuma-kun): Isamu Tanonaka
  • Chii: Bin Shimada
  • Jakotsu Babaa: Reiko Suzuki
  • Dracula III: Katsuyuki Konishi
  • Wild the Werewolf: Yasuhiro Takato
  • KyÅ«so: Yasuhiro Takato
  • Back Beard: Hidekatsu Shibata

Special Appearances

  • Hakusanbō: Chikao ÅŒtsuka
  • Male Actor, Preview Narration: Eiji Wentz
  • Yamada: Noboru Maeda (Harikenzu)
  • Tanaka: Yoshiyuki Arai (Harikenzu)
  • Herself: Midori Matsuo (Fuji TV Announcer)
  • Themselves: The 50 Kaitens

2003 PlayStation game

  • Kitarō: Rika Matsumoto
  • Medama Oyaji: Kazuo Kumakura
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Nachi Nozawa
  • Neko Musume: Yuko Miyamura
  • Sunakake Babaa: Junko Hori
  • Konaki Jijii: Takanobu Hozumi
  • Ittan Momen: Kenichi Ogata
  • Nurikabe: Kousei Tomita
  • Nurarihyon: Junpei Takiguchi
  • Dracula: Akio ÅŒtsuka
  • Back Beard: Michitaka Kobayashi
  • Giga: Seizō Katō

2008 anime (Hakaba Kitarō)

Airing in Fuji TV's Noitamina slot, Hakaba Kitarō shares an art director and animation techniques with Mononoke, and adapts the original manga version. This series also marks the return of Masako Nozawa and Chikao Ōtsuka to the roles of Kitarō and Nezumi-Otoko respectively for the first time since the second GeGeGe... series.

  • Kitarō: Masako Nozawa
  • Medama Oyaji: Isamu Tanonaka
  • Nezumi-Otoko: Chikao ÅŒtsuka
  • Mizuki: Tōru ÅŒkawa (1-6)
  • Mononoke (TV series)|Mononoke]]: Kōzō Shioya (3, 6)
  • Fake Kintarō: Kazue Ikura (4-7)
  • Kitarō's Father (First Life): Daisuke Gōri (1)
  • Kitarō's Mother: Reiko Suzuki (1)
  • Mizuki's Mother: Ako Mayama (1)
  • Hospital Director: Masaharu Satō (1-2)
  • Yaksha: Hideyuki Hori (2)
  • Dracula IV: RyÅ«zaburō ÅŒtomo (2)
  • Mizugami: Yasuhiko Kawazu (6-7)
  • Wolfman: Katsuhisa Hōki (7)
  • Toad Woman: Yōko Kawanami (7)
  • Kanemaru: Hidekatsu Shibata (8)
  • Mary: Naomi Shindō (8)
  • Murata: Mitsuru Miyamoto (8)
  • Vampire Johnny: Masashi Ebara (9)
  • Ikegaki: Tomomichi Nishimura (9)
  • Shigeru Mizuki: Bin Shimada (10)
  • Mizuki's Wife: Kimiko Saitō (10)
  • Caroline: Shiori Ebara (10)
  • Professor Gamotsu: Banjō Ginga (10)
  • Adobarana: Yasuhiro Takato (10)
  • Underground Sagaru Mizuki: Mahito ÅŒba (11)
  • Ochiba: Kōji Yada (11)
  • Doctor: Fumihiko Tachiki (11)
  • Sagara Mizuki: JÅ«rōta Kosugi (11)

Special Appearances

  • Neko: Shoko Nakagawa (3-5)
  • Trump Omoi: Pierre Taki (3-4)
  • Tompo: Natsuhiko Kyogoku (10)

Cultural impact


GeGeGe no Kitarō
  • Gegege no Kitarō is the mascot for the Gainare Tottori soccer club. Additionally, J.League Division 1 team F.C. Tokyo also holds "Gegege no Kitarō Day" every season.
  • In Episode 6 of the Japanese drama Hana-Kimi, the protagonist Ashiya Mizuki (Horikita Maki) is quoted as saying that Izumi Sano (Oguri Shun) looks like "Kitarō", due to the way Sano's hair is styled. Sano then said that Mizuki must be "Medama Oyaji", since Mizuki always has 'his' eye on Sano. Also, in Episode 7, Noe greets the assembled couples on their way to the roof of the school on the evening of the delayed star festival (August 7) dressed as Kitarō and holding a figure of Medama Oyaji bathing in a rice bowl.
  • The exclamation "GeGeGe no Ge!" is used by ShogunGekomon in Episode 15 of Digimon Adventure 02.
  • In the last chapter of the manga, Ikujinashi Shiawase (Happiness of a Cowardly Boy) by Naono Bohra, character Kawada is embarrassed to look at the face of his lover, Mori, after Mori gets a haircut. Kawada complains that with his new haircut, Mori's handsome face is "too exposed" and attracts too much attention from other people. He states that Kawada used to have hair like "GeGeGe Kitarō", and he preferred it that way since his face was half-hidden most of the time.
  • Japanese musician Miyavi has also described his hairstyle as a Kitarōu-cut many times (i.e.: official profile, diary, etc...).
  • Shigeru Mizuki has issued a series of limited-edition woodblock prints entitled "Fifty-Three Stations of the Yokaido Road", re-interpreting the famous Hiroshige series "Fifty-Three Stations of the Tokaido Road" as "a haunted journey". Printed from Mizuki's original paintings, the "Yokaido Road" prints star Kitarō and his troupe, as well as many other yokai and weird creatures of folklore. Produced through the Japanese publisher Yanoman Corporation, in March 2008 the series went on display in the Information and Culture Center of the Japanese Embassy in Washington DC.
  • In the Kamen Rider Den-O OVA spin off, Imagin Anime, Ryutaros refers to the show. When the other Tarōs attempt to sing the first part of the series' main theme, Deneb stopped them from getting sued from the mere mention of it by name.
  • In The Great Yokai War, after Tadashi first realizes Sunekosuri is a Youkai, goes out to look at the yokai models, statues of Kitarō and Konaki-Jijii are shown. Later, after a Youkai meeting ends up with their supposed help deciding to aid them, Kawataro the Kappa an Ittan-momen to a pillar while chiding "You're always real brave with Kitarō in those comics!" Kitarō's creator Shigeru Mizuki also appears in a cameo role in the film near the end.
  • In the anime Parasyte, Shinichi comments that he and Migi are like Kitaro and his dad.

References


GeGeGe no Kitarō

External links


GeGeGe no Kitarō
  • GeGeGe no Kitarō (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
  • Sakaiminato: The town where you can meet Kitaro
  • Gegege no Kitarō movie official site (Japanese)
  • Hakaba Kitarō official site (Japanese)
  • Poor Little Ghost Boy Japanzine by Zack Davisson
  • Yanoman Corporation
  • "Spooky Ooky" â€" brief history of Shigeru Mizuki and GeGeGe no Kitaro by Jonathan Clements

GeGeGe no Kitarō

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