Kamen Rider (ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼, Kamen RaidÄ, Masked Rider) is a tokusatsu superhero television series and weekly science fiction manga created by manga artist Shotaro Ishinomori. It debuted on television on April 3, 1971, and ran until February 10, 1973, airing on the Mainichi Broadcasting System and NET TV (now TV Asahi). The manga adaptation was also featured in ShÅnen Magazine around the same period. The series has evolved into a franchise with many subsequent annual iterations. The cultural impact of the series in Japan resulted in astronomer Akimasa Nakamura naming two minor planets in honor of the series: 12408 Fujioka, after actor Hiroshi Fujioka, known for his portrayal of Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1, and 12796 Kamenrider, after the series itself.
Story

The series takes place in a world plagued by Shocker, a mysterious terrorist organization. To further its plans for world domination, Shocker recruited its agents through kidnapping, turning their victims into mutant cyborgs and, ultimately, brainwashing them. However, one victim named Takeshi Hongo escaped just before the final brainwashing. With his sanity and moral conscience intact, Hongo battled Shocker's minions as the grasshopper-themed altered human (æ"¹é 人é", kaizÅ ningen) superhero Kamen Rider. Another victim of the altered human process, freelance photographer Hayato Ichimonji, became Kamen Rider 2 after Kamen Rider, who renamed himself as "Kamen Rider 1", saved him from Shocker's brainwashing. Assisted by motorcycle race team manager Tobei Tachibana and FBI agent Kazuya Taki, the Kamen Riders fought in both solo and partnered missions against Shocker and its successor organization, Gel-Shocker.
Manga

Many manga based on the original Kamen Rider series have been published, but only one was penned and drawn by Ishinomori himself. Ishinomori was also the author of one chapter of the Kamen Rider Amazon manga and the entire Kamen Rider Black manga. However, those manga were based on sequels to Kamen Rider, rather than the original series.
The original manga, published in 1971, initially follows a path resembling the first few episodes of the TV series, from basic plot to creature designs. However, when Hongo leaves the story, the series diverge greatly. In the TV show, Hongo travels abroad to fight Shocker in other countries, leaving Japan's protection to Hayato Ichimonji, a freelance cameraman who was experimented on by Shocker but saved by Hongo, becoming the second Kamen Rider. In the manga, Hongo never left Japan. He was confronted with twelve "Shocker Riders" and was subsequently mortally wounded during his battle against them. Hayato Ichimonji, one of the twelve Shocker Riders, receives a head injury during the fight and regains his conscience as a result. He then turns against Shocker and succeeds Hongo's role as Kamen Rider. In spite of the damage to his body, Hongo's brain survives and guides Ichimonji, the two fighting as one.
Hongo eventually returns as a Rider in both stories, but starting with Hayato's debut, villains and even basic story development greatly diverge between the two versions. The manga portrays a seemingly hopeless battle against Shocker, an organization with ties to governmental conspiracies that seems much bigger than either of the two Riders. The live action TV shows portray the Riders as heroes strong enough to bring down Shocker, only to see it replaced by similar organizations led by Shocker's mysterious leader. The Shocker Riders eventually appear in the TV series, too, but they looked different and had different abilities. There were also only six Shocker Riders, rather than the manga's 12.
Main characters

Riders
- Takeshi Hongo/Kamen Rider 1 (æ¬é· ç/ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼1å·, HongÅ Takeshi/Kamen RaidÄ IchigÅ): Main protagonist. A biochemist at Jounan University who also races motorcycles as part of the Tachibana Racing team.
- Hayato Ichimonji/Kamen Rider 2 (䏿å é¼äºº/ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼2å·, Ichimonji Hayato/Kamen RaidÄ NigÅ): Protagonist in episodes 14-52, partner 53-98. A freelance journalist who becomes Kamen Rider 2 after Hongo saves him from Shocker.
Allies
- TÅbei Tachibana (ç«è± è¤å µè¡, Tachibana TÅbee): Hongo's racing mentor and confidant. He is often called "Sensei" by other members of his racing club.
- Kazuya Taki (æ» å'ä¹, Taki Kazuya): An FBI agent assigned to investigate Shocker activities in Japan. While not himself a cyborg, Taki was skilled in martial arts, and often used them alongside both Kamen Riders to battle the foot-soldiers who invariably accompanied a Shocker agent.
- Professor Hiroshi Midorikawa (ç·'å·å士, Midorikawa Hakase, 1): A former Shocker scientist who freed Hongo and was killed by Spider Man, an agent of Shocker.
- Ruriko Midorikawa (ç·'å· ã«ãªå, Midorikawa Ruriko): The daughter of Professor Midorikawa, she initially blames Hongo for her father's death, but eventually learns the truth and becomes his ally. In episode 14, it is revealed that she accompanied Hongo on his quest to defeat Shocker activities in Europe.
- Hiromi Nohara (éå ã²ãã¿, Nohara Hiromi): Ruriko's friend, who works as a waitress at Snack Amigo.
- Kishimori: Hongo's fellow biochemist at Jounan University.
- Snack Amigo: A small café where Hongo and other members of Tachibana's racing club gather in early episodes. Its employees include Hiromi and the bartender Shiro, who occasionally assist Hongo in countering Shocker's plans.
- Mari, Yuri, and Michi: Female members of the Tachibana Racing Club who join after Hongo's departure. Michi is a small-displacement rider, Yuri is a martial artist, and Mari has experience in fencing.
- Goro Ishikura: Yuri's younger brother and a junior member of the racing club.
Shocker

Shocker (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼, ShokkÄ) is a terrorist organization, its name is an acronym for "Sacred Hegemony Of Cycle Kindred Evolutional Realm", as revealed in the movie reboot. Shocker's goal is to conquer the world. To this end, their scientists turn humans into superhuman cyborgs by surgically altering them with animal DNA. Virtually all of its members are modified in some way. The original manga showed that Shocker had influence over the governments of the world. Its founders had ties to the Nazis, and the Kamen Rider Spirits manga makes references to the group's support by the Badan Empire.
Ruthless and merciless, Shocker would often kidnap prominent scientists and force them to work for the organization, then kill them when their usefulness was at an end, or if they attempted to escape. The decision to kidnap and modify college student Takeshi Hongo proved to be their undoing. He was intended to be another of Shocker's powerful cyborg warriors, a grasshopper-human hybrid, but he escaped and opposed them as Kamen Rider 1. A later attempt to create a second, more powerful Kamen Rider backfired when the intended victim, Hayato Ichimonji, was rescued by the original Rider before he was brainwashed. Ichimonji joined Hongo as Kamen Rider 2. The pair, known as the Double Riders, put an end to Shocker, and later its remnants, who formed Gel-Shocker after their first defeat.
In OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders, Shocker, although with a membership and leadership covering Gel-Shocker members from the original TV series, obtained a Core Medal and modified it into the Shocker Medal. Though they were originally unable to use it, the appearance of the Greeed Ankh in their time enabled the organization to obtain one of his Cell Medals and create the Shocker Greeed. This altered time so that Shocker defeated the Double Riders and managed to conquer all of Japan and eventually the world, setting up a union with many of the other organizations that originally emerged after Shocker's destruction. But the group is ultimately defeated by the Kamen Riders.
But as revealed in Kamen Rider OOO and Kamen Rider Drive, there are some surviving members of the Shocker organization who went into hiding. But during the events of Super Hero Taisen GP: Kamen Rider 3, Shocker's remaining scientists created a History Modification Machine that they use to send a time displaced cyborg called Kamen Rider 3 back in time to destroy the Double Riders in the aftermath of GelShocker's defeat, creating a new timeline where Shocker rules the world with some Kamen Riders in their service. Luckily, the apparent destruction of the History Modification Machine restores the timeline.
- Great Leader of Shocker (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼é¦é , ShokkÄ ShuryÅ): The high ruler of the organisation and main antagonist of the series. He appears for the first time in a short video footage shown in episode 34, although his appearance there is mostly hidden by shadows. He talks with his followers through speakers on Shocker's emblems in the multiple outposts. The Great Leader is a cruel being who does not have qualms in sacrificing his minions during moments of crisis or failure. He takes various forms, his first being a Cyclopean gorgon in crimson robes in the original series, his second being a skeletal creature in Kamen Rider V3, following a skull-faced insect who lead a mini-restoration of shocker known as Black Satan, and his true form is known as the Great Leader Rock (岩ç³å¤§é¦é , Ganseki DaishuryÅ) in Kamen Rider Stronger a giant humanoid rock man controlled by a large one-eyed cybernetic brain.
- Colonel Zol/Werewolf (ã¾ã«å¤§ä½/ç¼ç"·, Zoru Taisa/Åkami Otoko, 26-39, Rider vs Shocker, V3 27-28) (a.k.a. Gold Werewolf (é»é'ç¼ç"·, Ågon Åkami Otoko)): From Shocker's Middle East branch, his true form was a wolf monster. He was also a disguise specialist, able to mimic Taki's appearance almost perfectly using only make up during his debut. His personal mark, worn by the soldiers of his own Shocker outpost and used in his official correspondence, was the Shocker emblem, but with the bird's head replaced by a wolf's. He confronted Kamen Rider #2 himself in episode 39 and after a lengthy fight was toppled off a cliff by Kamen Rider #2's Rider Punch, destroying him. Gold Werewolf briefly appeared in Kamen Rider vs Shocker among the members of the resurrected monster army. In Kamen Rider V3, episode 27, Colonel Zol is resurrected alongside the other 3 great Shocker and Gel-Shocker commanders from the original TV series by Destron. He aims to become a Destron commander, replacing Doctor G. However, in episode 28, after Kamen Rider V3 escaped from Destron's base, a self-destruction sequence was activated, and Colonel Zol was unable to escape, dying again with it. In Kamen Rider Spirits manga, he is revived with other Shocker commander as a soulless pawn of Badan Empire.
- Doctor Shinigami/Ikadevil (æ»ç¥å士/ã¤ã«ãã"ã«, Shinigami Hakase/Ikadebiru, 40-52, Rider vs Shocker, 61, 63, 68, V3 27-28, Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker, Let's Go Kamen Riders): From Shocker's branch in Switzerland, he took over Japan's command after Zol's death until Ambassador Hell appeared. However, he returned to Japan in episode 61, working together with Ambassador Hell and also attempting his own plans. He had a cold and calculating behavior. In episode 68, he captured Tobei Tachibana to help training him for his battle with Kamen Rider #1, but that only resulted in Tachibana learning about his weakness. Discarding his cape when he faced Hongo for the last time, Shinigami assumed the form of Ikadevil to fight Rider #1 with his tentacle whip, while Ichimonji was held off by the Shocker Combatmen. With Tobei's guidance, Rider #1 managed to overpower Ikadevil and weaken him with a Rider Chop before sending Ikadevil falling to his death with his Rider Tailspin Shoot. Ikadevil tried to rise once more, only to fall down and explode. Doctor Shinigami was resurrected by Destron in Kamen Rider V3, episode 27, and speculated about how he had been brought back to replace Doctor G, only to learn that he was there just for a new operation. Shortly afterwards, in episode 28, he died when Destron's base accidentally self-destructed. He is revived as a soulless pawn of Badan Empire alongside Colonel Zol and Ambassador Hell in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga.
- Ambassador Hell/Garagaranda (å°ç大使/ã¬ã©ã¬ã©ã³ã, Jigoku Taishi/Garagaranda, 53-79, Rider vs Ambassador Hell, V3 27-28, Decade: All Riders vs Great-Shocker, Let's Go Kamen Riders): Summoned from Shocker's branch in West Coast US, he took command of the organization in Japan. His true name was Damon according to Kamen Rider Spirits. He used a whip as his weapon. In episode 79, after capturing the Riders' friends, he called Hongo out as he assumed his monster form, able to burrow underground and use his whip arm as a weapon. Rider #1 battled Garagaranda while Taki freed Tachibana and the others, managing to use his Rider Kick on the monster. Reverting to his normal mode, Hell cursed the Riders and screamed to Shocker's perseverance before he died, exploding. Afterwards, the Great Leader destroyed the original Shocker. In spite of his failure, Ambassador Hell was resurrected by Destron in Kamen Rider V3 episode 27. In episode 28, his sneaky behavior ended up leading to the prisoner V3 capturing him and escaping from the Destron base. Soon afterwards, Ambassador Hell returned to the base, only to die in its self-destruction. Ambassador Hell returns in Kamen Rider Spirits manga, working for Badan Empire. But his difference among the other revived members is that he had his own consciousness, it is revealed that the Silver Skull used to revive him is capable of bringing back the dead person's memories. In Kamen Rider ZX, Ambassador Darkness, Ambassador Hell's brother, appeared as a Badan Empire leader.
- Shocker Combatmen (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼æ¦éå"¡, ShokkÄ SentÅin): Black uniformed soldiers, some which have skeleton markings on their torsos. They are normally easily defeated by the Riders, often without even needing to transform. Their trademark is a high pitched battle-cry.
- Big Machine (ã"ãã°ãã·ã³, Biggu Mashin): A character who only appears in Ishinomori's original Kamen Rider manga. Big Machine is Shocker's highest commander and main antagonist in the manga. He also seems to be the one called "Great Leader" by some of the lower ranking Shocker members. He has a fully mechanized body and is behind Shocker's "October Project", which involves using a super computer to brainwash the population of Japan. He's able to match up the Riders in combat and launch attacks that disrupt electronic equipment, including Rider 1's and 2's own bodies. The design of his body was the base of Ambassador Hell's design in the TV show, although it was altered to allow a human face, and, unlike Big Machine, Ambassador Hell was kept a separate character from the Leader of Shocker. In Kamen Rider à Super Sentai: Super Hero Taisen, Big Machine is reimagined as a project of the Shocker/Zangyack Alliance to create a giant robot from Crisis Fortress and the Gigant Horse.
Gel-Shocker
Gel-Shocker (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼, Geru ShokkÄ) was formed after the destruction of Shocker, with the remnants of the organization absorbing another organization called Geldam. After Ambassador Hell's defeat, The Great Leader reorganized the organization from the ground up, destroying all remaining secret bases and even liquidating the remaining troop contingent in a bloody forest massacre witnessed by unfortunate campers. Gel-Shocker troopers wore bright purple and yellow costumes, were capable of traveling from one to place to another by transforming into sheets that would drop down onto unsuspecting victims, and were capable of taking more blunt violent abuse than their predecessors
Gel-Shocker was led by the Great Leader of Gel-Shocker (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼é¦é , Geru-ShokkÄ ShuryÅ) and General Black (ãã©ãã¯å°è», Burakku ShÅgun), a commander originally from Geldam's Africa branch who had a monstrous leech/chameleon hybrid form called Hiruchameleon (ã'ã«ã«ã¡ã¬ãªã³, Hirukamereon) who has ability to sucking blood by hugging human which later used to reviving Gel-Shocker Kaijin who already defeated by Double Rider, throwing leech which cause the target follow his order, and able turning himself become invisible. Later he fought the Double Riders on a roller coaster and was defeated by their Rider Double Chop when turning invisible. Weakened, he reverted to his human form cursing the Double Rider and exploded. Eventually, General Black was resurrected and worked for Destron in an important operation, but ended up dying in the self-destruction of a Destron base. Black returned as a soulless pawn of the Badan Empire in the Kamen Rider Spirits manga, but he was defeated by Rider Double Kick performed by Kamen Rider 2 and ZX.
Episode list
- The Mysterious Spider Man (æªå¥èèç"·, Kaiki Kumo Otoko)
- The Terrifying Bat Man (ææèè ç"·, KyÅfu KÅmori Otoko)
- Monster, Scorpion Man (æªäººãããç"·, Kaijin Sasori Otoko)
- The Man-Eating Sarracenian (人å°ããµã©ã»ãã¢ã³, Hitokui Sarasenian)
- Monster, Mantis Man (æªäººãã¾ããç"·, Kaijin Kamakiri Otoko)
- Grim Reaper, Chameleon (æ»ç¥ã«ã¡ã¬ãªã³, Shinigami Kamereon)
- Duel With Grim Reaper Chameleon! World Fair Impression (æ»ç¥ã«ã¡ã¬ãªã³æ±ºéï¼ä¸åè·¡, Shinigami Kamereon KettÅ! Banpaku Ato)
- Strangeness! Bee Woman (æªç°ï¼è女, Kaii! Hachi Onna)
- The Terrifying Cobra Man (ææã³ãã©ç"·, KyÅfu Kobura Otoko)
- The Revived Cobra Man (ãã¿ãããã³ãã©ç"·, Yomigaeru Kobura Otoko)
- Bloodsucking Monster, Gebacondor (å¸è¡æªäººã²ãã³ã³ãã«, KyÅ«ketsu Kaijin Gebakondoru)
- Murder, Yamogelas (殺人ã¤ã¢ã²ã©ã¹, Satsujin Yamogerasu)
- Tokageron and the Big Monster Army (ãã«ã²ãã³ã¨æªäººå¤§è»å£, Tokageron to Kaijin Dai Gundan)
- Raid of the Demon Sabotegron (é"人ãµããã°ãã³ã®è¥²æ¥, Majin Saboteguron no ShÅ«rai)
- Counterattack, Sabotegron (é襲ãµããã°ãã³, GyakushÅ« Saboteguron)
- Wrestler of the Devil, Pirasaurus (æªé"ã®ã¬ã¹ã©ã¼ã"ã©ã¶ã¦ã«ã¹, Akuma no ResurÄ Pirazaurusu)
- Death Match in the Ring: Defeat! Pirasaurus (ãªã³ã°ã®æ»éå'ãï¼ã"ã©ã¶ã¦ã«ã¹, Ringu No ShitÅ Taose! Pirazaurusu)
- Fossil Man: Hitodanger (åç³ç"·ã'ããã³ã¸ã£ã¼, Kaseki-Otoko HitodenjÄ)
- Monster Kanibubbler Appears in Hokkaido (æªäººã«ãããã©ã¼åæµ·é"ã«ç¾ã, Kaijin KanibaburÄ HokkaidÅ ni Arawaru)
- Fire-Breathing Caterpillar Monster: Dokugander (ç«ã'å¹ãæ¯è«æªäººãã¯ã¬ã³ãã¼, Hi o Fuku Kemushi Kaijin DokugandÄ)
- Dokugander, Confrontation at Osaka Castle (ãã¯ã¬ã³ãã¼ã大éªåã®å¯¾æ±ºï¼, DokugandÄ Åsaka-jÅ no Taiketsu!)
- Suspicious Merman Amazonia (æªé人ã¢ãã¾ãã¢, Kai Kyojin Amazonia)
- Sky-Flying Monster Musasabedol (空é£ã¶æªäººã ãµãµã"ã¼ãã«, Soratobu Kaijin MusasabÄ«doru)
- Deadly Poison Monster Kinokomolg's Sortie! (çæ¯'æªäººããã³ã¢ã«ã°ã®åºæ'ï¼, MÅdoku Kaijin Kinokomorugu no Shutsugeki!)
- Defeat Kinokomolg! (ããã³ã¢ã«ã°ã'å'ãï¼, Kinokomorugu o Taose!)
- The Terrifying Antlion (ææã®ããå°ç, KyÅfu no Arijigoku)
- Mukadelas Monster Classroom (ã ã«ãã©ã¹æªäººæå®¤, Mukaderasu Kaijin ShÅshitsu)
- Underground Monster Mogurang (å°åºæªäººã¢ã°ã©ã³ã°, Chitei Kaijin Mogurangu)
- Electric Monster Kuragedall (黿°æªäººã¯ã©ã²ãã¼ã«, Denki Kaijin KuragedÄru)
- Revived Fossil, Bloodsucking Trilobite (ãã¿ãããåç³å¸è¡ä¸è'è«, Yomegaeru Kaseki KyÅ«ketsu San'yÅchÅ«)
- Deathmatch! Anteater Demon Arigabari (æ»æï¼ããããé"人ã¢ãªã¬ããª, ShitÅ! Arikui Majin Arigabari)
- Cannibalism Flower, Dokudalian (人å°ãè±ãã¯ããªã¢ã³, Hitokui Hana Dokudarian)
- Steel Monster, Armadillong (é¼éæªäººã¢ã«ãã¸ãã³ã°, KÅtetsu Kaijin Arumajirongu)
- Japan in Danger! Gamagiller's Invasion (æ¥æ¬å±ããï¼ã¬ãã®ã©ã¼ã®ä¾µå ¥, Nihon Ayaushi! GamagirÄ no ShinnyÅ«)
- Murderous Ant Queen, Archimedes (殺人女çè»ã¢ãªãã¡ãã¹, Satsujin JoÅari Arikimedesu)
- Resurrected Mummy Monster, Egyptus (ããããã£ããã¤ã©æªäººã¨ã¸ãã¿ã¹, Ikikaetta Miira Kaijin Ejiputasu)
- Poisonous Gas Monster Trickabuto's G-Plan (æ¯'ã¬ã¹æªäººããªã«ããã®ï¼§ä½æ¦, Dokugasu Kaijin Torikabuto no JÄ« Sakusen)
- Lightning Monster Eiking's World Darkness Plan (稲妻æªäººã¨ã¤ãã³ã°ã®ä¸çæé»'使¦, Inazuma Kaijin Eikingu no Sekai Ankoku Sakusen)
- Werwolf monster's Huge Murder Party (æªäººç¼ç"·ã®æ®ºäººå¤§ã'ã¼ãã£ã¼, Kaijin Åkami Otoko no Satsujin Dai PÄtÄ«)
- Deathmatch! Monster Snowman vs. Two Riders (æ»æï¼æªäººã¹ãã¼ãã³å¯¾äºäººã®ã©ã¤ãã¼, ShitÅ! Kaijin SunÅman Tai Futari no RaidÄ)
- Magma Monster Ghoster, Decisive Battle at Sakurajima (ãã°ãæªäººã´ã¼ã¹ã¿ã¼ æ¡å³¶å¤§æ±ºæ¦, Maguma Kaijin GÅsutÄ Sakurajima Dai Kessen)
- The Devil's Messenger, Mysterious Fly Man (æªé"ã®ä½¿è ãæªå¥ãã¨ç"·, Akuma no Shisha Kaiki Hae Otoko)
- Mysterious Birdman Pranodon's Attack (æªé³¥äººãã©ããã³ã®è¥²æ', Kai ChÅjin Puranodon no ShÅ«geki)
- Graveyard Monster, Kabibinga (å¢"å ´ã®æªäººã«ã"ã"ã³ã¬, Hakaba no Kaijin Kabibinga)
- Monster Namewhale's Gas Explosion Plan (æªäººãã¡ã¯ã¸ã©ã®ã¬ã¹ççºä½æ¦, Kaijin Namekujira no Gasu Bakuhatsu Sakusen)
- Showdown!! Snow Mountain Monster Bearconger (対決ï¼ï¼éªå±±æªäººãã¢ã¼ã³ã³ã¬ã¼, Taiketsu!! Yukiyama Kaijin BeÄkongÄ)
- The Death-Calling Ice Devil Todogiller (æ»ã'å'¼ã¶æ°·é"人ããã®ã©ã¼, Shi o Yobu KÅri Majin TodogirÄ)
- Bloodsucking Marshes of Hiruguerilla (å¸è¡æ²¼ã®ã'ã«ã²ãªã©, KyÅ«ketsu Numa no Hirugerira)
- Cannibalistic Monster, Isoginchack (人å°ãæªäººã¤ã½ã®ã³ãã£ãã¯, Hitokui Kaijin Isoginchakku)
- Monster Kamestone's Murderous Aurora Program (æªäººã«ã¡ã¹ãã¼ã³ã®æ®ºäººãªã¼ãã©è¨ç"», Kaijin KamesutÅn no Satsujin Årora Keikaku)
- Stone Monster Unicornos vs. Double Rider Kick (ç³æªäººã¦ãã³ã«ãã¹å¯¾ããã«ã©ã¤ãã¼ããã¯, Ishi Kaijin Yunikorunosu Tai Daburu RaidÄ Kikku)
- My Name is Mysterious Birdman Gilgalass (ããã®åã¯ãæªé³¥äººã®ã«ã¬ã©ã¹ã ï¼, Ore no Na wa Kai ChÅjin Girugarasu)
- Monster Jaguarman's Ready-to-Die Motorbike War (æªäººã¸ã£ã¬ã¼ãã³æ±ºæ»ã®ãªã¼ããã¤æ¦, Kaijin JagÄman Kesshi Åtobai Ikusa)
- Sea Serpent Man of the Phantom Village (ã¦ã¦ã¬ã¤æ'ã®æµ·èç"·, YÅ«rei Mura no Umihebi Otoko)
- Cockroach Man!! The Terrifying Bacterial Ad-Balloon (ã´ãããªç"·ï¼ææã®ç´°èã¢ããã«ã¼ã³, Gokiburi Otoko!! KyÅfu no Saikin AdobarÅ«n)
- Amazon's Poison Butterfly Gireera (ã¢ãã¾ã³ã®æ¯'è¶ã®ãªã¼ã©, Amazon no Doku ChÅ GirÄ«ra)
- Tsuchigumo Man Poisonmondo (åããç"·ãã¯ã¢ã³ã, Tsuchigumo Otoko Dokumondo)
- Monster Poison Lizard, Duel in Fear Valley!! (æªäººæ¯'ãã«ã²ããããè°·ã®æ±ºéï¼ï¼, Kaijin Doku Tokage Osore Tani no KettÅ!!)
- The Bottomless Swamp Monster, Earthworm Man! (åºãªãæ²¼ã®æªäººãããºç"·ï¼, Sokonashi Numa no Kaijin Mimizu Otoko!)
- Mysterious Owl Man's Murderous X-Rays (æªå¥ãã¯ãã¦ç"·ã®æ®ºäººã¬ã³ãã²ã³, Kaiki FukurÅ Otoko no Satsujin Rentogen)
- Monster Catfishgiller's Electric Hell (æªäººãããºã®ã©ã¼ã®é»æ°å°ç, Kaijin NamazugirÄ no Denki Jigoku)
- Monster Hedgehoras' Murder Skull Plan (æªäººããªããºã©ã¹ã殺人ã©ãã使¦, Kaijin Harinezurasu Satsujin Dokuro Sakusen)
- Monster Rhinogang's Autorace of Death (æªäººãµã¤ã®ã£ã³ã°ãæ»ã®ãªã¼ãã¬ã¼ã¹, Kaijin Saigyangu Shi no ÅtorÄ"su)
- Monster Cicadaminga's Song to Kill Everyone (æªäººã»ããã³ã¬ãã¿ãªæ®ºãã®ããï¼, Kaijin Semiminga Mina Koroshi no Uta)
- Monster Dr. Insect and the Shocker School (æªäººæè«å士ã¨ã·ã§ãã«ã¼ã¹ã¯ã¼ã«, Kaijin KonchÅ«-hakase to ShokkÄ SukÅ«ru)
- Shocker Graveyard, Revived Monsters (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼å¢"å ´ãã¿ãããæªäººãã¡, ShokkÄ Hakaba Yomigaeru Kaijin-tachi)
- The Shocker Leader Appears! Riders in Danger (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼é¦é åºç¾ï¼ï¼ã©ã¤ãã¼å±ãã, ShokkÄ ShuryÅ Shutsugen!! RaidÄ Ayaushi)
- Doctor Shinigami, the True Meaning of Terror? (æ»ç¥å士ææã®æ£ä½"ï¼, Shinigami Hakase KyÅfu no ShÅtai?)
- Monster Gillercricket's Claws of Impending Death (æªäººã®ã©ã¼ã³ãªãã®ãã¾ãæ»ã®ãã¡, Kaijin GirÄkÅrogi Semaru Shi no Tsume)
- Monster Electric-Guitarbotal's Fireball Attack (æªäººã¨ã¬ããã¿ã«ç«ã®çæ"»æ'ï¼ï¼, Kaijin Erekibotaru Hi no Tama KÅgeki!!)
- Monster Horseflygomes' Rokkoudai Mountain Pursuit (æªäººã¢ãã´ã¡ã¹å ç"²å±±å¤§ã¤ãããï¼, Kaijin Abugomesu RokkÅsan DaiTsuiseki!)
- Vampiric Mosquilas vs. Two Riders (å¸è¡ã¢ã¹ãã©ã¹å¯¾äºäººã©ã¤ãã¼, KyÅ«ketsu Mosukirasu Tai Futari RaidÄ)
- Double Riders' Defeat! Shiomaneking (ããã«ã©ã¤ãã¼ãå'ãï¼ã·ãªãããã³ã°, Daburu RaidÄ Taose! Shiomanekingu)
- Deadly Bloodsucking Fiends!! Good Luck, Rider Boys' Squad (æ»ã®å¸è¡é"ããã"ã°ãï¼ï¼ã©ã¤ãã¼å°'å¹´é, Shi no KyÅ«ketsu Ma Ganbare!! RaidÄ ShÅnen Tai)
- Poison Flower Monster Roseranga - The Secret of the House of Terror (æ¯'è±æªäººãã©ã©ã³ã¬ ææã®å®¶ã®ç§å¯, Doku Hana Kaijin Bararanga KyÅfu no Uchi no Himitsu)
- Three Head of Generator Monster Seadragons!! (ä¸å¹ã®çºé»æªäººã·ã¼ãã©ã´ã³ï¼ï¼, Sanbiki no Hatsuden Kaijin ShÄ«doragon!!)
- Monster Newtgeth, Duel at the Farm of Hell!! (æªäººã¤ã¢ãªã²ã¹ãã"ãç§å ´ã®æ±ºéï¼ï¼, Kaijin Imorigesu Jigoku BokujÅ no KettÅ!!)
- The Dreadful Urchindogma + The Phantom Monster (ææã®ã¦ããã°ãï¼ããããæªäºº, KyÅfu no Unidoguma + YÅ«rei Kaijin)
- Hell Ambassador!! The True Meaning of Fear? (å°ç大使ï¼ï¼ææã®æ£ä½"ï¼, Jigoku Taishi!! KyÅfu no ShÅtai?)
- Gel-Shocker Appears! Kamen Rider's Last Day! (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼åºç¾ï¼ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼æå¾ã®æ¥!!, GerushokkÄ Shutsugen! Kamen RaidÄ Saigo no Hi!!)
- Kamen Rider Dies Twice! (ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼ã¯äºåº¦æ»ã¬ï¼, Kamen RaidÄ wa Nido Shinu!)
- Monster Jellyfish Wolf, Dreadful Rush Hour (æªäººã¯ã©ã²ã¦ã«ããææã®ã©ãã·ã¥ã¢ã¯ã¼, Kaijin Kurage Urufu KyÅfu no RasshuawÄ)
- Monster Inokabuton, Defeat the Rider With Crazy Gas (æªäººã¤ãã«ããã³ãçºçã¬ã¹ã§ã©ã¤ãã¼ã'å'ã, Kaijin Inokabuton HakkyÅ Gasu de RaidÄ o Taose)
- Watch Out, Rider! Isoginjaguar's Hell Trap (å±ããã©ã¤ãã¼ï¼ã¤ã½ã®ã³ã¸ã£ã¬ã¼ã®å°çç½ , Ayaushi RaidÄ! IsoginjagÄ no Jigoku Wana)
- Sludge Monster, Dreadful Murder Smog (ãããæªäººææã®æ®ºäººã¹ã¢ãã°, Hedoro Kaijin KyÅfu no Satsujin Sumoggu)
- Monster Eaglemantis' Human Hunt (æªäººã¯ã·ã«ãã®ãªã®äººé"ç©ã, Kaijin Washikamagiri no Ningen Kari)
- Gel-Shocker's Delivery Man of Death (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼ãæ»ã®é é"人, GerushokkÄ Shi no Haitatsunin)
- Bizarre! The Picture of the Black Cat That Calls for Blood (æªå¥ï¼è¡ã'ãã¶é»'ç«ã®çµµ, Kaiki! Chi o Yobu Kuroneko no E)
- Fear's Pet Strategy, Drop Rider into Hell! (ææã®ããã使¦ãã©ã¤ãã¼ã'å°çã¸è½ã¨ãï¼, KyÅfu no Petto Sakusen RaidÄ o Jigoku e Otose!)
- Fear's Pet Strategy, Rider SOS (ææã®ããã使¦ãã©ã¤ãã¼ï¼³ï¼¯ï¼³, KyÅfu no Petto Sakusen RaidÄ Esu Å Esu)
- Gel-Shocker, Enroll in Terror School (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼ææå¦æ ¡ã«å ¥å¦ãã, GerushokkÄ KyÅfu GakkÅ ni NyÅ«gaku Seyo)
- Atrocity! Fake Kamen Riders!! (å¶æªï¼ã«ãä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼ï¼ï¼, KyÅaku! Nise Kamen RaidÄ!!)
- The Eight Kamen Riders (ï¼äººã®ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼, Hachinin no Kamen RaidÄ)
- The True Identity of the Gel-Shocker Leader (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼é¦é ã®æ£ä½", GerushokkÄ ShuryÅ no ShÅtai)
- Monster Garaox's Sky-Flying Car (æªäººã¬ã©ãªãã¯ã¹ã®ç©ºé£ã¶èªåè», Kaijin Garaokkusu no Sora Tobu JidÅsha)
- Takeshi Hongo, Cactus Monster Exposed!? (æ¬é·çããµããã³æªäººã«ãããï¼ï¼, HongÅ Takeshi Saboten Kaijin ni Sareru!?)
- Takeshi Hongo, Transformation Impossible (æ¬é·çå¤èº«ä¸å¯è½, HongÅ Takeshi Henshin FunÅ)
- Gel-Shocker Annihilated! The End of the Leader!! (ã²ã«ã·ã§ãã«ã¼å ¨æ» ï¼é¦é ã®æå¾ï¼ï¼, GerushokkÄ Zenmetsu! ShuryÅ no Saigo!!)
Films

- 1971: Go Go Kamen Rider (ã´ã¼ã´ã¼ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼, GÅ GÅ Kamen RaidÄ) - movie version of Episode 13
- 1972: Kamen Rider vs. Shocker (ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼VSã·ã§ãã«ã¼, Kamen RaidÄ tai ShokkÄ)
- 1972: Kamen Rider vs. Ambassador Hell (ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼VSå°ç大使, Kamen RaidÄ tai Jigoku Taishi)
- 1975: Five Riders vs. King Dark (äº"人ã©ã¤ãã¼å¯¾ãã³ã°ãã¼ã¯, Gonin RaidÄ Tai Kingu DÄku)
- 2005: Kamen Rider: The First
- 2007: Kamen Rider: The Next
- 2011: OOO, Den-O, All Riders: Let's Go Kamen Riders (ãªã¼ãºã»é»çã»ãªã¼ã«ã©ã¤ãã¼ ã¬ããã´ã¼ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼, Åzu Den'Å Åru RaidÄ: Rettsu GÅ Kamen RaidÄ)
- 2014: Heisei Rider vs. ShÅwa Rider: Kamen Rider Taisen feat. Super Sentai (å¹³æã©ã¤ãã¼å¯¾æå'ã©ã¤ãã¼ ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼å¤§æ¦ feat.ã¹ã¼ã'ã¼æ¦é, Heisei RaidÄ Tai ShÅwa RaidÄ Kamen RaidÄ Taisen feat. SÅ«pÄ Sentai)
S.I.C. Hero Saga

Published in Monthly Hobby Japan, the S.I.C. Hero Saga stories illustrated by S.I.C. figure dioramas portray stories featuring the characters from Shotaro Ishinomori series. Kamen Rider has had three different stories: Missing Link, Special Episode: Escape (SPECIAL EPISODE -è±åº-, SPECIAL EPISODE: Dasshutsu), and From Here to Eternity (ã"ã"ããæ°¸é ã«, Koko yori Towa ni). Missing Link ran in the July to October 2002 issues, From Here to Eternity was featured in the special issue HOBBY JAPAN MOOK S.I.C. OFFICIAL DIORAMA STORY S.I.C. HERO SAGA vol.1 Kakioroshi, and Special Episode: Escape was featured in the October 2006 issue of Hobby Japan.
New characters introduced during the Missing Link story are the twelve Shocker Riders (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼ã©ã¤ãã¼, ShokkÄ RaidÄ, each with different colored scarves) and the Shocker Tank (ã·ã§ãã«ã¼ã¿ã³ã¯, ShokkÄ Tanku).
- Missing Link chapter titles
- Infiltration (æ½å ¥, SennyÅ«)
- Disappearance (失踪, ShissÅ)
- Awakening (è¦é', Kakusei)
- Puppet (åå¡, Kairai)
Cast

- Hiroshi Fujioka as Takeshi Hongo
- Takeshi Sasaki as Hayato Ichimonji
- Akiji Kobayashi as TÅbei Tachibana
- JirÅ Chiba as Kazuya Taki
- JirÅ Miyaguchi as Colonel Zol
- Hideyo Amamoto as Dr. Shinigami
- Kenji Ushio as Ambassador Hell
- MatasaburÅ Niwa as General Black
- Chieko Morigawa (Played as Chieko Maki (çæ¨¹ åæµå, Maki Chieko)) as Ruriko Midorikawa
- YÅko Shimada as Hiromi Nohara
- Linda Yamamoto as Mari
- Wakako Oki as Yuri
- Katsumi Nakajima as Michi
- Emily Takami as Emi
- YÅko Sugibayashi as Mika
- Machiko Nakajima (Played as Machiko Nakajima (ä¸å³¶ çæºå, Nakajima Machiko)) as Tokko
- Yoshiko Nakada as Yokko
- Mimi Hagiwara (Played as Mimy (ããã¼, MimÄ«)) as Choko
- Yasuharu Miura as Goro Ishikura
- Tomonori Yazaki as Naoki
- HÅichi Yamada as Mitsuru
- JÅ Honda as ShirÅ
- GorÅ Naya as The Great Leader of Shocker/Gel-Shocker (voice)
- Shinji Nakae as Narrator
Crew
- Creator: Shotaro Ishinomori
- Scriptwriters: Masaru Igami, Shin'ichi Ichikawa, Masayuki Shimada, Mari Takizawa, Hisashi Yamazaki, Takao Ikuo, Masashi Tsukada, Takeo Oono, Shiro Ishimori, Seirou Suzuki, Takayuki Hasegawa, Kimio Hirayama, Minoru Yamada, Gorou Okeya, Shotaro Ishinomori
- Directors: Hirokazu Takemoto, Itaru Orita, Hidetoshi Kitamura, Minoru Yamada, Kazukuri Uchida, Katsuhiko Taguchi, Masashi Tsukada, Shotaro Ishinomori, Atsuo Kumanaka
- Photographer: Osamigi Yamamoto
- Illumination: Kouosamu Oota
- Music: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Mokuo Mikami
- Editing: Ayaki Sugeno (Eiko-Onkyo Ltd.)
- Recording: Mari Fujinami
- Assistant Director: Masashi Tsukada
- Costume Designer: Tokyo Designs
- Action Choreographer: Kazutoshi Takahashi
- Line Chief: Teruo Itou
- Production Manager: Okusouhei Matono
- Sound Recording: Katsushi Ota (Eiko-Onkyo Ltd.)
- Development: Toei Laboratories
- Cooperation: Muromachi Racing Group
Songs
- Opening themes
- "Let's Go!! Rider Kick" (ã¬ããã´ã¼!!ã©ã¤ãã¼ããã¯, Rettsu GÅ!! RaidÄ Kikku)
- Lyrics: ShÅtarÅ Ishinomori
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Hiroshi Fujioka with Male Harmony (ã¡ã¼ã«ã»ãã¼ã¢ãã¼, MÄ"ru HÄmonÄ«)
- Episodes: 1-13
- "Let's Go!! Rider Kick" (ã¬ããã´ã¼!!ã©ã¤ãã¼ããã¯, Rettsu GÅ!! RaidÄ Kikku)
- Lyrics: ShÅtarÅ Ishinomori
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Masato Shimon (as KÅichi Fuji) with Male Harmony
- Episodes: 14-88
- "Rider Action" (ã©ã¤ãã¼ã¢ã¯ã·ã§ã³, RaidÄ Akushon)
- Lyrics: ShÅtarÅ Ishinomori
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Masato Shimon
- Episodes: 89â"98
- Ending themes
- "Kamen Rider no Uta" (ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼ã®æ, Kamen RaidÄ no Uta, "The Song of Kamen Rider")
- Lyrics: SaburÅ Yatsude
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Masato Shimon (as KÅichi Fuji) with Male Harmony
- Episodes: 1â"71
- "Rider Action" (ã©ã¤ãã¼ã¢ã¯ã·ã§ã³, RaidÄ Akushon)
- Lyrics: ShÅtarÅ Ishinomori
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Masato Shimon
- Episodes: 72â"88
- "Lonely Kamen Rider" (ãã³ãªã¼ä»®é¢ã©ã¤ãã¼, RonrÄ« Kamen RaidÄ)
- Lyrics: Mamoru Tanaka
- Composition & Arrangement: Shunsuke Kikuchi
- Artist: Masato Shimon
- Episodes: 89â"98
Legacy
The Kamen Rider original series famously spearheaded launched "Second Kaiju Boom" or "Henshin Boom" on Japanese television in the early 1970s, greatly impacting the superhero and action-adventure genre in Japan. The famous "henshin sequence", in which the title hero performs ritualistic poses and shouting a keyword to transform into his superhero form has since become a staple in Japanese pop-culture, inspiring superheroes and magical girl genres. Kamen Rider went to later produce a great number of spin-offs which remain in production today. Several Kamen Rider series were aired in Japan after the first Kamen Rider finished. After Kamen Rider Black RX ended production in 1989, the series was put on hold.
There were three movie released as the 1990s "Movie Riders", which were Shin Kamen Rider: Prologue, Kamen Rider ZO and Kamen Rider J. After original creator ShÅtarÅ Ishinomori's death, the Kamen Rider franchise was continued in 2000 with Kamen Rider Kuuga. As of 2014, twenty-five Kamen Rider series have been made, with the newest being Kamen Rider Drive which premiered in October 2014.
As of 2005, a remake of the Kamen Rider series was made and reimagined with Kamen Rider The First and continued with Kamen Rider The Next released in 2007.
References
External links
- Ishimori@Style - Shotaro Ishinomori on Ishimori Productions official website
- Kamen Rider series on Region 2 DVD - A complete list of all official releases to date.
- Toei Kyoto Studio Park - A theme park with official events, exhibitions and shops related to the Kamen Rider.
- Kamen Rider at DMOZ
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