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Kamen RiderKamen Rider (仮面ライダー, literally "Masked Rider") is a very famous and successful Japanese superhero franchise created by Shotaro Ishinomori. It premiered on TV Asahi (as tokusatsu TV show) and Shonen Magazine (as manga) almost simultaneously in 1971. Original story The story took place in a world plagued by the mysterious terrorist organization Shocker. To fulfil its plan of world domination, the group recruited its agents through kidnapping, turned them into monstrous cyborgs using advanced technology and, ultimately, performed the lobotomy. However, one of the victims was rescued just before the final step, and his name was Takeshi Hongo. With his sanity and conscience remaining intact, the man assumed the identity of the costumed superhero Kamen Rider and battled Shocker with his newly acquired power. Live action shows The TV show premiered on TV Asahi in April 1971. During the shooting of early episodes, an accident happened and caused severe injury to Hiroshi Fujioka, the actor playing Takeshi Hongo. To keep the series going, a second Kamen Rider was introduced in episode 14 to reprise Hongo's role as Japan's guardian angel. Hayato Ichimonji, better known as Kamen Rider 2, did a short sequence of arm-waving motions and uttered "Henshin!" (literally "transform") whenever he wanted to transform from his human guise to the Rider form. The stylish pose was immensely popular among the young audience and the show became an immediate sensation. Rating was further boosted when Fujioka returned to the stage in episode 40, now known as Kamen Rider 1. The show spanned 2 years and ended in episode 98 with the Double Riders defeating Shocker. It spawned many sequels and acted as the role model of numerous superhero shows of the same genre that followed, affectionately referred to as henshin heroes. The classic Kamen Rider shows were produced by Toru Hirayama, with Shotaro Ishinomori at the helm of character design. The contiguous run from April 1971 to January 1976 distinguished itself by featuring the recurrent mentor character Tobei Tachibana: After a 4-year hiatus, the series returned to television broadcast in October 1979 for 2 years. In these new shows, the role of Tobei Tachibana was replaced by a similar character called Genjiro Tani: ZX, the 10th Kamen Rider, was introduced in a TV special on January 3, 1984. It was the last Kamen Rider show to be produced by Hirayama: Kamen Rider Black was the first series that neither indicated nor even hinted any relationship with the old canon. It adopted a more mature theme than its predecessors. The show was so well received by the audience that it spawned a "canonical" sequel, Kamen Rider RX, the basis of Saban's Americanized Masked Rider: The Kamen Rider legacy was totally absent from TV broadcast in the 1990s. However it had several theatrical and home video releases during the decade: The series returned to TV broadcast in 2000, 2 years after Shotaro Ishinomori's death in 1998. It has since become a regular feature of TV Asahi. The new shows are joint collaboration between Ishimori Productions, Ishinomori's studio, and Toei: - 2000: Kamen Rider Kuuga - TV series, TV special, video
- 2001: Kamen Rider Agito - TV series, TV special, movie, video
- 2002: Kamen Rider Ryuki - TV series, TV special, movie, video
- 2003: Kamen Rider 555 - TV series, movie, video
- 2004: Kamen Rider Blade - TV series, movie, video
- 2005: Kamen Rider Hibiki - TV series
Manga Many Kamen Rider mangas had been published, but only the following few were penned and drawn by Ishinomori himself: The original manga in 1971 (first run) was quite different from the TV series with respect to its response to the Fujioka accident. In the manga, Hongo was outnumbered by 12 Shocker Riders and was killed subsequently. Ichimonji Hayato, initially one of the twelve, received a head injury during the fight and regained conscience as a result. He then turned against Shocker and succeeded Hongo's role as Kamen Rider. Hongo was resurrected near the end of the series, nevertheless. Animation So far only one Kamen Rider anime has seen the light of day. It belongs to the super deformed genre and is a parody of its live action counterparts: Other merchandises Numerous Kamen Rider products, notably toys, can be found in the market, and the list is ever-expanding. Most of them, if not all, are licensed to Bandai. References TV Asahi Toei Others
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