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Japanese manga series and its franchise From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linebarrels of Iron (鉄のラインバレル, Kurogane no Rainbareru) is a Japanese manga series created by Eiichi Shimizu and Tomohiro Shimoguchi. The series was first serialized in Akita Shoten's monthly seinen manga magazine, Champion Red, in 2005.[4][5] It has since been compiled into 24 tankōbon, as of October 20, 2014.[6] The story centers on Kouichi Hayase, a fourteen-year-old boy living a mediocre life, until an accident turns him into the pilot of a gigantic robot called "Linebarrel" and leads him to encounter a mysterious girl.
Linebarrels of Iron | |
鉄のラインバレル (Kurogane no Rainbareru) | |
---|---|
Genre | Action, romance, science fiction[1] |
Manga | |
Written by | Eiichi Shimizu |
Illustrated by | Tomohiro Shimoguchi |
Published by | Akita Shoten |
Magazine | Champion Red |
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | December 19, 2004 – April 18, 2015 |
Volumes | 26 |
Manga | |
Volume 0 | |
Written by | Eiichi Shimizu |
Illustrated by | Tomohiro Shimoguchi |
Published by | Akita Shoten |
Magazine | Champion Red |
Demographic | Seinen |
Published | December 20, 2006 |
Volumes | 1 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Masamitsu Hidaka |
Produced by | Hiroyuki Birukawa Osamu Nagai Takaaki Kuwana Yoshihiro Iwasa |
Written by | Kiyoko Yoshimura |
Music by | Conisch |
Studio | Gonzo |
Licensed by | |
Original network | TBS, CBC, Sun-TV |
Original run | October 3, 2008[3] – March 20, 2009 |
Episodes | 24 + 2 OVAs |
An anime adaptation of the manga series was announced in the February issue of Animage magazine.[4] The anime is directed by Masamitsu Hidaka and animated by Gonzo. Though the world premiere of the first episode took place at Southern California's 2008 Anime Expo,[7] the series premiered in Japan on the television network TBS (Tokyo Broadcasting System) on October 3, 2008.[3] The anime broadcast a total of twenty-four episodes, the last of which aired on March 20, 2009. To commemorate the series' anime adaptation, Shimizu and Shimoguchi decided to create a one shot manga, recreating the entire first episode of the anime, in which the plot differs in many aspects compared to the beginning of the manga.[5]
The Linebarrels of Iron story takes place in an alternate universe in the year 2019, centering on a junior-high school student named Kouichi Hayase, who escaped his daily life of being ridiculed as a child by daydreaming about being a hero. His life is forever changed during a class trip in 2016 when an artificial satellite falls from orbit. Due to this "accident", Kouichi is left in a coma for half a year, and upon awakening, found himself with strange powers, including superhuman strength. Three years later, a mysterious robot called "Linebarrel" appears before him. It is revealed that the accident from three years ago was actually caused by the Machina robot Linebarrel and that this turned him into a "Factor", which is the name given to Machina pilots. This leads him to encounter Emi Kizaki, a mysterious amnesiac girl whose unknown past seems to be related to Linebarrel. He joins her in fighting for JUDA, the world's largest medical equipment maker, which happens to secretly own several other Machina robots.
There are two kinds of robots in Linebarrels of Iron: Armas and Machinas. The series primarily focuses on Machinas, robots which are not manufactured by humans and are powered by nanobots called D-S.O.I.L., also known as Drexler S.O.I.L., which also enable them to regenerate after being damaged. Since D-S.O.I.L. is like artificial muscle for the Machinas, they tend to "bleed" when they are damaged.
Machinas are also considered to have their own consciousness, as only their chosen "Factor" can pilot one, and should the Factor be killed, it will go on to find a replacement. The overlying reason for this is that all Machinas are incapable of intentionally killing another human on their own volition; they need a "Factor" i.e. another human, who would be the one who "kills". The Factor need not be actively piloting the machina for it to kill, as revealed when a rampaging Machina called Apparition was brought down by JUDA and the then-unaligned Hayase and it was found that the (dead) Factor was drugged and restrained inside it. Should it kill someone without a Factor's "assistance", usually by accident, a Machina has been known to resuscitate and heal the person by injecting their D-S.O.I.L nanobots into them, which in turn makes the person a Factor. This is case for Factor Reiji Moritsugu. In the case of Kouichi Hayase, then-Linebarrel pilot Emi Kizaki begged Linebarrel to heal him, which turned him into a Factor, at the expense of making Emi a less desirable Factor to Linebarrel ("It" does not want Emi to fight). In the anime it was revealed that Hayase's friend Hideaki Yajima was also resurrected by the Machina that caused his death.
In addition, a Machina can go into Overdrive, or a state of rampage which exponentially increase its capabilities, when its Factor's emotions go out of control. Machinas can also be stored in another dimension and appear before its Factor any time, excluding the Linebarrel. However, they cannot teleport if the Factor is inside it. Since there are only a limited amount of Machinas available and their true origins are unknown, humans created Armas, which are crude imitations of Machinas and do not have D-S.O.I.L. They can be piloted by anyone, but they cannot regenerate, nor they can perform at the level of true Machinas.
It is revealed mid-way through the manga that a majority of humanity was wiped out after the development of Nanomachines and the Machina due to a kill-switch built into their DNA. Many years later a majority of the Machina have obtained self-awareness and destroyed what was left with many of them hunting down humans and human corpses to provide them with a "Factor". Unsatisfied with their lack of purpose, the 'Human-Machina' had remade humanity to try and find the purpose of life. Known named Human-Machina include Deus Ex Machina, their leader, a nanomachine-copy of Abraham Lincoln who "pilots" the Machina 'Rail-Splitter and his "daughter" Maxi Oba, pilot of the self-named Lovebarrel.
A concept unveiled in the anime. As the story in the anime unfolds it is learned that there exists a parallel universe adjacent to our own, where humanity reached incredible peaks of technology at the cost of their very nature, to the point where the human species as a whole became extinct after merging its own collective consciousness with the machines they created. Similar to a hive mind, this virtual collective unity threw away individuality and any sort of vestige of human feelings for the sake of power, becoming one cold, ruthless mechanical being bent on a continuous, endless expansion of itself. Referred to as "Central", this hive mind acts in a way reminiscent of the machines from the Matrix trilogy, even having its own enforcers to hunt down and destroy whoever is perceived as a hindrance.
Voiced by: Tetsuya Kakihara (Japanese); Jessie James Grelle (English)
Voiced by: Mamiko Noto (Japanese); Alexis Tipton (English)
Voiced by: Yūichi Nakamura (Japanese); J. Michael Tatum (English)
Voiced by: Miyuki Sawashiro (Japanese); Mary Morgan (English)
Voiced by: Kana Ueda (Japanese); Cherami Leigh (English)
Voiced by: Rie Kugimiya (Japanese); Aaron Dismuke (English)
Voiced by: Aya Hirano (Japanese); Monica Rial (English)
Voiced by: Jōji Nakata (Japanese); Barry Yandell (English)
Voiced by: Sayaka Ohara (Japanese); Tiffany Grant (English)
Voiced by: Chiwa Saitō (Japanese); Tia Ballard (English)
Voiced by: Jun Fukuyama (Japanese); Todd Haberkorn (English)
Voiced by: Susumu Chiba (Japanese); Tony Patterson (English)
Voiced by: Tomoyuki Shimura (Japanese); Kent Williams (English)
Voiced by: Tetsu Inada (Japanese); Bryan Massey (English)
Voiced by: Hirofumi Nojima (Japanese); Ian Sinclair (English)
Voiced by: Yoshikazu Sato (Japanese, anime), Kenji Nomura (Super Robot Wars UX), Bob Carter (English, anime)
Voiced by: Emi Shinohara (Japanese); Michele Specht (English)
Voiced by: Daisuke Sakaguchi (Japanese); Sonny Strait (English)
Voiced by: Noriko Shitaya (Japanese); Carrie Savage (English)
Voiced by: Go Shinomiya (Japanese); Joel McDonald (English)
Voiced by: Jun Konno (Japanese); Jerry Jewell (English)
Voiced by: Shō Hayami (Japanese); Vic Mignogna (English)
Voiced by: Tesshō Genda (Super Robot Wars UX)
Written and illustrated by Eiichi Shimizu and Tomohiro Shimoguchi, the Linebarrels of Iron manga series was first serialized in Akita Shoten's monthly seinen manga magazine, Champion Red.[4] The chapters of the series are still published in the magazine, and has since been compiled into twenty-four tankōbon as of October 20, 2014.[6][9] This is excluding Volume 0, which was simultaneously released with the fifth volume. Akita Shoten also published a book containing details about the anime adaptation, simultaneously releasing it on the same day as the tenth volume.[6] The manga is published by Editorial Ivrea in Spain for readers of Spanish. The first ten volumes of the manga had been already published.
To commemorate the series' anime adaptation, Shimizu and Shimoguchi decided to create a one shot manga which will be serialized in the forty-fourth issue of the Japanese manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Champion. It recreates the entire first episode of the anime, in which the plot differs in many aspects compared to the beginning of the manga.[5]
Volume | Release date[6] | ISBN | Chapters |
---|---|---|---|
0 | December 20, 2006 | ISBN 978-4-253-23160-2 | — |
1 | June 6, 2005 | ISBN 978-4-253-23161-9 | 1 - 5 |
2 | November 1, 2005 | ISBN 978-4-253-23162-6 | 6 - 10 |
3 | April 20, 2006 | ISBN 978-4-253-23163-3 | 11 - 15 |
4 | August 18, 2006 | ISBN 978-4-253-23164-0 | 16 - 19 |
5 | December 20, 2006 | ISBN 978-4-253-23165-7 | 20 - 23 |
6 | April 20, 2007 | ISBN 978-4-253-23166-4 | 24 - 27 |
7 | August 21, 2007 | ISBN 978-4-253-23167-1 | 28 - 31 |
8 | December 20, 2007 | ISBN 978-4-253-23168-8 | 32 - 35 |
9 | April 18, 2008 | ISBN 978-4-253-23169-5 | 36 - 39 |
10 | September 19, 2008 | ISBN 978-4-253-23170-1 | 40 - 43 |
11 | November 20, 2008 | ISBN 978-4-253-23411-5 | 44 - 46 |
12 | March 19, 2009[9] | ISBN 978-4-253-23412-2 | 47 - 51 |
13 | August 20, 2009 | ISBN 978-4-253-23413-9 | 52 - 55 |
14 | December 18, 2009 | ISBN 978-4-253-23414-6 | 56 - 59 |
15 | May 5, 2010 | ISBN 978-4-253-23415-3 | 60 - 64 |
16 | October 20, 2010 | ISBN 978-4-253-23416-0 | 65 - 69 |
17 | March 19, 2011 | ISBN 978-4-253-23417-7 | 70 - 74 |
18 | August 19, 2011 | ISBN 978-4-253-23418-4 | 75 - 79 |
19 | January 20, 2012 | ISBN 978-4-253-23419-1 | |
20 | June 20, 2012 | ISBN 978-4-253-23420-7 | |
21 | January 18, 2013 | ISBN 978-4-253-23421-4 | |
22 | August 20, 2013 | ISBN 978-4-253-23422-1 | |
23 | April 18, 2014 | ISBN 978-4-253-23423-8 | |
24 | October 20, 2014 | ISBN 978-4-253-23424-5 | |
25 | August 20, 2015 | ISBN 978-4-253-23425-2 | |
26 | December 20, 2015 | ISBN 4-253-23160-8 |
The production of an anime adaptation for the Linebarrels of Iron manga was first revealed in Animate's preview information for the February issue of the anime and entertainment magazine Animage.[4] It was later announced that Masamitsu Hidaka, most well known as the director for the Pokémon anime series, will be directing Gonzo studio's anime adaptation.[7]
A gigantic robot and the girl of your dreams are what you get ... at the cost of your life.
Though the Japanese television premiere of the series was in October 2008, the world premiere of the first episode took place in the United States at Southern California's 2008 Anime Expo, which Masamitsu Hidaka attended as a Guest of Honor.[7] An official English language Linebarrels of Iron website was put up just before the Anime Expo in order to promote the American premiere of the series. Other special screenings for the first episode also took place in France's Japan Expo in July and Germany's Animagic 2008 in August.[10] The previewed first episode contained subtitles as it was still presented with its original Japanese dialogue.[11]
The series first premiered on Japanese television on October 3, 2008.[3] A total of twenty-four episodes aired, with the last of which being broadcast on March 20, 2009. Though the episodes aired first on the TBS (Tokyo Broadcasting System) television network, CBC and Sun-TV also broadcast the series; CBC aired it within an hour after TBS's initial broadcasts, and Sun-TV aired the episodes a week later.
In an agreement, in which Gonzo's corporate parent, the GDH group, decided to allow popular video-sharing websites to stream some of Gonzo's latest anime titles,[12] Crunchyroll, an anime-sharing site, streams episodes of the Linebarrels of Iron anime two hours after its premiere in Japan.[13] It is also illegally available on YouTube, though the only full episode available is episode one; Gonzo uploads only the first half of the following episodes, and to view the rest, viewers are directed to Crunchyroll.[14]
As of March 25, 2008, JVC Entertainment has released a total of four DVD volumes in Japan, with the first being released on December 24, 2008. The fifth volume was scheduled to be released on April 22, 2009. Each volume contains one disc, with each one containing three episodes, save the first volume, which contains only the first episode. Every volume also contains extras, ranging from Drama CDs to original illustrations by the creator.[15]
Five pieces of theme music are used for the anime series; one opening theme, two ending themes and two insert songs. The opening theme is "Kitei no Tsurugi" (鬼帝の剣, Sword of the Demon King) by the Japanese band Ali Project, the ending themes are "Ame ga Furu" (雨が降る, Falling Rain) and "Remedy" by Maaya Sakamoto, and the insert songs are "Kokoro no Mama ni" (心のままに, State of My Heart) and "PROUD" by Lisa Komine. An orchestra version of "Kitei no Tsurugi" was also used as an insert song in episode 20. Ali Project released the "Kitei no Tsurugi" single on November 19, 2008,[16] while "Ame ga Furu", Maaya's seventeenth single, was released on October 29, 2008.[17] The second ending theme, "Remedy" was released within Maaya's sixth album, Kazeyomi, on January 14, 2009.[18]
While the manga has garnered attention from noted animators and manga artists like Yoshikazu Yasuhiko and Mamoru Nagano, who are both avid readers of the series and recommends the work,[4] early reviews of the anime adaptation have been generally mixed. Four different reviewers from the anime and manga social networking site Anime News Network gave negative reviews based on the first few episodes; agreeing that the storyline is generic and predictable, and that it contains an easily detestable main character (Kouichi). Though the mecha designs were likable, the anime's characters designs and computer generated graphics were scrutinized and described as not being one of Gonzo's best.[19][20][21] Despite one of the reviewers finding the anime "marginally more tolerable" by the second episode, she comments that, "Whether or not you will be horrified enough to stop watching this show will be determined by your own personal level of tolerance for Kouichi's hubris."[22] Dani Moure of Mania, an entertainment website, believes that the first episode "does a good job of introducing the premise of the show," but finds it "predictable and full of several clichés." Also, though Moure comments that Kouichi is a dislikable character, he states that "he grows into his role with his belief that there is more to come from him."[23] In Moure's reviews of further episodes, he comments on how the series remains entertaining, "developing into a solid show," and that "watching Kouichi struggle to cope with the power that's been presented to him is becoming interesting."[24][25][26]
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