ファントムブラッド (Fantomu Buraddo) | |
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Written by | Kōyō Yamada |
Music by | Marco d' Ambrosio |
Studio | A.P.P.P. |
Released | February 17, 2007 |
The title Phantom Blood was first officially used in the book JOJO A-GO!GO!, and then later used for the Bunkoban release of the manga. The part has received two anime adaptations: a 2007 film by Studio A.P.P.P. and a 2012 TV series by David Production. It was also adapted into a 2006 PlayStation 2 game by Anchor Inc. and Bandai .
For the animated TV series adaptation, see JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (season 1). Phantom Blood ( Japanese: ファントムブラッド, Hepburn: Fantomu Buraddo) is a 1987 manga series created by Hirohiko Araki, and the first part of the larger JoJo's Bizarre Adventure series.
^ a b "JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1--Phantom Blood, Vol. 1". Viz Media. Archived from the original on 2017-10-15. Retrieved 2017-10-15. ^ a b c d Araki, Hirohiko (2015) [2013]. "Chapter 1: Prologue". JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Part 1—Phantom Blood. Vol. 1. Translated by Galloway, Evan. San Francisco: Viz Media. pp. 3–33. ISBN 978-1421578798.
Phantom Blood was originally serialized in Shueisha 's Weekly Shōnen Jump under the title JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 Jonathan Joestar: His Youth. It ran from January 1 to October 26, 1987 for a total of 44 chapters, and was later collected in five tankōbon volumes.
The story follows Jonathan Joestar as he matures with and eventually combats his adoptive brother, the cunning and merciless Dio Brando .
Phantom Blood consists of 44 chapters compiled into Volume 1 to 5 of the Jump Comics trade paperbacks ( Tankōbon W ). Chapter titles often change between the original publication in Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine and the paperback graphic novels, so both are included below (left for volume, right for magazine).
An animated movie adaptation by Studio A.P.P.P. was released on February 17, 2007 in Japanese theaters.
Araki has stated that his inspirations for Phantom Blood were the manga Fist of the North Star and the novel Bram Stoker's Dracula.[citation needed]
WataMote: No Matter How I Look at It, It's You Guys' Fault I'm Not Popular!
A rivalry between two heirs to an estate escalates into a supernatural quest when one of them becomes a vampire and the other sets out to stop him.
Other than its original theatrical run in Japan, the film has seen no home video release of any kind anywhere, even in Japan, allegedly because the quality of the film is so poor.
By what name was JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Phantom Blood (2007) officially released in Canada in English?
The film was produced to commemorate the 25th anniversary of creator Hirohiko Araki 's career as a manga artist and was given a limited theatrical release in Japan starting on February 17, 2007. Since then, the movie has never been seen publically, ...
For the TV anime adaption, see JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: The Animation. JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure: Phantom Blood (ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 ファントム ブラッド. , JoJo no Kimyō na Bōken Fantomu Buraddo) is a 2007 animated film produced by animation Studio A.P.P.P., who previously handled animation of the earlier OVA series. It is an adaptation of the first arc of the ...
Phantom Blood (ファントムブラッド. , Fantomu Buraddo) is the first part of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure . It was originally serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump from January to October 1987 under the title of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 Jonathan Joestar: His Youth, and was collected into five volumes by Jump Comics.
Phantom Blood consists of 44 chapters compiled into Volumes 1 through 5 of the Jump Comics trade paperbacks ( Tankōbon ). Chapter titles often change between the original publication in Weekly Shonen Jump magazine and the paperback graphic novels, so both are included below (left for volume, right for magazine).
The story follows Jonathan Joestar as he matures with and eventually battles his adoptive brother, the cunning and merciless Dio Brando . Phantom Blood featured on the cover of Weekly Shonen Jump.
These characters include faces such as Speedwagon, Poco, Dire, Straizo, leaving it at 90 minutes.
While the 2012 anime still looks great and the characters are often seen with weird hair colors, the 2007 movie looks like it was taken straight off that first volume's cover art in the cases of Jonathan and Dio.
To go right along with the art style, the character designs take incredible inspiration from the original manga appearances of the characters. While this seems like an obvious decision, it's one that David Production didn't follow for the 2012 anime adaptation for Phantom Blood for characters like the blue-haired Jonathan Joestar.
Jojo's Bizarre Adventure Phantom Blood had both a film and anime adaptation. We look at aspects of both to see which is better. In one corner we have the 2007 film, JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Phantom Blood. An adaptation of the original JoJo's Bizarre Adventure manga part, Phantom Blood.
An adaptation of the original JoJo's Bizarre Adventure manga part, Phantom Blood. This film was created by A.P.P and given a limited theatrical release. Sadly, it has since disappeared and is considered a piece of lost media.
This is the story of the Joestar family, and their battles against bizarre enemies. Jonathan Joestar's battle against the vampire Dio Brando starts it all, and it continues into roughly each second generation of Joestars through all parts of the story.
This version of Jojo is lost media. I will leave links from the found parts of the film under my review. What I could find I think I would have enjoyed. Although I will not rate anything, but the overall a 10. It would seem unfair to give this a proper review. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MVpwZxBJjJU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l5KOWKVTIeA
Anime with consistently vibrant usage of colors in both character and scene design that lasts for all of, or the majority of, the show.
The name Phantom Blood was actually first coined in a JoJo's Bizarre Adventure artbook entitled JOJO A-GO! GO! which came out to commemorate the full release of Part 5: Golden Wind, several years after Part 1's release. The title Phantom Blood wouldn't become the official title of Jonathan's adventure until Shonen Jump started releasing new volumes ...
Speedwagon). According to Araki, he started using names like this because he thought his story was including too many people with J's in their name.
9 Phantom Blood Was A Pivot From Adapting Hisashi Eguchi. Like many manga artists, Hirohiko Araki originally struggled to find his voice. While Phantom Blood in and of itself has admittedly some growing pains, Araki was already struggling to just get to that.
Many know JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 as Phantom Blood; but when it was originally released, it went by a very different name. In the original volumes, Part 1 actually went by Jonathan Joestar: His Youth. The name Phantom Blood was actually first coined in a JoJo's Bizarre Adventure artbook entitled JOJO A-GO!
Perhaps the biggest meme to come out of Phantom Blood and possibly the franchise as a whole is the iconic "But It Was Me, Dio!" . meme. In the anime, Dio's harassment of Erina was such an exaggerated scene that it inspired several fans to either make fun of it or celebrate it for its clear audacity.
Most fans are aware of Phantom Blood 's 2012 anime, the very release that started the franchise's current, cult success, and some even know about the OVA for Stardust Crusaders. However, few knew (and fewer ever got to see) the original, animated film for Phantom Blood made by the same people who made the Stardust Crusaders OVA.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure has become one of the most beloved manga series of recent times but there is plenty fans won't know about Phantom Blood. JoJo's Bizarre Adventure has come a long way from its battles against 19th-century vampires, a premise that wouldn't be a humble beginning for any other series.
Phantom Blood (Japanese: ファントムブラッド, Hepburn: Fantomu Buraddo) is a 1987 manga series created by Hirohiko Araki, and the first part of the larger JoJo's Bizarre Adventure series. The manga was originally serialized by Shueisha in Weekly Shōnen Jump under the title JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 Jonathan Joestar: His Youth and was collected in five volumes; a three-volume collectio…
In 19th-century England, a youth born into poverty named Dio Brando is adopted by the wealthy George Joestar to repay a family debt to Dio's father Dario, who died in 1880. George's son Jonathan, who aspires to become a gentleman, is shunned by his family and friends, whom Dio manipulates as part of his plot to take the Joestar fortune for himself. After Jonathan overpowers Dio in a fistfight, Dio gets revenge by murdering Jonathan's pet dog Danny, before biding his tim…
Phantom Blood was written and drawn by Hirohiko Araki. Prior to working on the series, he created a manga that resembled the works of Hisashi Eguchi, an artist known for his art of female characters; Araki's editor, Ryōsuke Kabashima, angrily told Araki to never draw something as derivative again, which led him to take another direction with his art, and the creation of Phantom Blood. Due to t…
Phantom Blood was originally serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump under the title JoJo's Bizarre Adventure Part 1 Jonathan Joestar: His Youth. It ran from January 1 to October 26, 1987, for a total of 44 chapters, and was later collected in five tankōbon volumes. It was also collected in a three-volume bunkoban collection on February 15, 2002, and a single volume sōshūhen edition in 2012. Another three-volume collection with new cover art by Araki was released from December …
Phantom Blood was met with reviews ranging from critical to positive. According to Araki, he was often told during the original serialization of the manga that it was the one series that did not fit in with the "best of the best" that were serialized at the same time, such as Dragon Ball, Fist of the North Star, Captain Tsubasa, Kinnikuman and Saint Seiya. Weekly Shōnen Jump readers were critical of the first few chapters, finding Jonathan unlikable as he kept losing against Dio at that …