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Originally depicting the ronin Hyakkumar and the small-time burglar Dororo, Tezuka's Dororo relates the Hyakkimaru is weeks long in search of and death for 12 demons who, in an evil alliance with his father before to his birth, took his limbs and other body parts. Hyakkumar is given a set of unique prosthesis that not only provides him the same powers as if he had his arms, hands, legs, and feet - but also superhuman skills thanks to the kindness of a stranger, later mentor, who found him abandoned as a newborn.
Dororo has a sad past and is also an abandoned child, much as Hyakkimaru. Hyakkumar takes Dororo, where he sees a part of himself under his wing, finally strengthening his mentor relationship with him. For its time, Dororo was quite dark and graphic; the protagonist, born as wounded and disabled from his father's avarice, must fight to physically retrieve his limbs from horrible demons.
Though Osamu Tezuka's most well-known work, Astro Boy has become increasingly popular as Netflix successfully adapted Pluto, a manga by Naoki Urasawa that gave Astro Boy a contemporary spin. Thanks to creator Atsushi Kaneko, another Tezuka classic, Dororo, was treated similarly; so, manga is now at last accessible to English viewers.
Kaneko reinvented Tezuka's Dororo in an 18-chapter limited series titled Search and Destroy in 2018. Now, as reported in a recent statement from the publisher of comic books and graphic novels Fantagraphics, an English language edition will be available for Kaneko and Tezuka aficioners late next month.
Keneko's Search and Destroy changes the chronology of the story from medieval Japan to a futuristic Cyberpunk information society, while maintaining the fundamental boundaries of Tezuka's original. In Kaneko's universe, indeed, the concept of merging technology with human biology is now acceptable and rather prevalent. Furthermore, sentient robots who will do whatever to suit their own needs replace the supernatural demons of the original tale since they can pay the "right price".
While Tezuka's original was released in the 1960s, a time when neural networks, artificial intelligence, and a modern information society were attractive but abstract ideas, Kaneko's update arrived at a time when technologically-speaking, everything addressed was in the realm of possibilities. Indeed, with artificial intelligence ingrained in almost every sphere of life, education, and industry, Kaneko's picture of society seems more realistic than fiction.
Originally published between October 2018 and March 2020 in TezuComi, a special limited-time magazine created in honor of Tezuka in the run-up to the legendary Mangaka's 90th birthday celebration on November 3, 2018, the volume gathers the first six chapters of the series.
On July 23, 2024 Fantagraphics will have Search and Destruction Vol. 1 available.
Apart from supernatural and technological elements and angles, Tezuka's original Dororo Manga excels because of a skillful narrative that captivates the reader. According to Kaneko's interpretation, that same level of curiosity and engaging narrative approach remain. Indeed, Kaneko's Search and Destroy remake of Tezuka's Dororo preserves all that makes it a classic while adding fascinating modern-day adjustments that make it even better and more relevant to the readers of today.
Source: Fantagraphic Illustration