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Does Soul Eater Continue After The Anime

Japanese manga series

Soul Eater
Soul Eater manga volume 1.jpg

Offset tankōbon volume cover, featuring Maka (right), Soul (lesser-left) and Blair (peak-left)

ソウルイーター
( Sōru Ītā )
Genre
  • Activeness[1] [2]
  • Dark comedy[3]
  • Dark fantasy[4] [5]
Manga
Written by Atsushi Ohkubo
Published by Foursquare Enix
English language publisher

NA

  • Yen Press
  • Square Enix (Perfect Edition)
Imprint Gangan Comics
Magazine Monthly Shōnen Gangan
English language magazine

NA

Yen Plus

Demographic Shōnen
Original run May 12, 2004August 12, 2013
Volumes 25 (List of volumes)
Anime television set serial
Directed by Takuya Igarashi
Produced by
  • Aya Yoshino
  • Taihei Yamanishi
  • Yoshihiro Oyabu
Written past Akatsuki Yamatoya
Music by Taku Iwasaki
Studio Bones
Licensed by

AUS

Madman Entertainment

NA

Funimation

SEA

Medialink

Britain

Manga Entertainment

Original network TXN (TV Tokyo)
English language network

PH

ABS-CBN, Hero, Studio 23

United states of america

Funimation Channel, Developed Swim (Toonami)

Original run April 7, 2008 March 30, 2009
Episodes 51 (List of episodes)
Manga
  • Soul Eater Not! (2011–14)
Video games
  • Listing of Soul Eater video games

Soul Eater (Japanese: ソウルイーター, Hepburn: Sōru Ītā ) is a Japanese manga serial written and illustrated by Atsushi Ohkubo. Set at the "Decease Weapon Meister Academy", the series revolves around three teams, each consisting of a weapon meister and (at to the lowest degree one) weapon that tin can transform into a humanoid. Trying to make the latter a "expiry scythe" and thus fit for use by the academy'south headmaster Shinigami, the personification of death, they must collect the souls of 99 evil humans and one witch, in that order; otherwise, they volition have to start all over again.

The manga was preceded by iii separate one-shots published by Foursquare Enix in 2003; the first two published in 2 Gangan Powered special editions and the last one in Gangan Wing. Soul Eater was regularly serialized in Square Enix's Monthly Shōnen Gangan magazine from May 2004 to August 2013. Its chapters were collected in twenty-five tankōbon volumes. A 50-i episode anime tv series adaptation produced past Bones was broadcast in Japan on Goggle box Tokyo from April 2008 to March 2009. The series has too spawned a drama CD, an fine art volume, and three video games. A spin-off manga series, titled Soul Eater Not!, was serialized in Monthly Shōnen Gangan from January 2011 to November 2014. Soul Eater was licensed for distribution in North America past Yen Press; it was serialized in Yen Press' Yen Plus manga anthology starting in July 2008, and the first manga book was released in October 2009. The anime series has been licensed past Funimation.

The Soul Eater manga had 19.6 meg copies in circulation as of July 2019. Both the manga and anime series have been overall well received, particularly for its art style and Gothic setting, often compared by critics to Tim Burton'south works like The Nightmare Before Christmas. The series, however, has been criticized for its utilise of fanservice and similarity to other shōnen series.

Synopsis [edit]

Setting [edit]

Decease Weapon Meister University

Soul Eater is set at Death Weapon Meister University ( 死神武器職人専門学校 , Shinigami Buki Shokunin Senmon Gakkō ) — "DWMA" ( 死武専 , Shibusen ) for brusk — located in the fictional Decease City[half-dozen] in Nevada, United States.[7] The school is run past Shinigami, also known as Death, equally a training facility for humans with the ability to transform into weapons, too as the wielders of those weapons, called meisters ( 職人 , shokunin ).[half dozen] Attending this school are Maka Albarn and her scythe partner, Soul Eater; assassinator Black Star and his partner, Tsubaki Nakatsukasa, who turns into various ninja weapons; and Shinigami's son, Death the Child, and his pistol partners, Liz and Patty Thompson. The meister students' goal is to have their weapons absorb the souls of 99 evil humans and one witch, which dramatically increases the weapon's ability and turns them into "expiry scythes" used by Shinigami.[six]

Plot [edit]

Maka and Soul boxing the witch Medusa, who forces Crona, her child and meister of the demon sword Ragnarok, to collect non-evil human being souls and eventually transform into a kishin ( 鬼神 ), an evil god. Medusa and her cohorts attack DWMA to revive Asura, the commencement kishin who nearly plunged the entire world into madness before existence sealed beneath DWMA past Shinigami. Despite the combined efforts of Maka, Blackness Star, and Death the Child, Medusa's grouping successfully revives Asura, who leaves to spread chaos around the world after a cursory battle with Shinigami. Medusa is seemingly killed by meister and DWMA teacher Franken Stein, while Crona surrenders to DWMA and enrolls there.

As a result of Asura's spreading madness, Medusa's sis Arachne comes out of hiding and reforms her organization, Arachnophobia, which poses a serious threat to DWMA. Shinigami calls in expiry scythes from around the globe to aid in the fight against Arachnophobia. During this time, Medusa reappears with her soul possessing the trunk of a immature girl, and forms a truce with DWMA so they tin can annihilate Arachnophobia together. The DWMA students and Medusa'southward entourage infiltrate Arachnophobia's headquarters, where Maka kills Arachne, only for Medusa to betray DWMA, possess Arachne'southward body, and brainwash Crona into rejoining her. Meanwhile, Death the Kid is captured by Noah, an bogus construct created from the Volume of Eibon. Following this, Maka uses Arachne's soul to plow Soul into a death scythe. The duo become part of the newly formed meister unit Spartoi forth with their friends, who rescue Death the Kid and defeat Noah.

Crona resurfaces in a city in Russia, destroying it and the death scythe stationed there, before existence provoked by Medusa into killing her and getting taken by insanity. Maka is ordered by Shinigami to hunt down Crona; while searching for Crona with her powers, she unwittingly detects Asura's location on the cartoonish moon within the atmosphere. DWMA launches an assail on the moon to defeat Asura, aided by the witches after Decease the Kid convinces them to establish a temporary alliance. During the battle, Crona absorbs Asura's body before being overtaken by him. Maka, Black Star, and Expiry the Child eventually restore Crona's sanity and defeat Asura past sealing him on the moon with his own claret; Crona willingly remains with Asura to continue him imprisoned, and Maka promises to one day rescue Crona. The DWMA forces return to Earth, where Expiry the Kid becomes the new Shinigami following his father'southward death, and establishes a peace treaty with the witches.

Production [edit]

Afterwards the end of his first manga serial, B.Ichi, Atsushi Ohkubo created a one-shot story called "Soul Eater" published in June 2003 past Gangan Powered.[viii] Japanese readers were and then fascinated by it that Ohkubo created two other one-shots called "Black Star" and "Decease the Child", published in September and November 2003, respectively. Since the results were high, the editor of Gangan Comics asked Ohkubo to create a series from his one-shots which became the introductory chapters to Soul Eater.

In an interview, Ohkubo said that the series was profoundly inspired by ideas from Tim Burton'southward animations, and by concepts from J. Grand. Rowling'southward Harry Potter. Ohkubo too stated he decided to make the primary protagonist of the series, Maka Albarn, a female person to differ from the traditional male hero found in well-nigh shōnen manga, and paired her and the other main characters with those of the opposite sex to demonstrate an equal representation of gender. He also said the series' title, Soul Eater, was intended to refer to Asura and his desire to eat innocent souls, and non to the character, Soul "Eater" Evans.[ix] Ohkubo has explained that, when he began Soul Eater, he already had the plot and details like the DWMA fully formed and shared with his editors. He thought too many manga had characters who were developed through flashbacks, which he considered besides clever. Therefore, he decided to develop his characters in the present rather than referring to their pasts, and to focus on "activeness and momentum," and so he could "write freely".[10]

Media [edit]

Manga [edit]

Atsushi Ohkubo wrote 3 1-shot capacity published by Square Enix. "Soul Eater" ( ソウルイーター , Sōru Ītā ) and "Black Star" ( ブラック・スター , Burakku Sutā ) were published in the summer and fall special editions of Gangan Powered, released on June 24 and September 22, 2003, respectively;[8] [11] the third one-shot, "Death the Kid", was published in Gangan Wing on November 26, 2003.[12] Soul Eater started in Square Enix's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Gangan on May 12, 2004,[xiii] and finished after a 9-twelvemonth run in the mag on August 12, 2013.[14] [fifteen] Square Enix compiled the serial into 20-five tankōbon volumes released under their Gangan Comics banner in Japan betwixt June 22, 2004,[sixteen] and December 12, 2013.[17] Square Enix republished the series in a seventeen-book kanzenban edition, titled Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition, released from July 12, 2019,[xviii] to March 12, 2020.[19]

The manga has been licensed by Yen Press for distribution in English in North America. The manga was initially serialized in Yen Printing' Yen Plus anthology magazine; the beginning effect went on auction on July 29, 2008.[twenty] The first English volume of the manga was published on Oct 27, 2009.[21] The last volume was published on March 24, 2015.[22] In July 2019, Square Enix announced the English language release of Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition.[23] The first book was released on July 28, 2020.[24]

Some other manga series which ran aslope the main series, titled Soul Eater Not! ( ソウルイーターノット! , Sōru Ītā Notto! ), was serialized in Monthly Shōnen Gangan from January 12, 2011,[25] to November 10, 2014.[26] Five tankōbon volumes were released between September 22, 2011,[27] and December 22, 2014.[28] Soul Eater Non! has been licensed by Yen Press in North America.[29] The five volumes were published between July 24, 2012,[30] and August iv, 2015.[31]

Drama CD [edit]

A drama CD was released on August 31, 2005 by Square Enix titled Soul Eater (Vol. 1): Special Social Studies Field Trip ( ソウルイーター(Vol.one)特別社会科見学 , Sōru Ītā (Vol. one) Tokubetsu Shakaika Kengaku ).[32] The CD came bundled with an art book and a script of the CD dialogue. Of the bandage used for the drama CD, merely Black Star's voice actress Yumiko Kobayashi was retained for the anime voice bandage.

Anime [edit]

A 51-episode anime adaptation was directed by Takuya Igarashi and produced by Basic, Aniplex, Dentsu, Media Factory, and TV Tokyo; Bones and Aniplex were responsible for the animation and music production respectively.[33] The scenario writer was Akatsuki Yamatoya who based the anime'south story on Ohkubo'southward original concept. Character design was headed past Yoshiyuki Ito, with overall art direction past Norifumi Nakamura. The anime's conceptual design was washed past Shinji Aramaki. The episodes aired on Idiot box Tokyo between Apr 7, 2008, and March 30, 2009,[34] and two animated specials aired on May 29 and June ane, 2008.[35] The serial aired in two versions: the regular evening broadcast and a belatedly-night "Soul Eater Late Show" version, which included special footage. The dual broadcast of the series was billed as the "globe'southward first evening and tardily-night resonance circulate". The "resonance" term refers to a story concept in which Maka and her living weapon partner, Soul Eater, achieve maximum power by synchronizing their souls.[36] Media Factory collected the episodes in thirteen DVDs, released from August 22, 2008,[37] to Baronial 25, 2009.[38] The series was rebroadcast on Telly Tokyo, under the championship Soul Eater: Repeat Show ( ソウルイーター リピートショー , Sōru Ītā Ripīto Shō ), on September thirty, 2010, featuring new opening and endmost themes.[39] Media Factory and Kadokawa brought the two previous Blu-ray box sets together into one box set released on February 26, 2014.[40]

In North America, the anime has been licensed past Funimation, who released the serial in four half-season DVD box sets starting with the beginning volume in Feb 2010.[ii] The anime made its North American television debut when it aired on the Funimation Aqueduct on September 6, 2010.[41] It also aired on Adult Swim's Toonami block from February 17, 2013.[4]

Video games [edit]

Three Soul Eater video games were produced. The outset, Soul Eater: Monotone Princess ( ソウルイーター モノトーン プリンセス , Sōru Ītā Monotōn Purinsesu ) is an activity-take a chance video game exclusively for the Wii and adult by Foursquare Enix with Basic. It was released on September 25, 2008 in Japan.[42] Ii characters that appear in the game, Grimoire ( グリモア , Gurimoa ) and Ponera ( ポネラ ) are original characters designed by author Ohkubo; Ponera is the titular Monotone Princess and Grimoire is known as Noah in the manga. A soundtrack called Shibusen's Treasure "Campus Broadcast Music Complete Works" ( 死武専秘蔵「校内放送楽曲大全」 ) was released as a pre-order bonus CD.[43] This game is only compatible with Japanese Wii systems.[44]

The second game, Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa ( ソウルイーター メデューサの陰謀 , Sōru Ītā Medyūsa no Inbō ) is an activity game produced past Namco Bandai Games for the Nintendo DS and was released on October 23, 2008.[45] Despite being created by two unlike companies, there are similarities between the Nintendo Wii game and the Nintendo DS game. It is a 3rd-person hack-and-slash game.[46]

The 3rd game, Soul Eater: Battle Resonance ( ソウルイーター バトルレゾナンス , Sōru Ītā Batoru Rezonansu ) is a fighting game developed by BEC and produced by Namco Bandai Games for the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable, and was released on January 29, 2009. This game follows the story line of the first 24 episodes of the anime series and allows the histrion to engage in the training and battles the characters experienced first hand. Along with new costumes and items, the player gets to experience the minds and wardrobes of each playable grapheme.[47]

Music [edit]

Six pieces of theme music are used for the episodes: two opening themes and four closing themes. The kickoff opening theme is "Resonance" by T.K.Revolution for the kickoff thirty episodes, and the single was released on June 11, 2008. The second opening theme is "Papermoon" by Tommy heavenly6 from episode 31 onward; the single was released on December 10, 2008 by DefStar Records. The first closing theme is "I Wanna Be" past Stance Punks for the start 13 episodes and the 51 episode; the single was released on June iv, 2008. The second closing theme is "Fashion" by Kana Nishino from episode 14 to 26; the single was released on August 13, 2008 by Sony Music Entertainment Japan. The third closing theme is "Bakusō Yume Uta" ( 爆走夢歌 ) by Soul'd Out's Diggy-Mo from episode 27 to 39; the single was released on November 26, 2008 past Sony Music Amusement Nihon. The final endmost theme is "Forcefulness" past Abingdon Boys School from episode 40 through episode 50; the single was released on Feb 25, 2009.[48] [49] The anime rebroadcasting features two boosted opening and closing themes. The first opening is "Counter Identity" by Unison Square Garden, released in autumn 2010, and the outset ending is "Ao no Kaori" ( 碧の香り ) by Yui Makino, released on Nov 10, 2010. The second opening is "Ai ga Hoshii yo" ( 愛がほしいよ ) by Shion Tsuji, released on March 9, 2011, and "Northern Lights" by How Merry Ally.[39]

The start character song maxi single sung by Chiaki Omigawa (Maka) and Kōki Uchiyama (Soul) was released on August 6, 2008 by Aniplex. The 2nd single by Yumiko Kobayashi (Black Star) and Kaori Nazuka (Tsubaki) was released on September iii, 2008, and the third single by Mamoru Miyano (Kid), Akeno Watanabe (Liz), and Narumi Takahira (Patty) was released on October 1, 2008. Composed and produced by Taku Iwasaki, two CD soundtracks have been released for the Soul Eater anime series. Soul Eater Original Soundtrack 1 was released on Baronial 27, 2008 with 20 tracks, and Soul Eater Original Soundtrack 2 was released on March 18, 2009 with 22 tracks by Aniplex. The theme vocal for Soul Eater: Monotone Princess is "Soul's Crossing" sung by T.M.Revolution, and is included on the "Resonance" single.[50]

Reception [edit]

Manga [edit]

Soul Eater was the 7th acknowledged manga in 2008, with three,076,351 copies sold.[51] As of Oct 2012, the manga had over xiii one thousand thousand copies in circulation.[52] As of April 2018, the manga had sold xviii.2 1000000 copies worldwide.[53] Equally of July 2019, the manga had 19.6 million copies in circulation.[xviii]

In her review of the first volume, Danielle Leigh of Comic Volume Resources wrote that it is "stylish and fun", favorably comparing Ohkubo's art to Tim Burton's The Nightmare Earlier Christmas and The Corpse Bride, which considered paired quite well with references to Anglo-American spooks and horror legends as Jack the Ripper and Frankenstein. Leigh, however, criticized the series for its excessive use of fanservice, and considered that information technology clashes terribly with the series "design oriented, with very little depth" art way.[54] Penny Kenny of Manga Life, gave the first volume a "B+". Kenny praised the series for its action scenes and diverseness of art styles, commenting that its panels "could accept come out of Blade of the Immortal, while others are very Yu-Gi-Oh like", and that others "share the same sensibilities every bit Tim Burton's The Nightmare Before Christmas", adding that Ohkubo uses a "dainty mix of standard action, comic, horror, and plain-featured design styles that blend together surprisingly well".[55] Julian Gnam of Otaku United states of america praised the weapon meister/demon weapon partnerships presented in the story, but criticized the series' fanservice and overall found its plot "conventional", adding that it could come off cliche to the "more jaded manga veteran", stating although, that this makes the serial attainable to casual readers.[56] Reviewing the second book, Chris Zimmerman of Comic Book Bin gave it a vii.5 out of 10. Zimmerman commended the series for its action sequences and wrote that the character designs are "thoughtful and artistic", merely criticized it for its lack of character development, prioritizing single chapter fights, and making it similar to other shōnen series.[57] Reviewing the first two volumes, Shaenon Garrity of Most.com gave the serial 2 out of 5 stars. She praised the manga's setting, describing it as a "hyperkinetic Halloween world that'south equal parts Shaman Rex, JoJo's Bizarre Run a risk, and The Nightmare Before Christmas", only stated that "snazzy visuals can't compensate for the banal characters and meandering story". Garrity concluded that the series' popularity comes from its anime adaptation, adding that it is "fun to wait at, bright and vibrant and visually imaginative", and in contrast, the original manga is "a lot less fun to sit downward and read".[58]

Reviewing the offset volume of Soul Eater: The Perfect Edition, Nicholas Dupree of Anime News Network gave information technology a B+. Dupree wrote that the series holds an inherent amuse to its earth and characters that is hard to find anywhere else, adding that the fundamental is its "spooky, Spirit Halloween-esque pattern sensibilities". He pointed out, notwithstanding, that the comedy did non historic period well, stating that the master characters' gimmicks get repetitive and unfunny, and he felt that its use of sexual humor and fanservice is "questionable at all-time", and would not blame uninitiated readers if they drop the serial for information technology "existence too much". Dupree concluded: "for whatsoever warts it bears 15 years after, in that location'due south nevertheless aught quite like Soul Eater out in that location".[59]

Anime [edit]

In her 2008 Anime Preview Guide, Casey Brienza of Anime News Network wrote; "Though Soul Eater should not exist surprising anyone with its standard tournament plot structure, it has some serious manner to burn. Like D.Grayness-man it is deeply indebted to Tim Burton's idiosyncratic gothic-fantasy imagery (recall Beetlejuice and Nightmare Before Christmas), but this series does, if possible, execute it better".[lx] Jacob Hope Chapman of the same website describes the series equally "dark but lively, visually imaginative, explosive neat fun".[61] James Brusuelas of Animation World Network wrote positively about the series, stating; "this anime knows exactly what information technology is: fun! The result: a series that takes the guilt out of your guilty pleasure".[62] Holly Ellingwood of activeAnime praised the anime serial, and wrote that "Information technology is different, exciting and unexpected at various turns. A large part of its uniqueness and thrills have to do with the original blitheness style. It is zany while at times existence creepy at whim. It is stylin' from commencement to finish!".[63] Sandra Scholes of the same website, wrote that its story is "full of comedy, fun and nighttime humour in a Gothic vein", also comparing the serial to D.Grayness-man and Bleach, and its fine art style to Gorillaz'due south videos. Scholes concluded; "If these type of night fantasy anime grips you then y'all've seen zip even so – it's the i that holds the audience right till the stop!".[five] Chris Zimmerman of ComicBookBin gave the series "A-" rating. Zimmerman wrote that Soul Eater follows the shōnen conventions of many other series, merely it stands out due to its "unrelenting humor and otherworldly feel", in addition to studio Basic "knack for cinematic blueprint and eye pleasing animation".[64] In his A+ review of Soul Eater: the Meister Collection Blu-ray, Zimmerman wrote that the series "embraces its shonen origins with flashy fights and themes of friendship while relying on lush animation and a colorful cast of characters that range from ultra serious to nonsensical".[65]

Jason Green of Anime News Network, wrote that the series "explores the imposing concept of death gods in a tone that's less Death Note and more Gurren Lagann". Green pointed out the Western references presented in the series, with characters named later on Jack the Ripper, The Blair Witch Project, Al Capone, Syd Barrett and Frankenstein.[66] Paul Champan of Otaku United states of america noted besides the series' Western influence, as it is seen in the presentation of the witches and monsters, its nods to American horror films and its different architectures and locations. Regarding the anime series finale, Chapman wrote; "The conclusion and the denouement of the Soul Eater anime are adequate. The catastrophe may not be mind-blowingly original, only it gives me everything that I require to be satisfied and it leaves me with the warm feeling of seeing the characters that I intendance about achieve a worthy goal". Champan concluded that "Soul Eater is a solid addition to the collection of any anime fan who likes heroic activeness with a taste of the sinister and the macabre mixed in".[1] Serdar Yegulalp of Well-nigh.com, said that the series last episodes "unleash some gloriously absurd broad-scale action that tap into giant-robot stories like Gurren Lagann or Evangelion".[67]

Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Charles Solomon ranked the series the sixth best anime on his "Top 10".[3] Serdar Yegulalp listed Soul Eater on his "Form of Anime For Newcomers".[68] Writing for Crunchyroll, Kara Dennison included Soul Eater on a list of "V Creepy Anime for Your Halloween Party Playlist".[69] Stephanie Donaldson and Jacki Jing of Anime News Network, listed the series on their list of "v Anime That Need a Reboot, Now!".[lxx]

Soul Eater was one of the Jury Recommended Works at the 12th Japan Media Arts Festival in 2008.[71]

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Manga official website Archived April 28, 2008, at the Wayback Car (in Japanese)
  • Anime official website (in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater Archived November 3, 2015, at the Wayback Car at Television receiver Tokyo (in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Monotone Princess video game official website (in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Plot of Medusa video game official website (in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater: Battle Resonance video game official website (in Japanese)
  • Soul Eater at Funimation
  • Soul Eater (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soul_Eater_%28manga%29

Posted by: peoplessyrument82.blogspot.com

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