Hiro Takachiho

Hiro Takachiho is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. His first appearance was in Sunfire & Big Hero 6 #1 and was created by Steven T. Seagle and Duncan Rouleau.

Hiro Takachiho
Hiro Takachiho by David Nakayama
Publication information
PublisherMarvel Comics
First appearanceSunfire & Big Hero 6 #1 (Sept. 1998)
Created bySteven T. Seagle & Duncan Rouleau
In-story information
Alter egoHiro Takachiho
SpeciesHuman
Team affiliationsBig Hero 6
AbilitiesAdvanced intelligence

The character is known as Hiro Hamada voiced by Ryan Potter in the Big Hero 6 film and television series and related media. He is a young robotics prodigy who helps form the superhero group Big Hero 6 to protect the city. The character is also changed to half Japanese and half Caucasian. Hamada also wears a suit for protection when he is flying on Baymax.

Publication history

Created by Steven T. Seagle and Duncan Rouleau in their spare time while working on another project, Hiro was first intended to appear with the rest of Big Hero 6 in Alpha Flight #17 (December 1998). However, the team first appeared in their own self-titled three-issue miniseries by writer Scott Lobdell and artist Gus Vasquez, which due to scheduling issues, was published before Alpha Flight #17.[1][2] The character appeared with the team in a subsequent five-issue miniseries which was launched by Marvel Comics in September 2008.

Fictional character biography

Born to wealthy industrialist Tomeo Takachiho and Maemi Takachiho, Hiro was raised in the affluent Tokyo suburb of Yoga, City of Setagaya. His parents noticed his intellectual brilliance at an early age, and he was placed in pre-school at age 2. He was eventually recognized as one of the world's most brilliant child prodigies and was accepted into the prestigious private Tesuka Advanced Science Institute. It was at the Tesuka Institute that young Hiro's proficiency for invention and innovation was discovered. He created his first and greatest invention to date, the robotic synthformer known as Monster Baymax, as a project for the institute's science fair.[3]

At age 13, Hiro was targeted by the Giri, a top-secret consortium of Japanese politicians and business entities that was established to recruit and train potential operatives for a Japanese super-team, Big Hero 6. Silver Samurai (Kenuichio Harada), Big Hero 6's initial field leader, first approached Hiro's mother for permission to have him join the team, but she refused as she wanted her child to live a normal life. Silver Samurai then approached Hiro directly, but the boy was less than impressed with Big Hero 6. However, after his mother was abducted by the Everwraith, the astral embodiment of all those killed in the 1945 nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Hiro was forced to turn to Big Hero 6 for assistance. After joining forces with the team, which also included his idol, the Japanese hero Sunfire, Hiro opted to join the team.[4] In fact, when Silver Samurai and Sunfire left the Big Hero 6, Hiro was appointed to serve as the team's field leader.[5] He continues to maintain a civilian life and attend classes at the Tesuka Institute, although his teachers and classmates are unaware that he moonlights as a secret agent.[3]

Hiro idolizes Sunfire and has a crush on Honey Lemon.[4]

Powers and abilities

Hiro is a brilliant child prodigy, proficient in many fields of science and technology, with a focus on biology, physics, and robotics. Although he is only an adolescent, he is a visionary theoretician and accomplished machinesmith who has already made several breakthroughs in fields such as robotics, computer science, synthetic polymers, geology, biology, and communications. He is also a gifted tactician and strategist.

Hiro has constructed several robots, his first and most advanced creation being Monster Baymax, a water-powered synthformer whose artificial intelligence is based on the thoughts and memories of his departed father. Other notable inventions include: the Bio-Atomic Parcel Detector (B-APD), a device capable of pinpointing the location of human-sized nuclear reactors; a jet-pack-propelled flight suit that grants its user limited firepower capabilities; a holographic virtual reality projector that can produce a comprehensive recreation of previous events by amassing information from various data streams; and eyeglasses with a cybernetic video display that can connect to an assortment of computer networks. Many of Hiro's inventions (including Monster Baymax) are connected to his Core Cyber Network (CCN), a mobile personal area computer network used for communication among his various mechanical devices.

In other media

Film

Hiro Hamada
Big Hero 6 character
Walt Disney Animation Studios re-imagining of Hiro
First appearanceBig Hero 6 (2014)
Voiced byRyan Potter
Age14
In-universe information
NicknameCaptain Cutie (by Karmi)[6]
Big Hero Guy (by Rishi Patel)[7]
GenderMale
FamilyTadashi Hamada (older brother; deceased)
RelativesCass Hamada (aunt)

In the film adaptation, Hiro, with his last name changed to Hamada[8] and his ethnicity changed to being half White, half East Asian,[9] appears in the 2014 Disney animated feature Big Hero 6, voiced by Ryan Potter.[10] Speaking of the character, co-director Don Hall said "Hiro is transitioning from boy to man, it's a tough time for a kid and some teenagers develop that inevitable snarkiness and jaded attitude. Luckily Ryan is a very likeable kid. So no matter what he did, he was able to take edge off the character in a way that made him authentic, but appealing."[11][12][13]

Hiro is a 14-year-old robotics prodigy whose battle robot dominates the underground bot fights of San Fransokyo. His older brother Tadashi, a student at the San Fransokyo Institute of Technology, inspires him to redirect his efforts toward gaining acceptance to its research program. After Tadashi is killed in a fire and explosion on the campus, Hiro becomes withdrawn and depressed. He later forms the Big Hero 6 team with Tadashi's fellow researchers and Baymax, an inflatable healthcare robot built by Tadashi, to stop Yokai, the villain who killed Tadashi by causing the fire.

Hiro initially lacks a social life and appears to suffer from intellectual boredom. After Tadashi's urging and meeting with his friends, he becomes more open and accepting to those around him and tries to be friendly. He also decides to be a hero out of necessity as opposed to being unwillingly forced into the occupation. He also wears bluish–purple armor that, by itself, serves absolutely no function besides protection. However, when paired with Baymax, the suit magnetizes to his back and allows Hiro to control him while flying.

Television

Hiro appears in Big Hero 6: The Series with Potter reprising the role.[14] The first episode, "Baymax Returns" takes place during the last part of the movie where Hiro rebuilds Baymax. He suddenly gets embroiled in a plot involving his new professor's paperweight and his previous arch enemy, Yama. He is later given Tadashi's old lab room so that he can have a familiar environment to focus in.[15]

In the episode "Issue 188", it is revealed that despite having a see through visor that reveals his face, some people still cannot tell that he is part of Big Hero 6, specifically Karmi, a fellow student who despises Hiro, but has a crush on his alter ego. Fred informs Hiro that the reason for this is simply that she "chooses" to see his alter ego as a hero and himself as an academic rival.[16] Additionally, Aunt Cass is also unaware of his heroic endeavors and at one point thought that Hiro had returned to bot fighting when she saw through his lie of where he was.[17]

In the episode "Muirahara Woods", Hiro is shown to be slightly agoraphobic admitting to Fred that he has never been outside of San Fransokyo. Furthermore, he is uncomfortable around nature and is afraid of bugs and insects.[18] Out of all of his teammates, he has the least in common with Wasabi whom he had difficulty with due to his cleanliness. By the end of "Killer App", the two become closer.[19]

Hiro is also shown to have updated his costume. His gloves now have the ability to magnetize and propel objects making him much more useful in a fight.[17] In the episode "Kentucky Kaiju", he briefly invented a suit that granted him super strength called Nano-Dex, but he got rid of it when it became a hassle to use. In the same episode, Hiro is shown to possibly suffer from a variation of little man's syndrome as he hates constantly having to be saved by his older and more capable teammates.[20]

In season two, it is revealed that Hiro somewhat envies other kids who grew up with normal childhoods. He befriends a girl named Megan Cruz who begins to treat him to common teenage outings; opening his eyes to new experiences.[21] At the end of the season, he accepts Tadashi's diploma on his behalf.[22]

In season three, he becomes closer with Karmi, with the implication that they both like one another.[23] He also inadvertently gets assigned to be a mentor to a student named Rishi Patel who is younger than he was when he started attending SFIT.[7]

Video games

Hiro appears in Disney Infinity: Marvel Super Heroes and Disney Infinity 3.0, based on his 2014 film appearance.

Hiro appeared in Kingdom Hearts III with the rest of Big Hero 6.[24]

References

  1. "LaughingPlace.com » Movie Week: A Look Ahead To Big Hero 6". Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  2. Big Hero 6 banks on a huggable robot to draw in audiences
  3. Big Hero 6 #1 (2008)
  4. Sunfire and Big Hero 6 #1-3 (1998)
  5. Alpha Flight Vol. 3 #9 (2005)
  6. Juwono, Ben (director); Jenny Jaffe (writer) (August 18, 2018). "Fan Friction". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 15. Disney XD.
  7. Castuciano, Johnny and Stephen Heneveld (director); Ricky Roxburgh (writer) (February 1, 2021). "The MiSFIT". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 3. Episode 8A. Disney XD.
  8. "Disney Gives Marvel Fans First Look at Big Hero 6 Animated Film". IGN. 9 August 2013. Retrieved 9 August 2013.
  9. Momo (November 4, 2014). "RYAN POTTER – BIG HERO 6'S "HIRO"". Center for Asian American Media. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  10. Hall, Don; Williams, Chris (2014-11-07), Big Hero 6, retrieved 2016-07-15
  11. Truitt, Brian (July 13, 2014). "Meet the saviors of San Fransokyo in 'Big Hero 6'". USA Today. Retrieved July 13, 2014.
  12. Yamato, Jen (July 14, 2014). "Maya Rudolph, James Cromwell, More Join Disney's Marvel Animation 'Big Hero 6′". Deadline. Retrieved September 5, 2014.
  13. "Hiro" (PDF). xprizechallenge.org. Retrieved September 24, 2014.
  14. "'Big Hero 6': Maya Rudolph & More Reprise Roles for Disney XD Animated Series". Deadline. November 3, 2016. Retrieved November 3, 2016.
  15. Heneveld, Stephen and Ben Juwono (director); Sharon Flynn and Paiman Kalayen (writer) (November 20, 2017). "Baymax Returns". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 1. Disney XD.
  16. Juwono, Ben (director); Bill Motz & Bob Roth (writer) (June 9, 2018). "Issue 188". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 2. Disney XD.
  17. Good, Kathleen (director); Noelle Stevenson (writer) (June 10, 2018). "Food Fight". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 5. Disney XD.
  18. Heneveld, Stephen (director); Sharon Flynn (writer) (June 16, 2018). "Muirahara Woods". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 6. Disney XD.
  19. Juwono, Ben (director); Daniel Dominguez (writer) (July 21, 2018). "Killer App". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 11. Disney XD.
  20. Juwono, Ben (director); Sharon Flynn (writer) (August 4, 2018). "Kentucky Kaiju". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 1. Episode 13. Disney XD.
  21. Heneveld, Stephen (director); Sharon Flynn (writer) (May 9, 2019). "Something's Fishy". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 2. Episode 4. Disney Channel.
  22. Heneveld, Stephen and Kenji Ono (director); Han-Yee Ling, Jenny Jaffe, Jeff Poliquin (writer) (February 8, 2020). "Legacies". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 2. Episode 24. Disney XD.
  23. Ono, Kenji (director); Han-Yee Ling (writer) (October 12, 2020). "Big Chibi 6". Big Hero 6: The Series. Season 3. Episode 4B. Disney XD.
  24. "Kingdom Hearts III to Include Big Hero 6". Disney Interactive. August 16, 2015.
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