Shadow Star

Shadow Star, known in Japan as Narutaru (Japanese: なるたる), is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Mohiro Kitoh, originally serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Afternoon. The Japanese name is an abbreviation of Mukuro Naru Hoshi, Tama Taru Ko (骸なる星 珠たる子), which roughly translates to Corpse of a Star; A Precious Child. In North America, it was licensed by Dark Horse Comics and serialized in Super Manga Blast!.

Shadow Star
Volume 1 English cover
なるたる
(Narutaru)
GenreDark fantasy,[1] horror, mystery[2]
Manga
Written byMohiro Kitoh
Published byKodansha
English publisher
MagazineAfternoon
English magazine
DemographicSeinen
Original runMarch 25, 1998October 25, 2003
Volumes12
Anime television series
Directed byToshiaki Iino
Written byChiaki J. Konaka
Music bySusumu Ueda
StudioPlanet
Licensed by
Original networkKids Station, TBS
Original run July 7, 2003 September 29, 2003
Episodes13

A 13-episode anime adaptation by Planet was broadcast in 2003 on the Japanese television station Kids Station. The anime was licensed by Central Park Media and released as Shadow Star Narutaru, and has played on Comcast's Anime Selects multiple times. In 2007 it ran on the Illusion on Demand television network. Central Park Media released the title under their "U.S. Manga Corps" line, on 4 DVDs, and later re-released the DVDs in a box set. Central Park Media filed for bankruptcy in 2009, and the DVDs have since been out of print.[3]

Plot

The protagonist of the series is a twelve-year-old girl named Shiina Tamai. She bonds with a starfish-shaped "dragonchild" (baby "shadow dragon") whom she calls Hoshimaru. The series is mainly about the interaction between Shiina and other young people who have also bonded with dragons.

The manga, especially the original Japanese version, is known for the gruesome material that appears as the plot progresses. Despite the young main characters, cute monster designs, and the initial appearance of a Pokémon-esque series, the story quickly takes on a much darker and more disturbing tone, with later volumes involving some graphic depictions of gore and sexual violence. The English- and German-language versions of the manga have some edited scenes; entire pages of content were removed from the seventh volume of the English-language release.

Media

Manga

There are twelve volumes total in the Japanese release, and seven in the English-language one. As a result of Dark Horse's rearrangement of the series' chapters, those seven volumes actually cover volumes 1 to 6 of the original Japanese release. Further chapters were serialized in Super Manga Blast!, and starting with the magazine's 54th issue, the series was translated in its original right-to-left reading format; this lasted until Super Manga Blast! was cancelled five issues later. These chapters have not been collected into volumes yet, nor has Dark Horse announced any plans to further translate Shadow Star.

Anime

The anime adaptation consisted of 13 episodes, each running for 24 minutes, and adapted the storyline of the first 6 volumes (7 volumes of the American release) of the manga.

Reception

Tasha Robinson of the Sci Fi Channel described the anime series as "transformed" from "fascinatingly quirky" to "slow but expressive."[4]

References

  1. King, Patrick. "Shadow Star Vol.3: Shadows of the Past". animefringe. Archived from the original on June 29, 2003. Retrieved December 8, 2019.
  2. Santos, Carlo (September 20, 2005). "Shadow Star Narutaru DVD 2 - Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  3. www.comicsbeat.com https://www.comicsbeat.com/central-park-media-files-chapter-7/. Retrieved 2019-11-30. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. Robinson, Tasha. "Shadow Star Narutaru." Sci Fi Channel. May 21, 2008. Retrieved on December 26, 2010.
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