Goemon Ishikawa XIII

Goemon Ishikawa XIII
Lupin III character

Goemon drawn by Monkey Punch
First appearance Lupin III chapter 28: "Appearance of Goemon"
Created by Monkey Punch
Voiced by Gorō Naya/Osamu Kobayashi (1969)
Chikao Ōtsuka (1971-2)
Makio Inoue (1977-85, 1989-2010, 2012)
Kaneto Shiozawa (1987)
Daisuke Namikawa (2011-present)
English:
William Ross (1979, Toho/Frontier)
Steve Kramer (1992-3, Streamline)
Mark Franklin (1995, AnimEigo)
Ardwight Chamberlain (1995, Streamline)
Garrick Hagon (1996, Manga UK)
Michael Gregory (2000, Animaze/Manga)
Mike McFarland (2002-5, 2013, FUNimation)
Lex Lang (2003-6, Phuuz/Pioneer/Geneon)
Portrayed by Go Ayano (2014)
Profile
Aliases Samurai (Toho/Frontier dub of The Mystery of Mamo, TMS subtitled print of The Castle of Cagliostro, Cliff Hanger)
Relatives Goemon Ishikawa (ancestor)
Nationality Japanese

Goemon Ishikawa XIII (Japanese: 十三代目 石川 五ェ門 Hepburn: Jūsan-daime Ishikawa Goemon) is a fictional character created by Monkey Punch for his manga series Lupin III, which debuted in Weekly Manga Action on August 10, 1967. Goemon is a thirteenth generation descendant of the renegade samurai Ishikawa Goemon. He is famous for a reticent personality coupled by apparent unlimited skill in martial arts and swordsmanship with his sword Ryusei (流星 Ryūsei), known in the anime as Zantetsuken (斬鉄剣). A partner with Arsène Lupin III and Daisuke Jigen, he tends to join their exploits only on a when-interested basis.

Description

In the original manga, Goemon first appears as a very dangerous enemy of Lupin in chapter 28. Lupin attempts to steal Goemon's master's alchemic formula through infiltration of Goemon's clan, but his cover is blown by Fujiko Mine, who is Goemon's girlfriend at the time. Goemon tries to kill Lupin over the next several installments, making attempts ranging from hiring assassins as skilled as Daisuke Jigen himself, to entering the service of three martial arts masters, to planting bombs in Lupin's belongings. However, he later decides that he could learn more working for Lupin than against him, and rather abruptly switches his allegiance. His position at Lupin's side is cemented when Lupin ruins the government's case against the man who killed Goemon's uncle, allowing Goemon to take his revenge as brutally and publicly as he wants without having to break into prison to do so.

By the events of the second manga series, Lupin trusts Goemon implicitly, and Goemon reciprocates. When a rival of Lupin's captures and hideously tortures Goemon, Goemon refuses to even respond to his interrogation, except to say that Lupin would find him and allow him to take revenge. Lupin then captures and seduces his rival's wife, and uses the information gleaned thereof to release Goemon, who slays his captor with Jigen's help.

In the original anime Goemon's relationship to Lupin starts off more professional than close friendship. By the second anime series, Goemon has developed a true loyalty to Lupin. However, he easily gets annoyed by Lupin's antics, especially Lupin's infatuation with women, Fujiko Mine in particular. He will occasionally oppose Lupin directly when Lupin's jobs or actions do not agree with his morals. He has even promised that the last act he will take with Lupin is delivering his deathblow. However, Goemon doesn't hesitate to help Lupin in serious situations, and readily assists him any time Lupin works for a just cause. However, in 1978's The Mystery of Mamo (originally titled simply Lupin III), he claims that he helps Lupin simply so he can keep his vow to kill him himself.

Goemon as seen in a TV special

Goemon has a much more amicable relationship with Jigen. Goemon sees Jigen as a fellow honorable warrior, while Jigen sees Goemon as a trustworthy "foxhole buddy", and the two are frequently paired together during jobs, and usually help keep Lupin in check. On the odd occasion and increasingly in recent years, Goemon will ally himself with Fujiko, in spite of his distrust of her.

Creation

Goemon is unique to the series as he was the only character not there from the beginning. Monkey Punch, in an interview featured on the American Dead or Alive DVD release, mentioned he added Goemon later as he felt the manga needed a more Japanese character. As such, Goemon was primarily based on the character Kyūzō, the master swordsman of Akira Kurosawa's 1954 film Seven Samurai. From the role came Goemon's strict demeanor and fast draw blade, as well as the long-faced appearance of actor Seiji Miyaguchi.

Reception

In 2007, Oricon magazine polled readers on which characters they would most like to see in their own series.[1] Goemon appeared in the number eight position on the female readers polls, and seventh place in the combined poll.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.