God Mazinger (ゴッドマジンガー, Goddo Majingā), also known as Mazin Legend (魔神伝説, Majin Densetsu), is an anime, manga and novel series created by manga artistGo Nagai. The anime aired on Japanese TV from April 15, 1984 (1984-04-15) to September 30, 1984 (1984-09-30) in the network Nippon Television with 23 episodes.[3][4] It is given the international title Space Adventure: The Deity on the official TMS website.[5] The manga was originally published in tankōbon format by Shogakukan in 4 volumes in 1984.[6] The novelization was published in 1984 and lasted 10 volumes.[7] The three of them share the same basic premise but have a different story.
Plot
A Japanese teen named Yamato Hino, a young sports enthusiast, during a quiet and ordinary day begins to feel strange calls from an indefinite dimension. Frightened and confused, the boy thinks that he had hallucinations but during a thunderstorm a lightning bolt drags him into a parallel world: the ancient kingdom of Mu, ruled by King Muraji whose concern is to defend the capital of his kingdom, attacked by monsters commanded by the evil Dorado of the Empire of Dinosaurs.
In the kingdom of Mu, a legend tells of a titanic being that stands ready to defend the population from any threat and the king wants to awaken the giant statue of the god Mazinger; to do this he needs a brave boy whose name is Yamato, the only one capable of awakening the mighty giant. The devout prayers of the king and the princess are heard: the boy arrives to the dimension of Mu and the statue suddenly becomes alive. A luminous beam covers the boy that is absorbed into the body of the statue, which begins to move. When the monsters of Dorado broke through the defenses of the kingdom, God Mazinger defeats the dinosaurs and makes the enemy army flee. And thus the legend becomes a reality.
Yamato joins the court of newly crowned Queen Aira Mu, becoming the champion of the Kingdom of Mu, always ready to repel the attacks of the evil Dorado and his fearsome dinosaurs.
Anime
Episodes
#
Title
Original airdate
01
"Revival Of The Legendary Giant" Transliteration: "yomigaerishi densetsu no kyojin" (Japanese: 蘇りし伝説の巨神)
April 15, 1984 (1984-04-15)
02
"The Chosen One" Transliteration: "erabareshi mono no sadame" (Japanese: 選ばれし者の定め)
April 22, 1984 (1984-04-22)
03
"The Mystery Of The Light-Bearer" Transliteration: "hikari yadorishi mono no nazo" (Japanese: 光宿りしものの謎)
April 29, 1984 (1984-04-29)
04
"The Secrets Of Mazinger" Transliteration: "mazinger no himitsu" (Japanese: マジンガーの秘密)
May 6, 1984 (1984-05-06)
05
"Raid On Prince Eldo" Transliteration: "eldo ooji no kishuu" (Japanese: エルド王子の奇襲)
May 13, 1984 (1984-05-13)
06
"Save Aira!" Transliteration: "aira o sukue!" (Japanese: アイラを救え!)
The scheduled broadcast of August 19, 1984 was cut for the 1984 Summer Olympics. Of the originally planned 24 episodes, one episode was cut and the 24th episode "Mazinger Disappears in the Sea" (海に消えたマジンガー, umi ni kieru Majingā) was not aired.[3]
Manga
The manga, although it shares some similarities and the same premise, differs from the anime with a more mature tone and also has a different conclusion. It was originally published in tankōbon format by Shogakukan in 1984. It was later re-printed by Kadokawa Shoten in 1986, Chuokoron-sha in 1995 and Daitosha in 1998.[7][9] It was published by Shogakukan and Kadokawa Shoten under the title Mazin Legend and by Chuokoron-sha and Daitosha under the title God Mazinger.
The novelization also expands the basic story and has several differences with both the anime and the manga. It was written by Yasutaka Nagai (volumes 1, 4, 7, 10), Tatsuhiko Dan (volumes 2, 5, 8) and Hideki Sonoda (volumes 3, 6, 9), with illustrations by Go Nagai.[7][20] It was published by Kadokawa Shoten under the label Kadokawa Bunko.
Date
Vol.
Subtitle
ISBN
1984-04
01
蘇る魔神
4041577012
1984-05
02
ヤマト追放
4041577020
1984-06
03
妖魔都市ダイカン
4041577039
1984-07
04
ムー彷徨人
4041577047
1984-07
05
陰謀の王
4041577055
1984-07
06
秘められた神櫃の謎
4041577063
1984-08
07
謎の花姫
4041577071
1984-09
08
魔境の四聖獣
404157708X
1984-11
09
破滅の迷宮
4041577098
1984-12
10
不死鳥大陸
4041577101
Media
Home video
In Japan, the anime series was released in home video format in the 1980s by the company VAP and it was also released in VHS by Maxam in 2000.[21] The series has also been released in DVD format two times. The first time in June 25, 2003 (2003-06-25) by Pioneer LDC (standard number PIBA-3157) as a DVD-box set with the full series.[22][23] The second time, also as a DVD-Box, in March 21, 2007 (2007-03-21) by Columbia Music Entertainment (standard number XT-2387/90).[24][25] US publisher Discotek Media will release the series with English subtitles on SD Blu-ray on January 28, 2020 (2020-01-28).[26]
Two vinyl records were released in Japan by VAP during the 1980s. The first was a single released in April 1984 (1984-04) containing the opening and ending themes [30] The second was an LP album with the full soundtrack, released in September 1, 1984 (1984-09-01).[31]
Besides the manga and the novel, some picture books targeted to children were also released in the 1980s. One was published by Hikari no Kuni,[33] another by Shogakukan[34] and the last one by Asahi Sonorama.[35]
In the Mazinger Angels manga, there is a saga dedicated to God Mazinger, where Princess Aira appears controlling a female version of God Mazinger and with the help of Jun Hono defeats the enemies of the kingdom, after Jun and the professor accidentally end up in the Kingdom of Mu. It is later with the help of Aira that Venus A becomes Queen of Gold.
Merchandise
A few toys and action figures based in God Mazinger were released by manufacturer Mark.[36]
Relationship to the Mazinger series
The series is considered as part of the Mazinger saga, if not only for the name of the title and that of his creator. In fact, a Japanese book called Mazinger Bible, released in 2002 for the 30th anniversary of the first Mazinger series, includes the God Mazinger, along with other Go Nagai's manga books that have not been made into anime, such as the adult-oriented MazinSaga, Z Mazinger, and First Comics' Mazinger comic book released exclusively for the U.S. market in 1988.
Also, the concept of God Mazinger was a candidate to be the sequel of the original Mazinger Z series but, in the end, the sequel was decided to be the concept of Great Mazinger, and later UFO Robot Grendizer.[21]