
, better known by the pen name , is a Japanese
manga artist
A is a comic artist who writes and/or illustrates manga. As of 2006, about 3,000 professional manga artists were working in Japan.
Most manga artists study at an art college or manga school or take on an apprenticeship with another artist be ...
and a prolific author of
science fiction, fantasy,
horror
Horror may refer to:
Arts, entertainment, and media
Genres
*Horror fiction, a genre of fiction
** Japanese horror, Japanese horror fiction
**Korean horror, Korean horror fiction
* Horror film, a film genre
*Horror comics, comic books focusing o ...
and erotica.
He made his professional debut in 1967 with ''Meakashi Polikichi'', but is best known for creating popular 1970s
manga
Manga (Japanese: 漫画 ) are comics or graphic novels originating from Japan. Most manga conform to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century, and the form has a long prehistory in earlier Japanese art. The term ''manga'' is u ...
and
anime series such as ''
Cutie Honey'', ''
Devilman'' and ''
Mazinger Z''. He is credited with creating the
super robot genre and for designing the first
mecha robots piloted by a user from within a cockpit with ''Mazinger Z'',
[Mark Gilson, "A Brief History of Japanese Robophilia", ''Leonardo'' 31 (5), pp. 367–369 68] and for pioneering the
magical girl
is a subgenre of Japanese fantasy media (including anime, manga, light novels, and live-action media) centered around young girls who possess magical abilities, which they typically use through an ideal alter ego into which they can transfo ...
genre with ''Cutie Honey'', the
post-apocalyptic manga/anime genre with ''
Violence Jack'',
and the
ecchi genre with ''
Harenchi Gakuen''. In 2005, he became a Character Design professor at the
Osaka University of Arts. He has been a member of the
Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize
Named after Osamu Tezuka, the is a yearly manga prize awarded to manga artists or their works that follow the Osamu Tezuka manga approach founded and sponsored by Asahi Shimbun. The prize has been awarded since 1997, in Tokyo, Japan.
Current ...
's nominating committee since 2009.
Life
Early life
Go Nagai was born on September 6, 1945
—in the
Ishikawa Prefecture
is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region of Honshu island. Ishikawa Prefecture has a population of 1,140,573 (31 October 2019) and has a geographic area of 4,186 km2 (1,616 sq mi). Ishikawa Prefecture borders Toyama Prefecture to ...
city of
Wajima.
He is the son of Yoshio and Fujiko Nagai (永井芳雄・冨士子),
and the fourth of five brothers.
His family had just returned from
Shanghai. While he was still in his early childhood, he along with his mother and his four brothers moved to
Tokyo after the death of his father.
As a child, he was influenced by the work of
Gustave Doré (specifically, a Japanese edition of the ''
Divine Comedy'') and
Osamu Tezuka
Osamu Tezuka (, born , ''Tezuka Osamu''; – 9 February 1989) was a Japanese manga artist, cartoonist, and animator. Born in Osaka Prefecture, his prolific output, pioneering techniques, and innovative redefinitions of genres earned him such ...
(Nagai's brother
Yasutaka gave him a copy of ''
Lost World'').
He graduated from the Metropolitan
Itabashi
is a special ward located in Tokyo Metropolis, Japan. In English, it calls itself Itabashi City. Itabashi has sister-city relations with Burlington, Ontario, in Canada; Shijingshan District of Beijing in the People's Republic of China; and ...
High School of Tokyo.
While passing his
ronin year in a prep school in order to earn placement at
Waseda University, he suffered a severe case of
diarrhea for three weeks. Aware of his own mortality, he wanted to leave some evidence that he had lived, by doing something that he liked as a child: working on manga. He was determined to create one work of manga in what he thought were his last months.
As Nagai prepared for the task, he went to the hospital, where he was diagnosed with
catarrh of the colon, and soon healed. But this was the turning point in his life.
Convinced that he would continue working on manga, he stopped attending school after three months and started living as a
ronin.
With the help of his brother Yasutaka, he created his first manga works.
Despite the fact that his mother opposed his manga aspirations, he submitted his works for publication, accumulating many rejections.
It is said that when the young Nagai submitted his tables to publishers, his mother secretly convinced publishers to reject them.
However, his work was noticed by ''
Weekly Shōnen Sunday'', which contacted
Shotaro Ishinomori.
Thanks to some trial manga he created with the help of Yasutaka, Nagai was finally accepted into the studio of Ishinomori in 1965.
The trial manga was about a
science fiction ninja,
and was a prototype for a different story, ''Kuro no Shishi''. Nagai was 19 years old when he made this work; it started at 15 or 16 pages and ended up being 88 pages long after a year, and was untitled at that time.
Ishinomori saw this work and praised Nagai for it, but commented that the design was too chunky and he should improve it a little. Two or three days later, Nagai was invited to become an assistant to Ishinomori and this work was forgotten until 2007, when it was published in the magazine ''Comic Ran Twins Sengoku Busho Retsuden'' (コミック乱 TWINS 戦国武将列伝) by
LEED
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) is a
green building certification program used worldwide. Developed by the non-profit U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC), it includes a set of rating systems for the design, construction ...
under the name ''Satsujinsha'' (殺刃者(さつじんしゃ)).
His professional career began in 1967, despite the opposition of his mother.
First works
After working as assistant of Shotaro Ishinomori, his very first professional manga work was ''Meakashi Polikichi'' (目明しポリ吉 also 目明かしポリ吉),
a very short gag comedy
one-shot
One shot may refer to:
Film and television
* One-shot film, a feature film shot in one long take with no edits, or manufactured to look like so
* ''One Shot'' (2005 film), a Sri Lankan action film directed by Ranjan Ramanayake
* ''One Shot'' (2 ...
, published in November 1967 in the magazine ''Bokura'' by
Kodansha
is a Japanese privately-held publishing company headquartered in Bunkyō, Tokyo. Kodansha is the largest Japanese publishing company, and it produces the manga magazines ''Nakayoshi'', ''Afternoon'', ''Evening'', ''Weekly Shōnen Magazine'' an ...
.
Almost at the same time, this was followed by the manga adaptation of Tomio Sagisu's TV anime ''
Chibikko Kaiju Yadamon
is a Japanese black-and-white anime series created by Ushio Souji, an alias of Tomio Sagisu. ''Yadamon'' is also famous for its manga adaptation, which was the second professional work of Go Nagai
, better known by the pen name , is a J ...
'' (ちびっこ怪獣ヤダモン, "Little Monster Yadamon"), also published in 1967 in the same magazine.
A common misconception is that ''Kuro no Shishi'' ("Black Lion") was his first manga work; while not entirely false, what Nagai really made two years earlier than ''Meakashi Polikichi'', was only a draft for what would later be ''Kuro no Shishi'', which would not be actually published until 1978.
His first works consisted entirely of short gag comedy manga. This would change with ''
Harenchi Gakuen''.
First success and controversies
In less than a year after debuting, he met with a big success. After being an unknown manga artist, he became a protagonist of televised debates and journalistic investigations.
In 1968, while
Shueisha was getting prepared to launch its first manga publication, ''
Shōnen Jump Shōnen Jump or Shonen Jump may refer to:
*''Weekly Shōnen Jump'', a Japanese manga anthology magazine published by Shueisha since 1968
* ''Jump'' (magazine line)
**''Shōnen Jump+'', a digital magazine and mobile application started in 2014
**''Mo ...
'', in order to compete with other magazines from rival companies (like ''
Shōnen Magazine'' from
Kodansha
is a Japanese privately-held publishing company headquartered in Bunkyō, Tokyo. Kodansha is the largest Japanese publishing company, and it produces the manga magazines ''Nakayoshi'', ''Afternoon'', ''Evening'', ''Weekly Shōnen Magazine'' an ...
and ''
Shōnen Sunday'' from
Shogakukan), Nagai was invited to be one of the first manga artists publishing in the new magazine. He contemplated this, since he had to design a long-running series instead of the auto-conclusive short stories that he had been developing until that point.
He accepted and the series became a big success, being the first for Nagai
and making ''Shōnen Jump'' sell more than one million copies.
With ''
Harenchi Gakuen'', Nagai was the first to introduce eroticism in modern manga and became the creator of modern erotic manga,
opened the door to a new era in manga
and also became the symbol of an entire generation.
This work has influenced Japanese society radically, completely changing the common perceptions of manga.
Until ''Harenchi Gakuen'', Japanese manga had been relatively tame affairs, but things soon changed.
The manga became so popular that several live-action films and TV series based on the manga were developed. ''Harenchi Gakuen'' is considered as probably the work that has had the most influence in the world of manga at the end of the 1960s, leading the newly born ''Shōnen Jump'' magazine to sell millions of copies per week.
A scandalous manga in its time, it is a very innocent series by today's standards.
At the time of its original publication, however, it met with severe criticism by some parts of the Japanese society. ''Harenchi Gakuen'' was criticized as vulgar because it introduced overt eroticism to children. Male students and teachers were depicted as being preoccupied with catching glimpses of girls' panties or naked bodies. Many parents, women's associations, and
PTAs protested.
In particular, the PTA protests over ''Harenchi Gakuen'' were notorious. Nagai was bombarded with interview requests from newspapers, magazines and TV. Whenever he flew outside of Tokyo, TV cameras were waiting for him. He was branded a "nuisance" and even an "enemy of society". He, however, had a clear sense of what things he could or could not do with the manga.
At first, Nagai did not think that the opposition was against him, since he was aware of the standards that applied with movies and similar things for an audience below 18 years old. At that time, he never drew sex scenes, avoided pictures of genitals and made nudes cute rather than sexy,
though the manga regularly showed male genitals throughout its run, including a castration scene. His fans supported him throughout the PTA protests. They sent him letters where they expressed how they were aware that the adults cracking down on them were reading raunchier stuff than what Nagai was producing.
The protests were not only against the manga, but also against the TV series. The PTA managed to prevent the distribution of the magazine in some parts of Japan.
As a result of the protests, when the series was about to be cancelled because of the PTA, Nagai changed the theme in ''Harenchi Gakuen'' into a more mature and serious matter, from nonsense gags with sexy touches, to a full-scale war where murder was depicted in the bloody way for which many know him. This led to the famous ending of ''Harenchi Gakuen'', symbol of freedom and of rejection of the hypocrisy, where all students and teachers, while defending their freedom of expression, are killed by the PTA and other parental forces. This was the ironic answer that Nagai gave to the PTA. (In the end, this was not the actual ending of ''Harenchi Gakuen'', as the title would subsequently return to publication for several years.)
It was also around that time that he created ''Gakuen Taikutsu Otoko'' (ガクエン退屈男), also known as ''Guerrilla High'', another school-themed manga, but this time war between youths and adults was the main theme. Shortly before that, in 1969, ''
Abashiri Ikka
is a Japanese manga series created by Go Nagai that originally ran in the magazine ''Weekly Shōnen Champion''. Some of its characters returned with different names as part of other series, such as ''Cutie Honey'', ''UFO Robot Grendizer'' an ...
'' (あばしり一家) was created. Both titles are a direct result of the PTA protests, both being a form of parody of what happened. ''Abashiri Ikka'' became a big success, and along with ''Harenchi Gakuen'', the most popular series of Nagai's juvenile period.
Dynamic Productions
Thanks to the success of ''Harenchi Gakuen'', Dynamic Productions (ダイナミックプロダクション, also known as Dynamic Production or Dynamic Pro, ダイナミックプロ), was founded by Go Nagai with his brothers in April 1969.
Meant to be a group to help him with his works, as a consequence ''Harenchi Gakuen'', where he derived almost no royalties from the TV series, films, or related merchandise, Dynamic Productions became a company established to manage Nagai's relations and contractual rights of his work. Dynamic became one of the first companies to require publishers sign contracts (even today many manga are created and published only on the basis of verbal agreements).
It would start as a
yugen kaisha
Japanese aesthetics comprise a set of ancient ideals that include '' wabi'' (transient and stark beauty), '' sabi'' (the beauty of natural patina and aging), and ''yūgen'' (profound grace and subtlety). These ideals, and others, underpin much of ...
(limited company) and would change to a
kabushiki kaisha (stock company) in 1970.
The same year of the foundation of Dynamic Pro,
Ken Ishikawa joined the company. He would become Nagai's second assistant after Mitsuru Hiruta, who had been working with Nagai since the beginnings of ''Harenchi Gakuen''.
He would become one of Nagai's regular partners and his best friend. Ken Ishikawa participated as assistant in ''Harenchi Gakuen'', ''Abashiri Ikka'' and ''Gakuen Taikutsu Otoko'', particularly in the last one. In parallel with those activities as assistant, he co-produces with Go Nagai what would be in fact his professional debut in manga, ''Gakuen Bangaichi'' (1969-09-08 ~ 1970-09-22), and also his second manga, ''Sasurai Gakuto'' (1970-01 ~ 1970-05). He temporarily quit Dynamic Productions in 1970. This prompted Nagai to end ''Gakuen Taikutsu Otoko'' and the story of this series would be left inconclusive.
Change in genres
Even with the changes in ''Harenchi Gakuen'' and other series, Nagai remained writing mostly gag comedies, varying only in the thematic. With the success of ''Harenchi Gakuen'' and ''Abashiri Ikka'', most editors expected this kind of story from Nagai. This would start to change in 1970, with the one-shot ''Oni -2889 Nen no Hanran-'', which tells a
science fiction story set in the year 2889 about a war between the race of
Onis (who in this story are treated as a lower class) and the human beings. After this, in 1971 came the horror one-shot ''Susumu-chan Dai Shock'' about a violent collapse of the parent-child relationships. A series of horror one-shots would follow, in the series called ''Gensou Kyofu e Hanashi'' (幻想恐怖絵噺), which comprehends ''Africa no Chi'' (an original story of
Yasutaka Tsutsui), ''Schalken Gahaku'' (based in the famous story ''Strange Event in the Life of Schalken the Painter'' by
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu) and ''Kuzureru''. A little before that, Nagai would be given the chance to write a full
serial of an occult horror story called ''
Demon Lord Dante'', which would in turn mark the beginning of his most famous horror work, ''Devilman''. Nagai stated in his autobiographical manga ''Gekiman!'' that his aspirations had always been to write more serious science fiction stories, and after the discontinuation of ''Demon Lord Dante'' saw ''Devilman'' as his chance to break out of the gag manga expectations publishers had of him.
Style and works
In his series ''
Harenchi Gakuen'' (ハレンチ学園, ''Shameless School'', 1968–1972, ''
Weekly Shōnen Jump'' magazine) Nagai used eroticism and extreme, graphic violence in kid's manga for the first time in Japan, thus breaking
taboos and becoming quite controversial.
His use of violence and gross humour was widely loathed in many corners of Japan's society and became a concern for many
PTAs at the time. The series temporary ended dramatically when all the characters died during a massacre. This type of content would be a trend in most of Nagai's later work and in those of other directors such as
Yoshiyuki Tomino. A ''Harenchi Gakuen'' live-action TV series followed in the early 1970s, as well as several other live-action movies and an
OVA version (''Heisei Harenchi Gakuen'', or "Modern-Day Shameless School") in the mid-1990s.
In 1970, Go Nagai started a company,
Dynamic Productions, to fund his
manga
Manga (Japanese: 漫画 ) are comics or graphic novels originating from Japan. Most manga conform to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century, and the form has a long prehistory in earlier Japanese art. The term ''manga'' is u ...
and
anime ventures. Dynamic Productions' first titles were ''
Getter Robo'' and ''
Abashiri Ikka
is a Japanese manga series created by Go Nagai that originally ran in the magazine ''Weekly Shōnen Champion''. Some of its characters returned with different names as part of other series, such as ''Cutie Honey'', ''UFO Robot Grendizer'' an ...
'' (あばしり一家, ''Abashiri Family'').
After ''Harenchi Gakuen'' Nagai created the ''
Mazinger Z'' (マジンガーZ) series, later expanded into ''
Great Mazinger'', ''
Grendizer'', and - many years later - ''
Mazinkaiser'', where he developed the concept of giant
mecha. Mazinger was the first manga where a giant robot was piloted by the hero, thus creating one of the biggest staples of the industry. ''Mazinger'' is considered the first successful "
Super Robot" anime show, and has spawned numerous imitations.
Simultaneously to ''Mazinger'', he created one of his most popular manga, ''Debiruman'' (デビルマン, ''
Devilman''), about a demonic hero fighting against hordes of demons. This manga was published simultaneously alongside an original TV anime under the same name, but due to the difference in age demographics became very different stories. The concepts were initially conceived for the TV series, which would be directed at elementary school age children, and were altered for the manga, which would be published in a
shōnen magazine with teenage readers. This allowed Nagai to include violence, nudity, and darker themes closer to the content of ''
Demon Lord Dante''. Go Nagai considers the ''Devilman'' and ''Mazinger'' series to be his life's work due to their massive popularity all over the world. In 1972, Nagai managed the very difficult feat of both drawing and writing five weekly manga publications at the same time, an accomplishment only equalled by other manga artists
Shinji Mizushima and
George Akiyama.
A month later after finishing ''
Devilman'', Nagai would create a sequel to it called ''
Violence Jack'' (ヴァイオレンス ジャック), another long-running series that spanned multiple volumes and dealt with a giant brute of a man fighting for justice in a post-
apocalyptic setting where Japan has been devastated by a massive earthquake and isolated from the rest of the world.
Years later Nagai revamped ''Devilman'' featuring versions of the protagonists as young adult women and altering the storyline, which eventually became another sequel story to the original. This series is called ''Devilman Lady'' (デビルマンレディー, ''
Devil Lady'' in the
US). It was first released as a manga and later animated with some changes.
One of Nagai's most popular works outside of his fanbase has been ''
Cutey Honey'', considered to be one of the first "
magical girl
is a subgenre of Japanese fantasy media (including anime, manga, light novels, and live-action media) centered around young girls who possess magical abilities, which they typically use through an ideal alter ego into which they can transfo ...
" comics and a major influence on future series in the genre (in particular ''
Sailor Moon
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Naoko Takeuchi. It was originally serialized in Kodansha's ''shōjo'' manga magazine ''Nakayoshi'' from 1991 to 1997; the 52 individual chapters were published in 18 volumes. The seri ...
''). Nagai had less success a few years later with ''
Majokko Tickle
, also known as ''Magical Girl Tickle'' or ''Tickle the Witch Girl'', is a 1970s magical girl manga and anime by Go Nagai. Unlike Nagai's earlier (and more popular) ''Cutie Honey'', ''Majokko Tickle'' is closer to the more traditional mold ...
'', a more traditional magical-girl series for younger children, although the accompanying anime was popular on TV in some
European countries.
In 1980, he received the 4th
Kodansha Manga Award
is an annual award for serialized manga published in the previous year, the event is sponsored by the publisher Kodansha. It is currently awarded in three categories: '' shōnen'', '' shōjo'', and general. The awards began in 1977, initially w ...
for
shōnen for ''
Susano OH''.
Nagai has worked with Shotaro Ishinomori and
Ken Ishikawa. He is currently being more prolific in manga production than ever. Much of Nagai's work has been adapted into
anime and
tokusatsu. Nagai has made cameo appearances in some live-action films, including ''
The Toxic Avenger Part II'', the ''
Cutie Honey'' 2004 live action film, and in a special DVD-only episode of ''
Cutie Honey: The Live'' as Dr. Koshiro Kisaragi.
Assistants
*
Ken Ishikawa (Kenichi Ishikawa, Rokuro Gen (Pen name for collaboration works))
* Gosaku Ota
* Shinobu Kaze
*
Tatsuya Yasuda (Tatsuo Yasuda, Rokuro Gen)
* Seiji Tanaka
* Ryu Noguchi (Taiyo Noguchi)
* Shigeru Akimoto (Mitsushige Hayata, Rokuro Gen)... Affiliated to Shiranuhi Pro (Division of Dynamic Pro)
*
Shuichi Ishiwata (Panchos Ishiwata)
* Masaru Irago (Ryo Irago, Hitomi Fuko)
* Iwasawa Tomo-daka
*
Yū Okazaki
is a Japanese manga artist and a former member of Dynamic Productions. His real name is , which he has used in some publications. After finishing high school, he joined Dynamic Productions and while working as Go Nagai's assistant, he debuted wi ...
(Yoshihiro Okada)
* Makoto Ono (Makoto Ono, Makoto Muramatsuri, Makoto Muramatsuri, Entotsu Ono, Makoto Muramatsuri, Makoto Ono)
* Onodera Katsuhiko
* Oyamada Tsutomu
* Haku Rokurou
* Eiichi Satou (Eiichi Saito, Kon Oriharu)... Affiliated to Shiranuhi Pro
* Sakamoto TakeshiHisashi
* Sasaki Kazushi
* Shintaku Yoshimitsu
* Takayuki Sugiyama (Kitaro)
* Takashima Shigeru
* Junichi Takanashi
* Takanashi Teppei
* Kenichi Takigawa (Orichalcum)
* Masahito Tanaka
* Koichi Tamura
* Doronpa (Tadashi Makimura, Rokuro Gen)
* Ninomiya Hirohiko
* Nonaka Minoru
* Hamada Yoshimi (Rokuro Gen)
* Mitsuru Hiruta (Mitsuru Hiruta, Yukio Asai, Yukio Asai, Mitsuru Asahi)
* Star Kazuya
* Koichi Maruyama (Koichi Hagane)
* Mutsu Toshiyuki
* Yamato Kouichi
*
Susumu Yoshikawa (Susumu Yoshikawa, Rokuro Gen)
Success abroad
In Italy, France, and the Middle East, ''
Grendizer'' was very popular when it aired. In Spain, a ''
Mazinger Z'' statue has been erected in
Tarragona.
Legacy
Nagai is credited with pioneering the
super robot genre with ''Mazinger Z'' and the
magical girl
is a subgenre of Japanese fantasy media (including anime, manga, light novels, and live-action media) centered around young girls who possess magical abilities, which they typically use through an ideal alter ego into which they can transfo ...
genre with ''Cutie Honey''.
''Violence Jack'' also created the
post-apocalyptic manga and anime genre. Its
desert
A desert is a barren area of landscape where little precipitation occurs and, consequently, living conditions are hostile for plant and animal life. The lack of vegetation exposes the unprotected surface of the ground to denudation. About on ...
wasteland setting had
biker gangs
An outlaw motorcycle club is a motorcycle subculture generally centered on the use of cruiser motorcycles, particularly Harley-Davidsons and choppers, and a set of ideals that purport to celebrate freedom, nonconformity to mainstream culture, a ...
, anarchic violence, ruined buildings, innocent civilians, tribal chiefs, and small abandoned villages. This was similar to, and may have influenced, the desert wasteland settings of later post-apocalyptic franchises such as the Australian film series ''
Mad Max'' (1979 debut) and the Japanese
manga
Manga (Japanese: 漫画 ) are comics or graphic novels originating from Japan. Most manga conform to a style developed in Japan in the late 19th century, and the form has a long prehistory in earlier Japanese art. The term ''manga'' is u ...
and
anime series ''
Fist of the North Star'' (''Hokuto no Ken'', 1983 debut).
Anime director
Hideaki Anno (''
Evangelion'') cited ''
Devilman'' and ''
Mazinger'' as a source of inspiration for ''Evangelion'' during a conversation between him and Go Nagai published in ''Devilman Tabulae Anatomicae''.
In an interview in the booklet that comes in the premium
Blu-ray edition of ''
Dororon Enma-kun Meeramera
, also known as ''Satanikus!'', is a Japanese horror-comedy anime and manga series created by Go Nagai. It's one of Nagai's most famous works in Japan, although not very well known in the rest of the world. In 2006, it would ...
'', the animation director
Takahiro Kimura claims to be a Go Nagai fan since he was a child and that ''
Dororon Enma-kun
, also known as ''Satanikus!'', is a Japanese horror-comedy anime and manga series created by Go Nagai. It's one of Nagai's most famous works in Japan, although not very well known in the rest of the world. In 2006, it would ge ...
'' was his favourite.
Manga artist
Kentaro Miura
was a Japanese manga artist. He was best known for his acclaimed dark fantasy series '' Berserk'', which began serialization in 1989 and continued until his death. As of 2021, ''Berserk'' had more than 50 million copies in circulation, making i ...
(''
Berserk
Berserk (meaning "very angry" or "out of control") may refer to:
* ''Berserk'' (manga), a 1989 Japanese manga by Kentaro Miura
** ''Berserk'' (1997 TV series), the first anime adaption of the manga
** ''Berserk'' (2016 TV series), a second adap ...
'') claims that he likes Go Nagai's dynamic style and that Nagai had a big influence on him, in an interview which was included as an extra in the fourth volume of the North American DVD release by
Media Blasters in 2002.
Movie director
Yoshihiro Nishimura (''
Tokyo Gore Police'') claimed that he's a fan of Go Nagai's works in an interview with ''Sancho Asia'' and said that he wants to re-adapt ''
Devilman'' into a live action movie since he did not like the 2004 live action ''Devilman'' adaptation by
Hiroyuki Nasu
(January 27, 1952 – February 27, 2005) was a Japanese film director. He won the award for Best Director at the 8th Yokohama Film Festival for '' Be-Bop-Highschool'' and '' Be-Bop-Highschool Kōkō yo Tarō aika''.
Filmography
* ''Devilman ...
. In another interview by
Screen Anarchy, he also said that he wanted to adapt ''
Violence Jack'' into live action.
Scriptwriter
Kazuki Nakashima is also familiar with his works. "In particular, I read everything by Go Nagai, from his debut works and then when I was in middle school his work Devilman really struck me. I felt like I was maturing along with the development of the writer himself."
Japanese novelist, visual novel writer, and anime screenwriter
Gen Urobuchi explained that ''Devilman'' made him realize that bittersweet endings are the best ones.
According to an interview between an Italian gaming website, geekgamer.it and ''
Shadow Hearts
''Shadow Hearts'' is a series of role-playing video games, consisting of a trilogy of titles for the PlayStation 2 (PS2) and their predecessor ''Koudelka'' for the PlayStation (console), PlayStation. The entire series was developed by Sacnoth (la ...
'' video game series creator Matsuzo Machida, the latter was inspired by the works of Go Nagai and Keisuke Fujikawa (''
Mazinger Z'' screenplay).
Videogame designer, writer, and director
Goichi Suda cites two works of Go Nagai, ''Violence Jack'' and ''
Susano Oh'' as his favorite manga.
Approximately seventy-five other series inspired by ''
Devilman'' were also featured on a poster and website as part of the advertising for ''
Devilman Crybaby''. This list includes titles such as ''
Parasyte
is a Japanese science fiction horror manga series written and illustrated by Hitoshi Iwaaki and published in Kodansha's ''Morning Open Zōkan'' and ''Monthly Afternoon'' magazine from 1988 to 1995. The manga was published in North Ame ...
'', ''
Tokyo Ghoul'', and ''
Attack on Titan
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Hajime Isayama. It is set in a world where humanity is forced to live in cities surrounded by three enormous walls that protect them from gigantic man-eating humanoids referred to as ...
'' alongside the afformentioned ''
Neon Genesis Evangelion
, also known simply as ''Evangelion'' or ''Eva'', is a Japanese mecha anime television series produced by Gainax and animated by Tatsunoko, directed by Hideaki Anno and broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1995 to March 1996. ''Evangelion' ...
'' and ''
Berserk (manga)
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kentaro Miura. Set in a medieval Europe-inspired dark fantasy world, the story centers on the characters of Guts, a lone swordsman, and Griffith, the leader of a mercenary band called t ...
''. This list does not include a number of other series whose creators have attributed the series as an inspiration or featured clear visual homages. (For example, ''
Yu-Gi-Oh!s creator
Kazuki Takahashi has stated that Devilman was one of the characters he drew most as a child.) The story has also inspired stories published after this site was created, such as
Tatsuki Fujimoto
is a Japanese manga artist, known for his works '' Fire Punch'' and ''Chainsaw Man''.
Early life
Fujimoto was born on October 10, 1992 or 1993, in Nikaho, Akita Prefecture, Japan. He started drawing at an early age. He had no preparatory school ...
's ''
Chainsaw Man
is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tatsuki Fujimoto. Its first part was serialized in Shueisha's ''shōnen'' manga magazine ''Weekly Shōnen Jump'' from December 2018 to December 2020; its second part began serializati ...
''.
References
External links
Go Nagai (Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of Japan)
:
(日本SF作家クラブ) — a Japanese version of the page.
The World of Before the Apocalypse Fan Page: Go Nagai*
with lists and pictures of various Nagai and Nagai-related works, and many notes on them.
Enciclo'Robopedia - Sezione di Go Nagai a website with a biography of Go Nagai and a list of almost all of his manga and anime work from 1967 to 2004, as well as other works based on his original ideas.
the official biography of Go Nagai by
D/visual.
Shuten Doji (Anime Mundi) detailed production information
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nagai, Go
1945 births
Anime character designers
Anime directors
Japanese science fiction writers
Living people
Mechanical designers (mecha)
People from Wajima, Ishikawa
Manga artists from Ishikawa Prefecture
Winner of Kodansha Manga Award (Shōnen)
Pseudonymous artists
Pseudonymous writers