Dokonjō Gaeru

Dokonjō Gaeru

Cover art from the Dokonjō Gaeru special DVD box release
ど根性ガエル
(Dokonjō Gaeru)
Genre Comedy, Slice of life
Manga
Written by Yasumi Yoshizawa
Published by Shueisha
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump
Original run July 27, 1970June 14, 1976
Volumes 27
Anime television series
Directed by Tadao Nagahama
Produced by Yutaka Fujioka
Music by Kenjiro Hirose
Studio Tokyo Movie Shinsha
Network TBS
Original run October 7, 1972 September 28, 1974
Episodes 103 (206 sequences)
Anime television series
New Dokonjō Gaeru
Directed by Tadao Nagahama
Music by Reijiro Koroku
Studio Tokyo Movie Shinsha
Network Nippon Television
Original run September 7, 1981 March 29, 1982
Episodes 30
Television drama
Directed by Shintaro Sugawara
Shunsuke Kariyama
Written by Yoshikazu Okada
Network NTV
Original run July 11, 2015 September 19, 2015
Episodes 10

Dokonjō Gaeru (ど根性ガエル lit. Gutsy Frog) is a Comedy manga series created and illustrated by Yasumi Yoshizawa. It was officially serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump magazine from July 27, 1970 to June 14, 1976, collected into 27 tankōbon volumes. Two anime adaptations of the manga were produced by Tokyo Movie Shinsha, the first aired from October 7, 1972 to September 28, 1974 and the second aired from September 7, 1981 to March 29, 1982. A movie was directed by Tsutomu Shibayama and was aired on NTV on March 20, 1982. A live-action sequel was also aired on NTV from July 11, 2015 until September 19, 2015.

Summary

While frog Pyonkichi is hopping in an empty lot in Nerima, Tokyo's Shakujii Park, middle schooler Hiroshi trips over a rock and squashes him. However, Pyonkichi is reborn as an imprint on the front of Hiroshi's shirt and now gives him advice and commentary on his life.

Characters

Reception

In 2005, Japanese television network TV Asahi conducted a "Top 100" nationwide survey; Dokonjō Gaeru placed 100th.[1] In 2006, TV Asahi conducted an online poll for the top one hundred anime, and Dokonjō Gaeru placed 56th in the "Celebrity List".[2] In 2013, animator Masaaki Yuasa recommended among other anime, Dokonjō Gaeru, highlighting episodes 145 and 146.[3]

The series also became popular in Latin American countries, dubbed in Spanish under the title La rana valiente, with most character names unchanged from the Japanese except Pyonkichi's to Raponchi.

In 2013, an American TV-movie remake of The Gutsy Frog was reported to be in development, presumably as a pilot for a new TV series.[4] The pilot film was to contain both live action and CGI animation and to feature a cast including Frankie Jonas as "Frankie" (Hiroshi) as well as Maxwell Perry Cotton, Mischa Barton, and others, and features both American and Japanese names among the production staff[5] although TMS is not reported to be involved in the remake.

As of October 2014, the original anime is airing in Los Angeles, California, on a Japanese-language digital HD-2 side channel of KSCI-TV.[6]

A live-action dorama version of the story is set to premiere in Japan in July 2015 on Nippon TV. The new TV series, set to air Saturdays at 9pm Japan time, will be set in 2015 Japan and feature a grown-up Hiroshi and Kyoko and a computer-generated Pyonkichi. The cast of the live-action version will include Kenichi Matsuyama as Hiroshi and former AKB48 singer Atsuko Maeda as Kyoko.[7]

References

  1. "TV Asahi Top 100 Anime, Part 2". Anime News Network. September 23, 2005. Retrieved April 12, 2008.
  2. "Japan's Favorite TV Anime". Anime News Network. October 13, 2006. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  3. "Ghost in the Shell Director Oshii Praises Kick-Heart in Ad". Anime News Network. September 8, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2014.
  4. "Mischa Barton working with Jonas Brother, making movies". KABC-TV Los Angeles; from OnTheRedCarpet.com. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  5. "The Gutsy Frog (2013) at Internet Movie Database". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  6. "The Gutsy Frog at UTB Hollywood (English)". UTB 18.2 (KSCI). Retrieved October 20, 2014.
  7. Ex-AKB48 Atsuko Maeda to Play Heroine Kyoko in "Dokonjo Gaeru" TV Drama Adaptation, Crunchyroll.com, 28 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.

External links

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