Dominion (manga)

Dominion

Cover of Dominion issue one
ドミニオン
Genre Comedy, Science fiction, Cyberpunk
Manga
Written by Masamune Shirow
Published by Hakusensha
English publisher
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Young Animal Arashi
Published 1986
Original video animation
Directed by Kōichi Mashimo
Produced by Kazuhiko Inomata
Ritsuko Kakita
Tamaki Harada
Written by Kōichi Mashimo
Music by Yoichiro Yoshikawa
Studio Agent 21
Licensed by
Manga Entertainment (1999–expired)
Central Park Media (1993–2009)
Manga Entertainment (1999–expired)
Released May 27, 1988 August 11, 1989
Runtime 36 minutes per episode
Episodes 4
Original video animation
New Dominion Tank Police
Directed by Norubu Furuse
Written by Anzu Nemuru
Hiroshi Yamaguchi
Mitsuo Mutsuki
Music by Yoichiro Yoshikawa
Studio J.C.Staff
Bandai Visual
Licensed by
Manga Entertainment (2003–2013)
Maiden Japan (2013–present)
Released October 21, 1993 October 21, 1994
Runtime 26 minutes per episode
Episodes 6
Manga
Dominion: Phantom of the Audience[1]
Written by Masamune Shirow
Published by Seishinsha
English publisher
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Young Manga
Published March 1, 1994
Manga
Dominion Conflict One: No More Noise
Written by Masamune Shirow
Published by Seishinsha
English publisher
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Young Manga
Published 1995
Original video animation
Tank Police Team TANK S.W.A.T. 01
Directed by Romanov Higa
Produced by Romanov Higa
Yutaka Kamata
Studio DOGA Productions
Released 2006
Runtime 30 minutes

Dominion (ドミニオン Dominion) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Masamune Shirow. Set in the fictional city of Newport, Japan, in a future in which bacteria as well as air pollution have become so severe that people must wear gas masks when outdoors, the series follows a police squadron that uses military-style tanks.

Dominion has been adapted into three original video animation series: the first was released in 1988, the second, New Dominion Tank Police (特捜戦車隊ドミニオン Tokusō Sensha Tai Dominion) in 1993, and the third, Tank Police Team TANK S.W.A.T. 01 (警察戦車隊TANKS.W.A.T.01 Keisatsu Sensha Tai TANK S.W.A.T. 01) in 2006. The 1988 OVA is four volumes long and animated by Agent 21, the 1993 OVA is six volumes long and animated by J.C.Staff, while TANK S.W.A.T. is one volume long and animated by DOGA Productions.

The manga was published by Hakusensha, Kodansha and later by Seishinsha. It has been published in English by Dark Horse Comics. The anime has been released in English translation in the United Kingdom and Australia by Manga Entertainment and in the United States by Central Park Media, under their U.S. Manga Corps division. The New Dominion Tank Police series was also distributed in the UK, Australia and United States by Manga Entertainment, but later expired. Maiden Japan licensed the six-episode 1993 New Dominion Tank Police OVA series for distribution in North America in 2013.[2]

Characters

The Tank Police

Leona Ozaki
Voiced by: Hiromi Tsuru & Rei Sakuma (Japanese); Toni Barry (English)
A young female officer in the Tank Police. Extremely enthusiastic about her work, and obsessively protective of her tank, which she calls "Bonaparte." Originally an officer in the motorcycle division before requesting a transfer to the Tank Police. Her name, in conjunction with her tank, is likely a reference to the early 19th-century French ruler Napoleon Bonaparte.
Al Cu Ad Solte
Voiced by: Masaaki Ohkura & Hiroyuki Shibamoto (Japanese); Steve Graf & Adam Henderson (English)
A young male officer, Leona's much calmer partner and co-pilot of Bonaparte. He is very taken by Leona but is always second in her affections behind Bonaparte. He is a very good computer hacker (In the final episode of New Dominion Tank Police, Al refers to himself as "Al Southwell").
Charles Brenten
Voiced by: Yuusaku Yara (Japanese); Sean Barrett (English)
Leona's squad leader. Very macho, with little regard for regulations or the health, safety and property of civilians. He is the best shot in the force, preferring a large, old-fashioned revolver (which he lovingly refers to as "the Castigator") to the automatic weapons used by other members of his unit. He has a lifetime subscription to How to Kill magazine. According to Shirow, he is named after the Bren Ten 10 mm handgun, as popularized by the then popular American TV series, Miami Vice. In some translations he is known as "Britain," due to an error in translation.
Chaplain
An unofficial police chaplain and tank pilot. He once took pity on a criminal, who took advantage by shooting and killing his partner and escaping.
Jim E. Lovelock (Specs, Megane or Four-Eyes)
A scientific expert and tank commander. His knowledge and insights are often helpful on difficult cases and his calm and logical thinking are critical to crisis situations. He has a friendly rivalry with Chaplain.
Chief
The chief of police. Prone to tearing out what little hair he has left... and what's left turned white due to the stress of the job. He has a chronic ulcer that acts up whenever the Tank Police cause too much collateral damage. In arguments with the previous mayor, he comments in the introduction that tanks are insufficient for keeping the peace, and would prefer 'replacing our guns with tactical nuclear weapons,' though it's unclear if he means this to be taken seriously.

Criminals

Buaku
The "super criminal" the Tank Police was formed to fight, specializing in bank robbery and general mayhem. He leads a gang, but appears to be backed by unknown individuals. Buaku's true origins are unclear between the OVA and the Manga itself. In the OVA, Buaku was apparently a "test dummy" for the Greenpeace Crolis project, who escaped destruction when government agents raided the lab and destroyed everything except for encoded data disguised as a nude portrait of himself. He ends up living on the streets and is eventually framed for a bank robbery by an unidentified woman and later arrested by police... which starts the chain of events that led him to become a criminal. In the Manga, it is said that Buaku started his criminal career over 80 years ago in Argentina.
In part 1 of the OVA his goal is to retrieve urine samples for a mysterious go-between for the unseen crime boss "Mr. Big." The Tank Police thwarted his plans, but are unable to arrest him.
In part 2 of the OVA he tried to retrieve the encoded data from the Greenpeace experiment, which is on display at a local auction house in Newport. In the Manga, his final criminal act is the theft of the Space Colony "Embryo", in which he succeeds and escapes to the stars with his gang, with the exception of the Puma Sisters, who were left on Earth to organize the final getaway.
AnnaPuma and UniPuma
Anna & Uni are a pair of tall, beautiful blonde android catgirls who were created as "love dolls" to be marketed for profit, but they developed beyond this superficial programming and became criminals, joining forces with Buaku. Except for the occasional spat, they are inseparable and sisterly in the most extreme ways. They despise the series' heroine Leona Ozaki, and the feeling is mutual.
They are vastly superior to humans in terms of strength, agility, speed and ability to take damage. They also have what seems to be the equivalent of military-grade targeting computers. The oddest trait of their construction is that much of their large size is optional. They have the ability to shrink to child-size by expelling large amounts of water (and returning to normal size by ingesting water). When it's discovered their normal size is too big to effectively pilot the tanks, they reveal their ability to become smaller. Many of these traits do not appear much (if at all) in the OVA, but are all featured in the manga.

Others

Greenpeace Crolis (or Chloris)
A mysterious green-skinned girl with wings, kidnapped from the Critical Science Development Agency by Buaku's Gang. She is briefly seen in the OVA, but is still an important element for the antagonists to reach throughout the course of the episodes.
The Counselor
Buaku's client before the Greenpeace incident in Part 1 of the OVA, he provides Buaku's gang with intelligence and "weapons" (vintage tanks) to obtain the urine samples necessary for the completion of Greenpeace.

Media

Manga

The manga was serialized in 1986 under the Young Animal Arashi magazine, and later released under a single tankōbon in the same year. The plot of the manga is set in the distant future on a highly polluted Earth. Due to unbearable air quality, the people who inhabit the metropolis of New Port City are forced to wear oxygen masks when outside.

Bandit Buaku, accompanied by two android twins called the "Puma Sisters," tries to capture a top-secret government project that applies a plant's biology to a human's genome allowing for self-oxygenation. In doing so he hopes to prevent the establishment from forcibly changing the human race instead of solving the pollution issue. Captain Brenten and his squadron of Tank Police, composed of officers Leona Ozaki and Al Cu Ad Solte among others, set out to put a stop to Buaku using their brute military force.

Dominion: Phantom of the Audience

An omake (or short story) titled "Dominion: Phantom of the Audience" was published by Shirow Masamune and Seishinsha on March 1, 1994. It involves a fictional sport called "Smartball" and features Leona and the rest of the Tank Police crew.

Original video animations

The OVA is a four-part prequel to the manga, leading up to Buaku's discovery of Greenpeace. New Dominion Tank Police appears to be a direct sequel to the original manga. Leona's Bonaparte is a different color and minor differences to its body show that she had to rebuild it after the initial Bonaparte's destruction. This anime also shows the first animated incarnation of the Fuchikoma, which originally appeared in Masamune's Ghost in the Shell manga.

Tank Police Team Tank S.W.A.T. 01 takes place near the events of the Conflict arc; the pumas begin as members of the police department. Unlike in the manga, however, they do not appear to have to reduce their size in order to fit into the driver's section of the tanks.

Dominion Conflict One: No More Noise

Dominion Conflict One: No More Noise (ドミニオンC1コンフリクト Dominion C1 Konfurikuto) by Masamune Shirow was originally published in a collected series from February 1995 (Seishinsha) and published in North America in March 1997 by Dark Horse Comics. It is not considered to be part of the same continuity as the original stories.

While the story revolves around Leona Ozaki and the members of the Newport Tank Police, and Conflict One contains some of the same elements as in the original stories, other aspects have been downplayed, altered, or completely removed. Originally planned for 4 Conflict series, Shirow has placed Dominion on hold while he worked on other projects. These included the various Ghost in the Shell anime and Man-Machine Interface. Conflict Two, originally planned for 1997, has yet to be published.

New continuity

Many elements set Conflict apart from the original Dominion story. Shirow has asked people to think of Conflict as another time line altogether.

Plot

Set in November 201X, Conflict One presents the changed Newport City. It is no longer plagued by severe pollution. The story begins with Urushi-maru the "Skyscraper Pirate" and his partner attacking the Nankaiden department store while being pursued by the Osaka Air Police. Tank Police Sergeant Leona Ozaki gets involved when she fires on Urushi-maru's plane, causing the pirate to drop his stink bombs on Nankaiden's rival Hokutenro (the presumed backer of Urushi-maru's attack).

While searching for Urushi-maru, Leona must deal with the selection of the next generation of police tanks, relationship issues, public backlash against the Tank Police, personal rivalries with the current members of her old traffic division, and—to her greatest displeasure—the addition to her unit of the former criminal android Annapuna.

Characters

Role-playing game

The Dominion Tank Police Role-Playing Game was published by Guardians of Order in 1999. It uses the Tri-Stat System.

David L. Pulver worked on this and a number of licensed, standalone games for the company.[3]

Reception

Helen McCarthy in 500 Essential Anime Movies commented that 1988 OVA "has some serious themes - ecological disaster and the excessive power of state - but they're delivered lightly, wrapped in a shiny package of action, slapstick, and outrageous visual puns".[4]

References

  1. "Dominion Special - Phantom of the Audience :: Profile :: Dark Horse Comics". Dark Horse Comics. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
  2. "Maiden Japan Licenses New Dominion Tank Police Video Anime". Anime News Network. April 23, 2013. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  3. Shannon Appelcline (2011). Designers & Dragons. Mongoose Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907702-58-7.
  4. McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 58. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
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