Shamo (manga)
Shamo (軍鶏 or game fowl) is a Japanese action manga with a dark theme. Currently it is discontinued because its serialized manga magazine went out of business. It tells a story of an innocent boy who killed his parents and turned himself into a cold-blooded fighting machine.
- Author: Izou Hashimoto (橋本以蔵)
- Artist: Tanaka Akio (たなか亜希夫)
- Hero: Ryo Narushima (成嶋亮)
Background
This story was inspired by the Kobe Serial Murder (神戸連続児童殺傷事件) of 1997 in which a 14-year-old "Youth A" killed and decapitated several children.
Synopsis
Part 1: The reformatory
Ryo, a talented highschooler who was about to enter Tokyo University, the most prestigious university of Japan, killed his loving parents before his successful life could begin. The perfect family and perfect life seemed to devour the young boy's restless soul. In a beautiful sunny afternoon when cicadas were singing, he stabbed his father and mother to death with a short knife repeatedly before he came to his mind.
The 16-year-old flimsy bookworm murderer was convicted and sent to a reformatory where he was gang raped by other boys. Kenji Kurokawa (黒川健児), a jailed man who nearly assasinated Japanese Prime Minister decades ago, was sent to the reformatory to teach the youngsters karate every week. He discovered Ryo's talent and taught him self-defense. Ryo survived. Thanks to a law that protects the minor, he was released two years later.
Alone in a city full of crime, he tried to look for his lost beautiful sister who became a homeless drug-abusing prostitute because of the tragedy. Ryo started to fight for his living where he was known to use all imaginable dirty tricks to defeat his enemy. He also ambush gangsters in dark alleys to perfect his fighting skill. He also worked as a gigolo.
Part 2: Sugawara
In this part, Ryo will fight Naoto Sugawara (菅原直人) of the Banryukai (番竜会) twice. Kurosawa, a cast away from that elite dojo, helped Ryo to become stronger as a way to revenge Kensuke Mochizuki (望月謙介), his past foe and the current owner of the Banryukai. Banryukai is possibly modeled after the Seidokai (正道会館) and Mochizuki is possibly modeled after Kasuyoshi Ishii (石井和義), the founder of Seidohkai.
Believing that he is the strongest, the "game fowl" started to take on other good martial artists. A blood-thirsty TV producer noticed that this street-dominating young man was the "Youth A" and managed to let him join the "Lethal Fight," a fictional combat arena modeled after Japan's K-1 tournament. Ryo, a dangerous man with an animal instinct who destroyed many good fighters in the ring, one day finds himself facing Thailand's best fighter who was fighting to support his family. Before he was totally defeated by that family-loving man, he purposedly kicked into his face and took his right eye.
Ryo wanted to take on Sugawara. However, Sugawara was much taller and heavier than him so his chance to fight him was remote. As a way to provide incentive, Ryo raped Sugawara's supermodel girlfriend. Sugawara vowed to kill Ryo with his hands in the boxing ring to comfort his woman and agreed to a televised fight at the Tokyo Dome. It was the duel between darkness and brightness. Only this time, Ryo (亮), literally "brightness," stands for the dark side.
Ryo went through a painful body-building training where he used steroids to increase his muscle mass and strength. Before the fight began, his left eye became bloody under the non-human torture. He didn't care. Bad luck was on Ryo's side. His small body still is no comparison to Sugawara's. However, he rediscovered his long-forgoten left-handedness surpressed by his parents since he was a child minutes before the end of the last round. Then he wildly gave Sugawara countless heavy left punches before Sugawara used his broken right fist to punch him out of conscious. He survived the lethal fight and was defeated only five seconds before the fight was over. Sugawara failed to killed him in front of the crowd.
Out of anger and frustration, Sugawara invited Ryo to another private fight three months later in an abandoned temple. Sugawara took several darts and a long wooden stick. Ryo took a pair of tonfa with him. After a night's killing, Sugawara was hit in the back of the neck and was hospitalized.
Part 3: The old man and the "Monkey"
Ryo fled to Shanghai, China where he fought illegal fights under the offensive stage name "Jap" (東洋鬼). This part was not as long as the last one. After destroyed many fighters, Ryo's market value diminished because it becomes a no-brainer to bet on him or to lose money. Then the underground casino invited "Sun Wukong", an one-armed man in a monkey mask to fight Ryo.
Unaware of the danger, Ryo was no comparison with the acrobatic Sun Wukong who could attack from every possible direction. Before being killed on stage, an old man who had eaten breakfast with Ryo that morning entered the ring and saved Ryo. That old man was Sun Wukong's former sifu before he went stray.
At the end of his life, the old man could not fight "Sun Wukong" without Ryo's help. So he took Ryo back to his home in an unknown remote mountain where Ryo learned many physics defying paranormal tricks like standing on a short piece of bamboo stick floating on the water surface. Ryo finally killed the Sun Wukong but he old man and his adopted granddaughter were killed.
Part 4: The ballet dancer
This part was discontinued. It tells a story that a successful male ballet dancer mysteriously abandoned his dancing career to pursue martial arts. He was trained in judo and sambo. Before he could fight Ryo or anyone else, the serial terminated.
The books
Volume | ISBN | Publish Date |
---|---|---|
1 | ISBN 4-575-82383-X | 1998/11/12 |
2 | ISBN 4-575-82394-5 | 1999/01/05 |
3 | ISBN 4-575-82416-X | 1999/04/12 |
4 | ISBN 4-575-82432-1 | 1999/07/09 |
5 | ISBN 4-575-82452-6 | 2000/03/28 |
6 | ISBN 4-575-82488-7 | 2000/04/28 |
7 | ISBN 4-575-82492-5 | 2000/05/22 |
8 | ISBN 4-575-82499-2 | 2000/06/27 |
9 | ISBN 4-575-82509-3 | 2000/09/08 |
10 | ISBN 4-575-82525-2 | 2000/12/11 |
11 | ISBN 4-575-82551-4 | 2001/03/26 |
12 | ISBN 4-575-82572-7 | 2001/06/28 |
13 | ISBN 4-575-82607-3 | 2001/10/28 |
14 | ISBN 4-575-82627-8 | 2001/12/19 |
15 | ISBN 4-575-82663-4 | 2002/04/18 |
16 | ISBN 4-575-82709-6 | 2002/08/18 |
17 | ISBN 4-575-82760-6 | 2002/12/12 |
18 | ISBN 4-575-82816-5 | 2003/04/19 |
19 | ISBN 4-575-82845-9 | 2003/07/19 |
External links
- Shamo (Feature, Manga) - June 05, 2004
- Official Website (in Japanese)
- Synopsis (1) (in Japanese)
- Synopsis (2) (in Japanese)
- Manga: Shamo (in Spanish)
- Shamo: The Incomplete Manga Guide (in German)
- Coq de combat (in French)
- De Linkadoor - Manga Anime Corner - Reviews - Coq de Combat (in Dutch)