The Bottle (lost unreleased one-shot manga from mangaka Hirohiko Araki; 1978): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
No edit summary
m (Added See Also for other JJBA stuff.)
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 4 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{LMW
{{InfoboxLost
|title=The Bottle (Lost One-shot)
|title=The Bottle (Lost One-shot)
|description=Unreleased Debut One-shot of Hirohiko Araki
|startyear=1978
|timeframe=No
|image=The bottle (lost).png
|image=The bottle (lost).png
|imagecaption=The only Illustration of The One-Shot that is Public.
|imagecaption=The only Illustration of The One-Shot that is Public.
|status=Lost
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|category=Lost literature;Lost comics;Lost comics
}}
}}
{{NeedingWork|lack of references, lack of content and lack of proper formatting}}


''The Bottle'' is a lost one-shot created by Hirohiko Araki who had written and illustrated it in 1978. He would later go on to create ''JoJo's Bizarre Adventure'' and other mangas of the sort, with ''JoJo's Bizarre Adventure'' being the most famous.
''The Bottle'' is a lost one-shot manga written and drawn by Hirohiko Araki in 1978. He would later go on to create his popular manga series ''JoJo's Bizarre Adventure''.


== Background ==
== Background ==
Before Araki became famed due to ''Jojo's Bizarre Adventures'' success, his first job as a mangaka was ''The Bottle,'' in which a character dressed in old western-style outfits is featured. This was considered crude character design at the time. The work was intended to compete for the 14th Tezuka Award in the first issue of the magazine, Weekly Shōnen Jump (1978). However, as it did not win the award, its content was never shown to the public.
Before Araki became famed due to ''Jojo's Bizarre Adventures'', his first job as a mangaka was for ''The Bottle,'' in which a character dressed in old western-style outfits is featured. This was considered crude character design at the time. The work was intended to compete for the 14th Tezuka Award in the first issue of the magazine, Weekly Shōnen Jump (1978). However, as it did not win the award, and its content was never shown to the public.


In the words of Hiroshi Motomiya, judge of the contest at the time:  
In the words of Hiroshi Motomiya, judge of the contest at the time:  
Line 20: Line 15:
<blockquote>No one is capable of being a freelance manga artist unless they have a story with originality. Of these, I'm interested in seeing an original story by the artist from 'The Bottle.' Considering his age, it's safe to say that he's a very smart and promising newcomer.<ref>[https://ameblo.jp/killer-jojo/entry-12213141381.html] Retrieved 5 Apr '22</ref></blockquote>
<blockquote>No one is capable of being a freelance manga artist unless they have a story with originality. Of these, I'm interested in seeing an original story by the artist from 'The Bottle.' Considering his age, it's safe to say that he's a very smart and promising newcomer.<ref>[https://ameblo.jp/killer-jojo/entry-12213141381.html] Retrieved 5 Apr '22</ref></blockquote>


It's possible the story could have been about cowboys, as Araki has made several oneshots and characters that are cowboy related or cowboys themselves.<ref>[http://atmarkjojo.org/archives/15678.html] Retrieved 5 Apr '22</ref> However, the story, characters, and overall premise of the story is unknown, so it cannot be said for sure. It's possible Araki owns the one-shot himself, or the people who held the contest have it, however the status of the one-shot still remains unknown.
It's possible the story could have been set in the Wild West and featured cowboys, as Araki had made several one-shots and characters that were Wild West themed or cowboys themselves.<ref>[http://atmarkjojo.org/archives/15678.html] Retrieved 5 Apr '22</ref> However, the story, characters, and overall premise of the story is unknown, so it cannot be said for sure. It's possible Araki owns the one-shot himself, or the people who held the contest have it. However, the status of this one-shot still remains unknown.


== Availability ==
== Availability ==
Line 27: Line 22:
{{Video|perrow  =1     
{{Video|perrow  =1     
   |service1    =youtube
   |service1    =youtube
   |id1          =v=hhuPlpHzdko
   |id1          =hhuPlpHzdko
   |description1 =a mention of The Bottle by Hamon Beat (0:38 - 1:06)
   |description1 =a mention of The Bottle by Hamon Beat (0:38 - 1:06)
}}
}}
 
==See Also==
*[[GioGio's Bizarre Adventure (lost build of cancelled English localization of PlayStation 2 action-adventure game based on manga; 2002-2003)]]
*[[JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Phantom Blood (partially found anime film based on manga; 2007)]]
== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Lost comics|Bottle, The]]
[[Category:Lost literature|Bottle, The]]
[[Category:Completely lost media|Bottle, The]]

Latest revision as of 03:22, 27 May 2023

The bottle (lost).png

The only Illustration of The One-Shot that is Public.

Status: Lost


The Bottle is a lost one-shot manga written and drawn by Hirohiko Araki in 1978. He would later go on to create his popular manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.

Background

Before Araki became famed due to Jojo's Bizarre Adventures, his first job as a mangaka was for The Bottle, in which a character dressed in old western-style outfits is featured. This was considered crude character design at the time. The work was intended to compete for the 14th Tezuka Award in the first issue of the magazine, Weekly Shōnen Jump (1978). However, as it did not win the award, and its content was never shown to the public.

In the words of Hiroshi Motomiya, judge of the contest at the time:

No one is capable of being a freelance manga artist unless they have a story with originality. Of these, I'm interested in seeing an original story by the artist from 'The Bottle.' Considering his age, it's safe to say that he's a very smart and promising newcomer.[1]

It's possible the story could have been set in the Wild West and featured cowboys, as Araki had made several one-shots and characters that were Wild West themed or cowboys themselves.[2] However, the story, characters, and overall premise of the story is unknown, so it cannot be said for sure. It's possible Araki owns the one-shot himself, or the people who held the contest have it. However, the status of this one-shot still remains unknown.

Availability

Due to Araki losing in the finals, no prints or premise of the story exist other than the only one-shot that is left. Whoever has ownership of it is unknown, and due to Araki having no possible way of contact on social media, it's possible that The Bottle could be lost forever.

Video

a mention of The Bottle by Hamon Beat (0:38 - 1:06)

See Also

References

  1. [1] Retrieved 5 Apr '22
  2. [2] Retrieved 5 Apr '22