Oraa Guzura Dado (partially found original anime audio and manga series; 1967-1968, 1987-1988): Difference between revisions

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|title=<center>Oraa Guzura Dado</center>
|title=<center>Oraa Guzura Dado</center>
|image=Screenshot 20190827 181441.png
|image=Screenshot 20190827 181441.png
|imagecaption=From the 80's series
|imagecaption=A screenshot from the 1987 version of the series.
|status=<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span>
|status=<br><span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Found'''</span> (1967 anime, manga)<br><span style="color:green;">'''Found'''</span> (1987 anime)
}}
}}
'''''Oraa Guzura dado '''''(おらぁグズラだど "Hey, I'm Guzura!") Is an 1967 black and white anime series directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa and produced by Tatsunoko Productions, When it lauched it also got an Manga adaptation and some Sonosheets, and then in 1987 it got a color memake
'''''Oraa Guzura dado''''' (''おらぁグズラだど'' ''Hey, I'm Guzura!'') is a 1967 black and white anime series directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa and produced by Tatsunoko Productions. It also had a manga adaptation. In 1987, the series was remade in color.


== 1967 anime ==
==1967 anime==
This version of the series was the first seires, aired during October 7, 1967 till September 25, 1968 and got 103 segments in 52 episodes, the series was also animated in black and white being the last black and white anime of Tstsunoko, it said that the series was made to catch in the gag anime boom that some animes were trying to get in because of Q-taro the ghost. The series was kinda successful but it didn't got many attention, it only got a few toys and sonoshets
[[File:Oraaguzura.jpg|right|150x150px]]
[[File:Oraaguzura.jpg|left|150x150px]]
The original series aired from October 7th, 1967, till September 25th, 1968, and was composed of 104 segments (52 episodes). It was the last black and white anime produced by Tatsunoko Production.
Despite that the series got lauched in Brazil by the name "Guzula" in 1971 and there it was kinda successful, but not as successful as other animes in brazil in that time like Peraman and others. There were two Brazilian dubs, one made by cinecastro and the other made by ACI-SP
''Oraa Guzura dado'' came along during the kaiju boom, a surge of tokusatsu related media that kicked off in the 60s. The series was an international hit, there were a few toys and merchandise produced and the show was exported to other countries, such as Australia, where it recived an english dub with the name "Gazula the Amicable Monster".<ref>[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=1509 "Mike Toole Presents: A Crash Course in Godzilla Cartoons" by Mike Toole] Retrieved 08 Jan '22</ref>


Another thing about the series is that it was animated with a low budget like other animes from that time so it sometimes looked off and had to reuse frames
===Staff===


=== Voice actors ===
Kei Tomiyama as Papa


Mie Azuma as Bonta


Shigeru Asou as Mama
====Chief Director====
* Hiroshi Sasagawa


Yoshiko Matsuo as Tin


Toru Ohira as Guzura
====Script====
* Haruya Yamazaki (eps 7-8, 11-12, 19-20, 24, 27-35, 38, 43-44)
* Hiroshi Sasagawa (ep 1)
* Hisayuki Toriumi (ep 9)
* Jinzo Toriumieps (5, 10, 14, 16-17, 25)
* Masatsugu Nagai (ep 42)
* Motoyoshi Maesato (ep 36)
* Osamu Jinnoeps (7, 11, 15-16, 18, 20-23, 25-26, 28, 30, 32, 35, 37-38, 41-42, 44-45, 50)
* Rentaro Itai
* Satoshi Dezaki (ep 10)
* Shinichi Murabayashi (eps 4-5, 27)
* Takashi Kusakawa (eps 31-32)
* Tsunehisa Itō (eps 6, 14, 17-18, 34)
* Yoshiaki Yoshida (eps 19, 40, 47)
* Yoshitake Suzuki (eps 2-3, 9, 15, 39-40)
* Yūgo Serikawa (ep 4)
* Yûsaku Sakamoto (ep 6)


Emi Azuma as Oshio


Yoshiko Matsuo as Suzuko
====Voice actors====
* Kei Tomiyama as Papa
* Mie Azuma as Bonta
* Shigeru Asou as Mama
* Toru Ohira as Guzura
* Yoshiko Matsuo as Suzuko


Mitsuko Aso as Mama


=== Rarity ===
====Episode Director====
[[File:Hqdefault (1444444444444).jpg|right|150x150px]]
* Hiroshi Sasagawa
The series isn't "Lost" Tatsunoko has all episodes, but never shared them online. Some episodes are avaible in DVD but no one shared them online (Well, someone uploaded the first episode in japanese on youtube but it got deleted). Episodes of the series were only found because of pepole that posted the brazilian dub on youtube, but still, there are episodes missing, and there is no clips of the japanese dub
* Hisayuki Toriumi
* Mineo Fuji
* Renzo Kinoshita
* Ryousuke Takahashi
* Seitarô Hara
* Takashi Nishioka


== Manga ==
====Music====
* Kousuke Onozaki
 
 
====Original creator====
* Hiroshi Sasagawa
 
 
====Art Director====
* Mitsuki Nakamura
 
 
====Animation Director====
* Jinzo Toriumi
 
 
====Sound Director====
* Yasunori Honda
 
 
====Producer====
* Tatsuo Yoshida
 
 
====Animation====
* Juji Mizumura
* Masami Suda
* Takashi Saijo
 
 
====Chief animator====
* Yûsaku Sakamoto
 
 
====Planning====
* Jinzo Toriumi
 
 
====Sound Effects====
* Shoji Kato
 
 
===Status===
[[File:Hqdefault (1444444444444).jpg|right|220x220px]] The series is considered partially lost. It is belived that Tatsunoko Productions has every episode, but this claim is uncertain. Most episodes of this series were found via Brazilian airings, either on youtube or bootleg DVDs, but missing their original japanese audio.
 
==Manga==
[[File:0001161165.png|600px|thumb|left|Photo of the original version of the manga|150x150px]]
[[File:0001557529.jpeg|600px|thumb|right|Photo of later chapters of the manga with the new character designs|150x150px]]
'''''Onboro Kaijū Kuzura''''' (''オンボロ怪獣クズラ Worn-out Monster Kuzura'') was a 4 chapter manga series (erroneously referred to as a oneshot in most places on the internet) drawn and written by Hiroshi Sasagawa, serialized in the Weekly Shōnen Sunday magazine from 1966 March 13th to early 1967<ref>[https://http://www1.megaegg.ne.jp/~natsumantaro/SASAGAWAHIROSHI.htm "Hiroshi Sasagawa works list"] Retrieved 19 Mar '24</ref>, which would serve as the foundation for the ''Oraa Guzura Dado'' anime series. This manga series has never been republished outside of its original serialization in the magazine, becoming mostly forgotten to time.
 
Later on, in 1967, a manga adpatation of the anime series would start serialization on Weekly Shōnen Sunday, as well as in children's magazines owned by Shogakukan. Tankōbon volumes compiling the chapters featured in Weekly Shōnen Sunday (Drawn by Rentaro Itai and written by Hiroshi Sasagawa) have been realesed several times, the most recent being 2008, however, the chapters in children's magazines (drawn by Jiro Ota, Hideo Shinoda and Shigeru Matsuyama) have never been republished in any shape or form since their original serialization.
 
==1987 Anime==
Aired between October 12th, 1987, and September 20th, 1988, and was composed of 88 segments (44 episodes; 2 segments per episode). This was a color remake of the original series. Most of the scenes were fully redrawn, however they were often drawn over the original frames. This series was exported to multiple other countries, but never recived an english dub, unlike its predecessor.
 
===Status===
The series was considered partially lost, with only the footage being avaible via foreign dubs, until around April 2020, when the series was released on Amazon in Japan<ref>[https://www.amazon.co.jp/-/en/dp/B087CYHZCL 1987 series on Amazon Japan] Retrieved 25 Apr '20</ref>.
 
==Gallery==
{{Video|perrow  =2
  |service1    =youtube
  |id1          =MgCKeEubhMo
  |description1 =Theme song of the second series.
  |service2    =youtube
  |id2          =RC6exIHFePU
  |description2 =Opening of the first series.
}}
{{Video|perrow  =3
  |service1    =youtube
  |id1          =Dk5OOmGdW0Y
  |description1 =Brazilian dub.
  |service3    =youtube
  |id3          =GSP4jf8KAqI
  |description3 =First segment of that same episode, colorized 20 years later
  |service2    =youtube
  |id2          =Cz_mXlqmx78
  |description2 =First episode.
}}
<gallery mode=packed heights=300px>
14705080 740471072775711 8526141343968264192 n.jpg|Page of the manga (Drawn by Rentaro Itai).
56749570 382351922364482 7873500554891303253 n.jpg|Promotion of the series by Enoki films.
</gallery>
==External Link==
*[https://matsuzakiakemi.seesaa.net/article/484448210.html Blogpost showcasing 1966's Weekly Shōnen Sunday No. 10, featuring scans of the first chapter of Onboro Kaijū Kuzura] Retrieved 19 Mar '24
*[https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLYS51obIgt-GcXzn611s3LiyypyEX7vSM Youtube playlist featuring episodes of the 1967 series, reconstructed using footage from brazillian dubbed episodes and audio from the 1987 colorization] Retrieved 19 Mar '24
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
 
[[Category:Lost audio]]
[[Category:Lost animation]]
[[Category:Lost TV]]
[[Category:Lost comics]]
[[Category:Found media]]
[[Category:Partially found media]]

Latest revision as of 23:57, 19 March 2024

Screenshot 20190827 181441.png

A screenshot from the 1987 version of the series.

Status:
Partially Found (1967 anime, manga)
Found (1987 anime)

Oraa Guzura dado (おらぁグズラだど Hey, I'm Guzura!) is a 1967 black and white anime series directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa and produced by Tatsunoko Productions. It also had a manga adaptation. In 1987, the series was remade in color.

1967 anime

Oraaguzura.jpg

The original series aired from October 7th, 1967, till September 25th, 1968, and was composed of 104 segments (52 episodes). It was the last black and white anime produced by Tatsunoko Production. Oraa Guzura dado came along during the kaiju boom, a surge of tokusatsu related media that kicked off in the 60s. The series was an international hit, there were a few toys and merchandise produced and the show was exported to other countries, such as Australia, where it recived an english dub with the name "Gazula the Amicable Monster".[1]

Staff

Chief Director

  • Hiroshi Sasagawa


Script

  • Haruya Yamazaki (eps 7-8, 11-12, 19-20, 24, 27-35, 38, 43-44)
  • Hiroshi Sasagawa (ep 1)
  • Hisayuki Toriumi (ep 9)
  • Jinzo Toriumieps (5, 10, 14, 16-17, 25)
  • Masatsugu Nagai (ep 42)
  • Motoyoshi Maesato (ep 36)
  • Osamu Jinnoeps (7, 11, 15-16, 18, 20-23, 25-26, 28, 30, 32, 35, 37-38, 41-42, 44-45, 50)
  • Rentaro Itai
  • Satoshi Dezaki (ep 10)
  • Shinichi Murabayashi (eps 4-5, 27)
  • Takashi Kusakawa (eps 31-32)
  • Tsunehisa Itō (eps 6, 14, 17-18, 34)
  • Yoshiaki Yoshida (eps 19, 40, 47)
  • Yoshitake Suzuki (eps 2-3, 9, 15, 39-40)
  • Yūgo Serikawa (ep 4)
  • Yûsaku Sakamoto (ep 6)


Voice actors

  • Kei Tomiyama as Papa
  • Mie Azuma as Bonta
  • Shigeru Asou as Mama
  • Toru Ohira as Guzura
  • Yoshiko Matsuo as Suzuko


Episode Director

  • Hiroshi Sasagawa
  • Hisayuki Toriumi
  • Mineo Fuji
  • Renzo Kinoshita
  • Ryousuke Takahashi
  • Seitarô Hara
  • Takashi Nishioka

Music

  • Kousuke Onozaki


Original creator

  • Hiroshi Sasagawa


Art Director

  • Mitsuki Nakamura


Animation Director

  • Jinzo Toriumi


Sound Director

  • Yasunori Honda


Producer

  • Tatsuo Yoshida


Animation

  • Juji Mizumura
  • Masami Suda
  • Takashi Saijo


Chief animator

  • Yûsaku Sakamoto


Planning

  • Jinzo Toriumi


Sound Effects

  • Shoji Kato


Status

Hqdefault (1444444444444).jpg

The series is considered partially lost. It is belived that Tatsunoko Productions has every episode, but this claim is uncertain. Most episodes of this series were found via Brazilian airings, either on youtube or bootleg DVDs, but missing their original japanese audio.

Manga

Photo of the original version of the manga
Photo of later chapters of the manga with the new character designs

Onboro Kaijū Kuzura (オンボロ怪獣クズラ Worn-out Monster Kuzura) was a 4 chapter manga series (erroneously referred to as a oneshot in most places on the internet) drawn and written by Hiroshi Sasagawa, serialized in the Weekly Shōnen Sunday magazine from 1966 March 13th to early 1967[2], which would serve as the foundation for the Oraa Guzura Dado anime series. This manga series has never been republished outside of its original serialization in the magazine, becoming mostly forgotten to time.

Later on, in 1967, a manga adpatation of the anime series would start serialization on Weekly Shōnen Sunday, as well as in children's magazines owned by Shogakukan. Tankōbon volumes compiling the chapters featured in Weekly Shōnen Sunday (Drawn by Rentaro Itai and written by Hiroshi Sasagawa) have been realesed several times, the most recent being 2008, however, the chapters in children's magazines (drawn by Jiro Ota, Hideo Shinoda and Shigeru Matsuyama) have never been republished in any shape or form since their original serialization.

1987 Anime

Aired between October 12th, 1987, and September 20th, 1988, and was composed of 88 segments (44 episodes; 2 segments per episode). This was a color remake of the original series. Most of the scenes were fully redrawn, however they were often drawn over the original frames. This series was exported to multiple other countries, but never recived an english dub, unlike its predecessor.

Status

The series was considered partially lost, with only the footage being avaible via foreign dubs, until around April 2020, when the series was released on Amazon in Japan[3].

Gallery

Theme song of the second series.

Opening of the first series.

Brazilian dub.

First episode.

First segment of that same episode, colorized 20 years later

External Link

References