Jump to content

Lady Snowblood (manga)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lady Snowblood
The cover of Vol. 1 of the Dark Horse Comics collection
修羅雪姫
(Shurayuki-hime)
Manga
Written byKazuo Koike
Illustrated byKazuo Kamimura
Published byShueisha
English publisher
ImprintPlayboy Zōkan
MagazineWeekly Playboy
DemographicSeinen
Original runFebruary 29, 1972March 6, 1973
Volumes2 (4 in English) (List of volumes)

Lady Snowblood (Japanese: 修羅雪姫, Hepburn: Shurayuki-hime) is a Japanese manga series written by Kazuo Koike and illustrated by Kazuo Kamimura. It was serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Playboy magazine from February 1972 to March 1973. The series revolves around the title character, a female assassin who seeks vengeance against the bandits who murdered her stepfather and older half-brother and raped her mother.

Lady Snowblood was translated into English and published in four volumes by Dark Horse Comics between 2005 and 2006. The manga was adapted into a live-action film of the same name starring Meiko Kaji in 1973, which was followed by Lady Snowblood: Love Song of Vengeance in 1974. The manga and film adaptations have influenced a number of other works.

Title

[edit]

The Japanese title Shurayuki-hime is a pun on Snow White's Japanese name (白雪姫, Shirayuki-hime, "Princess Snow-White").[1] Additionally, shura nods to the Buddhist path of the asura, in which a devout follower is prepared to kill.[1] The title was translated as Lady Snowblood because Asura is associated with the term shuraba "scene of a great battle" or "scene of carnage".[2]

Plot

[edit]

Four bandits-Shokei Tokuichi, Okono Kitahama, Gishiro Tsukamoto, and Banzo Takemura-murder the husband and son of Sayo, a woman whom they also rape. Sayo kills Tokuichi, but gets locked up in a women's prison for life; she then seduces multiple men to conceive a child whom she wants to deliver her vengeance on the three remaining bandits. Months later on a cold snowy night in winter, Sayo gives birth to a baby girl, whom the other women inmates name Oyuki after the snow. Sayo tells the midwife who had delivered Oyuki her story and makes her the girl's guardian before dying from childbirth complications.

Raised by the midwife, Oyuki is subjected to hellish training by a Buddhist priest. By the time she growns into an adult, Oyuki has become the assassin known as Syura Yuki (transl. Lady Snowblood). With her sword concealed in the shaft of her umbrella, Oyuki travels around Japan to hunt down her mother's enemies and deliver her vengeance. Along the way, Oyuki does contract killings, seduces her female targets, dons disguises, and even has the pickpocket Kiku-who had served time at the same prison where Oyuki was born-train her to become an expert thief.

After Oyuki gets them a hojicho, an impoverished man named Matsuemon and his fellow beggars aid her by looking for the bandits and informing her of their current whereabouts. Matsuemon even convinces Oyuki to recruit the writer Miyanara, whom she inspires to publish books about her life to draw out her mother's enemies and who becomes a father figure to her. With Miyanara and the beggars' help, Oyuki successfully commits her acts of vengeance: she frames the mastermind Okono as a murderer so she will be convicted; when Tsukamoto discovers Oyuki's plan, he holds Miyanara hostage, only to be outsmarted and slain by her; when Takemura begs Oyuki for forgiveness, she kills him and sends his body falling into the sea, yet saves his young daughter, Kobue, from a life of prostitution.

Having avenged her family, Syura Yuki throws her umbrella sword into the sea.

Characters

[edit]
Oyuki, aka Syura Yuki
Oyuki/Syura Yuki (transl. Lady Snowblood)
Oyuki, also known as Syura Yuki, is the main protagonist of the manga. A seductive and beautiful woman, she has formidable skills in using a sword hidden in her umbrella. She has been entrusted with a task of vengeance by her mother Sayo to kill the three surviving criminals who murdered her half-brother and stepfather. When necessary, she uses her sex appeal to distract her foes.[1]
Miyanara-san
A writer who pens Oyuki's story in an effort to draw the final two tormentors out in the open. Although antagonistic at first, he comes to treat Oyuki as his daughter, even risking his life to assist in her quest. It is implied through their final interaction that Oyuki will return to take care of him, as he is the closest thing to a father that she has ever had.
Matsuemon-san
The leader of a band of beggars who assists Oyuki in discovering the location of her kill list in return for Oyuki stealing a hojicho for him.

Production

[edit]

Written by Kazuo Koike and illustrated by Kazuo Kamimura, Lady Snowblood was serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Playboy magazine between February 29, 1972 and March 6, 1973.[3] The chapters were collected and published under the Playboy Zōkan imprint in two volumes on December 10, 1972 and March 15, 1973.[3] Since then the manga has been republished in various editions by different publishers, including a 1976–1977 three volume edition by Akita Shoten, a five volume 1985 edition by Takeshobo, and a two volume 2001 edition by Kadokawa Shoten.[3]

Lady Snowblood: Resurrection Chapter (修羅雪姫 復活之章, Shurayuki-hime: Fukkatsu no Shō) was serialized in Weekly Playboy from November 1973 to June 1974.[4]

Lady Snowblood was translated and published in English between 2005–2006 by Dark Horse Comics as a series of four volumes, collected into more-or-less self-contained chapters.[5]

Media

[edit]

English volumes

[edit]
No. Title Release date ISBN
1The Deep-Seated Grudge (Part 1)September 21, 20051-59307-385-2
  • Chapter 1: Sumida River Loincloth Cutting Board
  • Chapter 2: Stylish Woman and Umbrella over rain of Blood
  • Chapter 3: Love, Hate, String of Blood, and Confession
  • Chapter 4: Dead Cherry Blossoms and the dance of short sleeve with white blade
  • Chapter 5: Rokumeikan Murder Panorama
In chapter 1, Lady Snowblood is contracted to assassinate the oyabun from a gambling den. She cheats using powdered dice to lure out the oyabun before killing him and the guards outside in the snow.

In chapter 2, Lady Snowblood is hired to assassinate Jinba, a brothel owner and find out what makes his brothel so popular. She starts a fire on one of Jinba's buildings before helping to put it out to gain his trust. Upon learning the brothel's popularity is in a lesbian sex show, she kills Jinba.

In chapter 3, a child is born in a women's prison. The mother suffers terribly while giving birth but before dying, she tells the tale of how her husband and son were murdered and she was brutally raped. She escaped their clutches by killing one of her tormentors, Tokuichi Shoei, but was caught by the police and sentenced to life imprisonment. This child, Oyuki, is cursed to carry out the vengeance her mother was unable to. This is where the reader learns Lady Snowblood's true name.

In chapter 4, Oyuki is given a contract to slay Kotozo Shimaya, who runs a rickshaw business which preys on unaccompanied women.

In chapter 5, Oyuki learns the skills of a pickpocket from an inmate friend of her mother. Using her newly acquired skills, she slays two women and two men and she frames corrupt high-ranking officials into shutting down a rokumeikan (Social Hall), which was for the westernization of Japan.
2The Deep-Seated Grudge (Part 2)December 28, 20051-59307-443-3
  • Chapter 6: Hojicho and Precious Flowers
  • Chapter 7: Harsh Training and a Blooming Countenance
  • Chapter 8: Love, Pawnshop of Life and Merciless Disposal
  • Chapter 9: Blackmailer Genjirô and the song of the phantom, Part 1
In chapter 1, Oyuki makes a deal with Matsuemon, the leader of band of thieves / beggars. In return for Hojicho, a document containing the dates of people's deaths, he will find the current locations of her mother's tormentors.

Chapter 2 recounts Oyuki's brutal sword training as a child to become Lady Snowblood.

In chapter 3, Oyuki frames Okono Kitahama, one of her mother's four tormentors, with a fake life insurance business and for murder. Okono is the one on Oyuki's vengeance list who she does not kill.

In chapter 4, Oyuki is contracted to find blackmailer Genjirô. It concludes in a cliffhanger, with Oyuki about to be raped by Genjirô.
3Retribution (Part 1)March 29, 20061-59307-458-1
  • Chapter 9: Blackmailer Genjirô and the song of the phantom, Part 2
  • Chapter 10: Unveiling of a Pretty Woman and a Strange Story
  • Chapter 11: Master Crook, the Wanderer
Picking up from the previous chapter, Oyuki escapes Genjirô's clutches and deals a fatal blow to him. However, before he dies she decides to have sex with him.

In chapter 2, Oyuki is contracted to kill a yakuza controlling an area, so that it can be developed into a museum.

In chapter 3, Oyuki enlists the help of a writer to chronicle her life in a newspaper in an effort to locate the final two people on her assassination list.
4Retribution (Part 2)June 28, 20061-59307-532-4
  • Chapter 12: Bloom of Youth, White Uniform, and Song of Tears
  • Chapter 13: Indecent Photographer's confession
  • Chapter 14: An Account of How Gishiro Strikes Back
  • Chapter 15: Bamboo's Tears
In chapter 12, Oyuki hides as a nurse in a mental health clinic to avoid capture.

In chapter 13, a photographer uses men to rape his female clients. The photos of the rape are then used as blackmail. Oyuki is hired to destroy the photos and slay the photographer.

In chapter 14, Gishiro captures Mr. Miyanara. Oyuki, disguised as an old lady, slips into Gishiro's house and murders him in cold blood, leaving only Hanzo Takameru.

In chapter 15, Hanzo Takameru is now an old man with a young daughter supporting him. Oyuki kills Hanzo, but saves his young daughter from being sold as a prostitute. She lies to her that her father committed suicide. Finally obtaining retribution for her mother, the final panel shows an umbrella, which houses Oyuki's blade, being tossed into the sea.

Film adaptations

[edit]

In 1973, the manga was adapted into a feature film of the same name by director Toshiya Fujita, starring Meiko Kaji. The film was followed by Lady Snowblood: Love Song of Vengeance in 1974. A science fiction remake titled The Princess Blade, starring Yumiko Shaku, was released in 2001.

Lady Snowblood and its 1973 adaptation are credited as major sources of inspiration behind Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill: Volume One and Two and its protagonist The Bride (Beatrix Kiddo),[6] as well as the Marvel Comics supervillainess Lady Bullseye (Maki Matsumoto), created by Ed Brubaker, Marko Djurdjevic, and Clay Mann,[7] and voiced by Reiko Aylesworth in the animated series Hit-Monkey.[8][9]

Additionally, the manga and film adaptation are an inspiration for the 2021 anime series Joran: The Princess of Snow and Blood.[10]

Stage adaptations

[edit]

In November 2021, the stage adaptation of the manga was performed at the CBGK Shibugeki theater in Tokyo, with Yui Imaizumi as the main character.[11] A sequel titled Lady Snowblood – 50th Anniversary Revival – Lady Snowblood and the Eight Rogues (修羅雪姫-復活祭50th- 修羅雪と八人の悪党) was performed in February 2022.[12]

Video game adaptations

[edit]

Character of Setsuka from the SoulCalibur franchise (started as a "Soul Edge" in the first entry of the series) of fighting video games was heavily inspired by Oyuki, both in visuals and her fighting/fencing style. Setsuka uses a knife concealed in an umbrella, exactly the same way Oyuki does, and also has nearly identical backstory and motivations for her actions in all respective SoulCalibur games where she appears. Some of Setsuka's extra costumes and additional color palettes directly reference and mirror Oyuki's clothes in original Lady Snowblood manga and both movie adaptations.

Reception

[edit]

Tom Rosin from Manga Life considers Lady Snowblood "another cold-blooded revenge drama from the author of Lone Wolf", and says he enjoyed the mix of Western modernization and Japanese traditionalism.[13] W .E. Wallo from Blogcritics.org finds the English translation weak compared to that of Lone Wolf and Cub, but recommends it to any fans of the latter series. Similarly to Tom Rosin, he praises the prevalent East–West dichotomy.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Koike, Kazuo (2016). A Beautiful Demon: Kazuo Koike on Lady Snowblood (DVD). The Criterion Collection. Event occurs at 1:30, 7:45.
  2. ^ "Samurai Liner Notes". AnimEigo. Archived from the original on 31 March 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "修羅雪姫". Kazuo Kamimura Official Site (in Japanese). Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  4. ^ "修羅雪姫 復活之章". Kazuo Kamimura Official Site (in Japanese). 14 March 2019. Retrieved 14 November 2020.
  5. ^ Koike, Kazuo (2005). "Lady Snowblood". Dark Horse Comics.
  6. ^ Rose, Steve (6 April 2004). "Found: where Tarantino gets his ideas". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 September 2006.
  7. ^ Phegley, Kiel (5 September 2008). "Daredevil: Enter Lady Bullseye". Marvel.com. Retrieved 2 May 2009.
  8. ^ Robbins, Jason (1 December 2021). "Which Marvel Characters Appear in 'Hit-Monkey'?". Collider. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
  9. ^ Marvel (20 September 2021). "'Hit-Monkey' Premieres November 17 On Hulu". Marvel.com. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
  10. ^ Poehlman, Alex (7 July 2021). "INTERVIEW: The Staff Of JORAN: THE PRINCESS OF SNOW AND BLOOD". Crunchyroll News. Retrieved 8 April 2022.
  11. ^ Inc, Natasha. "【公演 / 会見レポート】今泉佑唯、女優復帰作「修羅雪姫」幕開けに「皆さんのおかげ」と感謝述べる". ステージナタリー (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 April 2022. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  12. ^ Inc, Natasha. "今泉佑唯が再び修羅雪姫に、舞台「修羅雪姫-復活祭50th- 修羅雪と八人の悪党」". ステージナタリー (in Japanese). Retrieved 23 April 2022. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  13. ^ Rosin, Tom (November 2005). "Lady Snowblood v1: The Deep-Seated Grudge". Manga Life. Archived from the original on 19 February 2006. Retrieved 8 April 2008.
  14. ^ Wallo, W. E. (17 November 2005). "Graphic Novel Review: Lady Snowblood Vol. 1". Blogcritics.org. Archived from the original on 12 June 2008. Retrieved 8 April 2008.; archived at the "Wayback Machine" .
[edit]