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Beelzebub (manga)

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Beelzebub
First tankōbon volume cover, featuring Tatsumi Oga, Beelzebub, and Hildegarde
ベルゼバブ
(Beruzebabu)
GenreAction, comedy, supernatural[1]
Manga
Written byRyuhei Tamura
Published byShueisha
ImprintJump Comics
Magazine
DemographicShōnen
Original runFebruary 23, 2009March 13, 2015
Volumes28 (List of volumes)
Original video animation
Directed byYoshihiro Takamoto
Written byMasahiro Yokotani
Music by
StudioPierrot+
ReleasedOctober 23, 2010
Runtime34 minutes
Anime television series
Directed byYoshihiro Takamoto
Produced by
  • Kōji Nagai
  • Makoto Furukawa
Written byMasahiro Yokotani
Music by
  • Yasuharu Takanashi
  • Kenji Fujisawa
StudioPierrot+
Licensed by
Original networkNNS (ytv)
English network
Original run January 9, 2011 March 25, 2012
Episodes60 (List of episodes)

Beelzebub (Japanese: べるぜバブ, Hepburn: Beruzebabu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Ryuhei Tamura. It is the story about a first year student at a school for juvenile delinquents. It was first published in 2008 as a one-shot in Shueisha's Weekly Shōnen Jump, subsequently winning the fourth Gold Future Cup. The manga was then serialized in the same magazine, from February 2009 to February 2014, and then transferred to Jump Next!! as Beelzebub: Bangai-hen, where it ran from May 2014 to March 2015.

The Pierrot+ studio produced an original video animation (OVA) adaptation, which premiered at the Jump Super Anime Tour in October 2010. This was followed by a 60-episode anime television series, which aired between January 2011 and March 2012.

Plot

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The story follows Tatsumi Oga, who is a first year student at a school for juvenile delinquents called Ishiyama High. The story starts with Oga telling his best friend, Takayuki Furuichi, the strange story of how he found a baby. One day while doing 'laundry' by the river, he saw a man floating downstream. Oga pulled him to shore but the man split in half, revealing a baby boy inside. This baby turned out to be the son of the great demon king, and Oga has been chosen as the one to raise him, along with the baby's maid, Hilda. The manga follows Oga's life as he tries to raise the child while enrolled at Ishiyama High.

In the early chapters, he attempts to 'pass on' Beel to other students at Ishiyama, thinking that if he can find someone stronger and more evil than himself, the baby will attach himself to that person instead. He decides to try to pass the baby on to the Tōhōshinki,[a] Ishiyama High's strongest four students. Oga meets and fights Hajime Kanzaki, the first member of the Touhoushinki and the one who is closest to dominating the school; however, Oga defeats Kanzaki, which causes Beel to find him even more appealing.

Later, Oga then discovers a peculiar symbol etched on the back of his right hand. Hilda explains that it is the fly king's seal, more commonly known as the Zebul spell, and serves as the family crest of the royal family. The appearance of the seal means that he has officially made a contract with Beel. She also explains that the more evil the bearer of the seal is, the more complex the design of the seal will become. Oga attempts to prevent the seal from growing by avoiding fights with other students, but gives up when Himekawa, the second member of the Touhoushinki, captures Hilda and Furuichi. Oga then infiltrates Himekawa's base to rescue them and defeats him by using the Zebul blast for the first time. The consequences of using the seal's power cause the crest to stretch across his arm. Hilda comments after looking at the crest that the amount of energy it used would have driven a normal human mad.

While visiting the park, Oga then meets a girl named Aoi and her brother, Kouta. Oga asks her immediately to go out with him, which causes a misunderstanding that stays within Aoi's heart. Oga tells Beel to fight Kouta, possibly as a joke, but Kouta accepts the challenge and easily pushes Beel off a bench. This event sparks a rivalry between the two babies. It is later revealed that Aoi, who was in disguise the whole time, is in fact Aoi Kunieda, then, the leader of the Red Tails and another member of the Touhoushinki.

Aoi, who was then away from school during the earlier events of the manga, has returned to Ishiyama High to defeat Oga in order to prevent him from causing any more trouble within the school. When they encounter each other in battle, she realizes that she has already met Oga in the park, but he doesn't recognize her. After he dodges her attacks twice, he notices Beel's interest in Aoi and asks her to become Beel's mother. Although he means for her to replace him as a parent, his request causes another misunderstanding similar to the one in the park. The fight is postponed, and Hilda soon arrives to give Beel his milk. The MK5 make their debut in the story, only to be defeated in a five panel pattern which appears again later in the story. After the fight, Beel senses something which turns out to be the last of the Toushinki, Tojo. Oga, however, does not notice.

Aoi sees Oga and Hilda's fight with the MK5, and believes the rumors that they are husband and wife. She is challenged by Hilda to a fight so she can test her ability, but the fight ends quickly with Hilda deciding that Aoi isn't on the same level as Oga. At the same time, Oga is confronted by Chiaki and Nene. Two female students tell Aoi that Oga injured the two of them, which later turns out to be MK5.

Aoi fights Oga to avenge her two classmates, while Oga assumes that she wants to accept the role of becoming Beel's parent. At the same time, Nene wakes up in the infirmary and goes to warn Aoi of MK5's trap, which turns out to be Miwa's scheme. MK5, however, prevents anyone from interrupting Aoi and Oga's fight. Nene is about to get shot, but Natsume appears and fights with MK5 to allow Nene to tell Aoi. She was unfortunately too late, as Aoi seems to have defeated Oga, and she comes just in time for Miwa and Ikari to take over.

Oga suddenly gets back up and defeats Ikari and Miwa with ease. It is then shown that Furuichi and Hilda have been watching the whole time. Oga, Furuichi, Hilda and baby Beel go to the beach in search of Tojo to hand baby Beel over to him, not knowing that this is a plot set up by Kanzaki and Himekawa, who want Tojo and Oga to crush each other. Aoi goes to the beach as well to warn Oga of Tojo's strength. Oga and the gang have troubles searching for Tojo and are sent on a wild goose chase. Oga decides to write a letter of challenge to Tojo and have Aoi pass it to him. Aoi attempts to tear it up, but one of Tojo's henchmen finds it. They are supposed to meet between the two rocks at 5 PM. Oga is confronted by the MK5 once again, but quickly defeats them and arrives late. Tojo has left after crushing several motorcycle gangs, which inspires Oga to find Tojo. Later, baby Beel starts feeling sick and it appears that he's come down with a cold. However, Oga's tattoo mysteriously vanishes, and later that night Beel disappears. Hilda kicks Oga out of the house and leaves to find help in the demon world. Oga goes off to find Beel, but runs into Tojou, who, as it turns out, has Beel on his back. After a scuffle, Tojo comes out as the victor, and asks Oga to challenge him again sometime. Once Oga gets home, he is in a surprise to find Hilda there waiting for him, with a strange demon doctor known as Dr. Furucas, and his assistant, Lamia. Furucas reveals that the cold is actually Beel's way of coping with a rise of his power, by keeping the energy within himself, and that he cut off the link between him and Oga to protect him. Lamia then injects Oga with a drug that allows him to re-establish the connection with Beel. Oga then goes to confront Tojo with the aid of the three other Tohoshinki. Once he makes it to Tojo, Beel returns to normal and goes back to Oga. Tojo and Oga then have one final duel in which Oga is victorious, but baby Beel's influx of power causes him to destroy Ishiyama.

Due to their school being destroyed, the students of Ishiyama can only go to their sister school, Saint Ishiyama. Initially, they are constantly looked down on, but after a volleyball match against the Six Knights, the negative views towards them stop. During the volleyball match, Oga's demonic power is displayed due to a fight with someone who had a grudge on him, though it is covered up by the Saint Ishiyama president who claimed that it is just a trick. The president turned out to be a demon himself.

A new teacher soon arrives to replace the one teaching the Ishiyama group, knocking out both Oga and Tojo on the same day before carrying them to the classroom. The teacher, Zenjiro Saotome, later appears when Oga, Hilda and Aoi are attacked by Hecadoth, and puts up a fight against the demon. Later, Naga and Graphel, the other two demons who came to the world in search of Oga, appear before Saotome, but Saotome uses his Spellmaster spell to attack them. After realizing that he is a Spellmaster who is too powerful for them to win against, Naga uses a teleporting jewel to take the three demons back to Demon World. After that, Saotome, the spellmaster, although having Oga refuse, ends up training him. After successfully powering up, Oga confronts the demons and defeats them. He later battles with other human-demon contractors and is brutally defeated before eventually gaining more strength and defeating the strongest contractor. The last chapter displays him returning from an adventure to the demon world with another baby on his shoulder.

Media

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Manga

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Written and illustrated by Ryuhei Tamura, Beelzebub was first published as one-shot pilot chapter in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump on August 11, 2008,[2] subsequently winning the fourth Gold Future Cup.[3] It was later serialized for five years in the same magazine from February 23, 2009,[3] to February 24, 2014.[4][5] A spin-off series, entitled Beelzebub: Bangai-hen (べるぜバブ 番外編, Beruzebabu Bangai-hen, lit.'Beelzebub: Extra Edition'), ran in Shōnen Jump Next!! from May 7, 2014, to March 13, 2015.[6][7] Shueisha collected its 246 chapters in twenty-eight tankōbon volumes, released from July 2, 2009,[8] to May 1, 2015.[9]

Anime

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An anime adaptation has been produced by Pierrot Plus. An original video animation was shown during the Jump Super Anime Tour between October 23 and November 21, 2010. The TV anime premiered on January 9, 2011, on Yomiuri TV and other NNS stations and ended on March 25, 2012.[10][11] The series' cast included Katsuyuki Konishi as Oga, Miyuki Sawashiro, Shizuka Itou, Aki Toyosaki, Tomokazu Seki, and Takahiro Mizushima. Crunchyroll simulcasted the series in North America and Europe two hours after airing.[12] However, some episodes were postponed and rescheduled following the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami.[13] The series ended on March 25, 2012, with a total of 60 episodes.[11] The series airs with English subtitles on Animax Asia in Southeast Asia, although it is edited to cover Baby Beel's nudity with a diaper.[14][15] The series has been licensed in North America by Discotek Media in 2015.[1] Muse Communication has licensed the series in Asia-Pacific and streamed on Muse Asia YouTube channel.[16]

Music

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Opening themes
  • "Praise☆ The Boss Appears! Beelzebub" (アッパレ☆番長参上!べるぜバブ, Appare☆ Banchō Sanchō! Beruzebabu) by Hiroaki Takeuchi (OVA)
  • "DaDaDa" (だだだ) by Group Tamashii (episodes 1–10), and used in the final episode (episode 60) ending
  • "The First Goodbye" (始まるのは, サヨナラ, Hajimaru no wa, Sayonara) by On/Off (episodes 11–23)
  • "Hey!!!" by Flow (episodes 24–35)
  • "Baby U" by MBLAQ (episodes 36–48)
  • "Only You -My Bonds With You-" (Only you -キミとのキヅナ-, Only you -Kimito no Kizuna) by Lc5 (episodes 49–60)
Ending themes
  • "Answer" by no3b (Episodes 1–10)
  • "Show of Courage" (つよがり, Tsuyogari) by Shoko Nakagawa (episodes 11–23)
  • "Rainbow☆Tears" (なないろ☆ナミダ, Nanairo Namida) by Tomato n'Pine (episodes 24–35)
  • "Papepipu♪ Papipepu♪ Papepipupo♪" (パペピプ♪パピペプ♪パペピプポ♪) by Nozomi Sasaki (episodes 36–48)
  • "Girl Traveller" (少女トラベラー, Shōjo Toraberā) by 9nine (episodes 49–59)

Video games

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Oga appears as a playable character, assisted by Baby Beel, in the Jump crossover fighting game J-Stars Victory VS. Aoi, Hilda, and Alaindelon appear in the game's story mode as non-playable characters.

Notes

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  1. ^ Tōhōshinki (東邦神姫) are the beginning kanji in the four members' last names. Tōhōshinki ("Rising Kings of the East") is also the name of a J-pop / K-pop band.

References

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  1. ^ a b Loo, Egan (August 27, 2015). "Discotek Adds Hana Yori Dango, 07-Ghost, Beelzebub, Kyousougiga, Getter Robo: Armageddon, Z/X Ignition, Karate Master". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on August 28, 2015. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  2. ^ 2008年Vol.37·38 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on September 12, 2008. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Loo, Egan (February 15, 2009). "Katsura Hoshino to Resume D.Gray-man Manga on March 9". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on February 17, 2009. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  4. ^ "Beelzebub Manga to End Shonen Jump Run on Monday". Anime News Network. February 19, 2014. Archived from the original on June 5, 2023. Retrieved February 19, 2014.
  5. ^ 天野洋一×成田良悟、呪い受けた少年描く新連載がジャンプで. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). February 24, 2014. Archived from the original on November 13, 2019. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  6. ^ ベル坊が帰ってきた「べるぜバブ」番外編の連載、NEXT!!で. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). May 7, 2014. Archived from the original on November 13, 2019. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  7. ^ 「べるぜバブ 番外編」がNEXT!!で完結、付録にハイキュー!!ポスターも. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). March 13, 2015. Archived from the original on November 13, 2019. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  8. ^ べるぜバブ 1 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on October 9, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2011.
  9. ^ べるぜバブ 28 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on March 23, 2020. Retrieved November 13, 2019.
  10. ^ "Beelzebub Manga Gets TV Anime In January". Anime News Network. August 31, 2010. Archived from the original on September 1, 2010. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
  11. ^ a b "Beelzebub TV Anime to End on March 25 - News". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on March 21, 2012. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  12. ^ "Crunchyroll To Simulcast Beelzebub Shōnen Anime". Anime News Network. January 3, 2011. Archived from the original on January 6, 2011. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
  13. ^ "Anime/Manga Releases Delayed After Quake: Part IV - News". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on January 17, 2013. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  14. ^ "When Anime Boobs and Baby Dingalings Must Be Changed". Kotaku.com. August 7, 2012. Archived from the original on January 27, 2013. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  15. ^ "Beelzebub | Asia Animax". Animaxasia.com. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013. Retrieved January 12, 2013.
  16. ^ "Muse Asia Streams Beelzebub Anime". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on August 23, 2022. Retrieved August 23, 2022.
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