Black Lagoon Wiki
m (Fixed Dutch's redirectory link.)
Tag: Visual edit
(the truth)
Tag: Visual edit
Line 11: Line 11:
 
''Black Lagoon'' features a wide cast of characters, many of them envolved in the criminal underworld and its dealings in and around Roanapur.
 
''Black Lagoon'' features a wide cast of characters, many of them envolved in the criminal underworld and its dealings in and around Roanapur.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Rock Rock]''' (Rokuro "Rock" Okajima) is the main protagonist of the series, voiced by Daisuke Namikawa. He is a Japanese salaryman who joins the crew of the Black Lagoon after they kidnap him. Rock does not fight but is an excellent negotiator and translator, and apparently does the accounting for the Black Lagoon Company. He is often scared by the methods Revy sometimes uses to achieve her goals. He appears to be quite intelligent and can talk himself out of trouble as seen whe he manages to talk a very angry Balalaika out of shooting him for arguing with her. Dutch states that he sees a darkness in Rock as well as in Benny. As the show progresses Rock's personality seems to change as he does not like to take violent measures or harm others but starts to care less when others suffer starting with Gretels death at the hands of Balalaika.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Rock Rock]''' (Rokuro "Rock" Okajima) is the main protagonist of the series, voiced by Daisuke Namikawa. He is a Japanese salaryman who joins the crew of the Black Lagoon after they kidnap him. Rock does not fight but is an excellent negotiator and translator, and apparently does the accounting for the Black Lagoon Company. He is often scared by the methods Revy sometimes uses to achieve her goals. He appears to be quite intelligent and can talk himself out of trouble as seen whe he manages to talk a very angry Balalaika out of shooting him for arguing with her. Dutch states that he sees a darkness in Rock as well as in Benny. As the show progresses Rock's personality seems to change as he does not like to take violent measures or harm others but starts to care less when others suffer starting with Gretels death at the hands of Balalaika.
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Revy Revy]''' is the female protagonist of the series, voiced by Megumi Toyoguchi. She provides the muscle for the Lagoon Company. She is of Chinese descent and grew up in New York City. Revy is exceptionally skilled with using firearms in battle, but is not much of a people person. She enjoys killing her enemies and seldom stops to negotiate. Despite her usual indifferent demeanor, her tendency to enjoy taking the lives of others is a result of her internal emotional instability, as evidenced by her more conflicting interactions with Rock. While her personality constantly clashes with Rock's, she seems to spend quite a bit of time with him and admits that she does consider him her friend. It is possible she has romantic feelings for him since she can never seem to give Eda a straight answer when she asks about her and Rocks sexual relations. Her signature weapon is a brace of custom-made stainless steel 9 mm Beretta 92 "Sword Cutlass Special" pistols. Her nickname "Two Hands" reflects her ability to use both pistols simultaneously. Because Japanese-to-Western transliteration conflates R with L, and B with V, her name is sometimes rendered as Levy, and sometimes attributed as a nickname for Rebecca.
+
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Revy Revy]''' is super sexy the female protagonist of the series, voiced by Megumi Toyoguchi. She provides the muscle for the Lagoon Company. She is of Chinese descent and grew up in New York City. Revy is exceptionally skilled with using firearms in battle, but is not much of a people person. She enjoys killing her enemies and seldom stops to negotiate. Despite her usual indifferent demeanor, her tendency to enjoy taking the lives of others is a result of her internal emotional instability, as evidenced by her more conflicting interactions with Rock. While her personality constantly clashes with Rock's, she seems to spend quite a bit of time with him and admits that she does consider him her friend. It is possible she has romantic feelings for him since she can never seem to give Eda a straight answer when she asks about her and Rocks sexual relations. Her signature weapon is a brace of custom-made stainless steel 9 mm Beretta 92 "Sword Cutlass Special" pistols. Her nickname "Two Hands" reflects her ability to use both pistols simultaneously. Because Japanese-to-Western transliteration conflates R with L, and B with V, her name is sometimes rendered as Levy, and sometimes attributed as a nickname for Rebecca.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Dutch Dutch]''' is the leader of the Lagoon "trading company," voiced by Tsutomu Isobe. An African-American, he captains the PT boat ''Black Lagoon'', and coordinates his crew. Although he seldom participates in battle, he is still a deadly adversary, stemming from his time as a Marine in the Vietnam War. He is much smarter than he appears and can easily read people intentions and feelings. He seems to have some past relation with Balalaika where either one or both of them owe the other some form of debt. He is always calm and level headed and keeps Rock and Revy's emotions in check and keeps them thinking clearly.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Dutch Dutch]''' is the leader of the Lagoon "trading company," voiced by Tsutomu Isobe. An African-American, he captains the PT boat ''Black Lagoon'', and coordinates his crew. Although he seldom participates in battle, he is still a deadly adversary, stemming from his time as a Marine in the Vietnam War. He is much smarter than he appears and can easily read people intentions and feelings. He seems to have some past relation with Balalaika where either one or both of them owe the other some form of debt. He is always calm and level headed and keeps Rock and Revy's emotions in check and keeps them thinking clearly.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Benny Benny]''' is a former post-graduate student at the University of Central Florida, voiced by Hiroaki Hirata. He is of Jewish descent and serves as the Lagoon's technical expert. He joined the crew when he "managed to piss off the FBI and the mafia at the same time" prompting Revy to step in and save him, offering him a job with Lagoon. Like Rock, he is not a gunfighter and does not have the capacity to kill in cold blood. However, he is hardened to the job and willing to overlook almost anything to get the job done.
 
* '''[http://lagooncompany.wikia.com/wiki/Benny Benny]''' is a former post-graduate student at the University of Central Florida, voiced by Hiroaki Hirata. He is of Jewish descent and serves as the Lagoon's technical expert. He joined the crew when he "managed to piss off the FBI and the mafia at the same time" prompting Revy to step in and save him, offering him a job with Lagoon. Like Rock, he is not a gunfighter and does not have the capacity to kill in cold blood. However, he is hardened to the job and willing to overlook almost anything to get the job done.

Revision as of 21:26, 18 August 2020

Black Lagoon

Black Lagoon (ブラック・ラグーンBurakku Ragūn) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Rei Hiroe. It has been published in Shogakukan's Monthly Sunday Gene-X since 2002, and nine collected volumes have been released so far. It was later adapted into an anime television series, by Madhouse, that aired from April to June 2006 for twelve episodes. A second season, subtitled "The Second Barrage", ran for twelve weeks starting on October 2, 2006. A five volume original video animation series, titled Roberta's Blood Trail, was released from July 2010 to June 2011.

Viz Media began releasing an English translation of the manga in North America on August 12, 2008. Madman Entertainment licensed the anime in Australasia and the United Kingdom. The anime was dubbed and originally licensed in English by Geneon Universal Entertainment, now licensed by Funimation Entertainment, in North America. Funimation later licensed the OVA, which also was licensed by Kazé in the UK, for release in Spring 2013.

Plot

The story follows a team of pirates/mercenaries known as Lagoon Company, that smuggles goods in and around the seas of Southeast Asia in the early to mid 1990s.[1] Their base of operations is located in the fictional harbor city of Roanapur in southeast Thailand (somewhere in the Amphoe Mueang Trat district, likely on the mainland north/northeast of the Ko Chang island or on the island itself).[2] They transport goods in the 80-foot (24 m) Elco-type PT boat Black Lagoon. Lagoon Company does business with various clients, but has a particularly friendly relationship with the Russian crime syndicate Hotel Moscow. The team takes on a variety of missions—which may involve violent firefights, hand-to-hand combat, and nautical battles—in various Southeast Asian locations, even going as far as Phu Quoc island of Vietnam and when not doing much, the members of the Lagoon Company spend much of their down time at The Yellow Flag, a bar in Roanapur which is often destroyed in firefights.

Characters

Main article: List of Black Lagoon characters
Black Lagoon features a wide cast of characters, many of them envolved in the criminal underworld and its dealings in and around Roanapur.

  • Rock (Rokuro "Rock" Okajima) is the main protagonist of the series, voiced by Daisuke Namikawa. He is a Japanese salaryman who joins the crew of the Black Lagoon after they kidnap him. Rock does not fight but is an excellent negotiator and translator, and apparently does the accounting for the Black Lagoon Company. He is often scared by the methods Revy sometimes uses to achieve her goals. He appears to be quite intelligent and can talk himself out of trouble as seen whe he manages to talk a very angry Balalaika out of shooting him for arguing with her. Dutch states that he sees a darkness in Rock as well as in Benny. As the show progresses Rock's personality seems to change as he does not like to take violent measures or harm others but starts to care less when others suffer starting with Gretels death at the hands of Balalaika.
  • Revy is super sexy the female protagonist of the series, voiced by Megumi Toyoguchi. She provides the muscle for the Lagoon Company. She is of Chinese descent and grew up in New York City. Revy is exceptionally skilled with using firearms in battle, but is not much of a people person. She enjoys killing her enemies and seldom stops to negotiate. Despite her usual indifferent demeanor, her tendency to enjoy taking the lives of others is a result of her internal emotional instability, as evidenced by her more conflicting interactions with Rock. While her personality constantly clashes with Rock's, she seems to spend quite a bit of time with him and admits that she does consider him her friend. It is possible she has romantic feelings for him since she can never seem to give Eda a straight answer when she asks about her and Rocks sexual relations. Her signature weapon is a brace of custom-made stainless steel 9 mm Beretta 92 "Sword Cutlass Special" pistols. Her nickname "Two Hands" reflects her ability to use both pistols simultaneously. Because Japanese-to-Western transliteration conflates R with L, and B with V, her name is sometimes rendered as Levy, and sometimes attributed as a nickname for Rebecca.
  • Dutch is the leader of the Lagoon "trading company," voiced by Tsutomu Isobe. An African-American, he captains the PT boat Black Lagoon, and coordinates his crew. Although he seldom participates in battle, he is still a deadly adversary, stemming from his time as a Marine in the Vietnam War. He is much smarter than he appears and can easily read people intentions and feelings. He seems to have some past relation with Balalaika where either one or both of them owe the other some form of debt. He is always calm and level headed and keeps Rock and Revy's emotions in check and keeps them thinking clearly.
  • Benny is a former post-graduate student at the University of Central Florida, voiced by Hiroaki Hirata. He is of Jewish descent and serves as the Lagoon's technical expert. He joined the crew when he "managed to piss off the FBI and the mafia at the same time" prompting Revy to step in and save him, offering him a job with Lagoon. Like Rock, he is not a gunfighter and does not have the capacity to kill in cold blood. However, he is hardened to the job and willing to overlook almost anything to get the job done.

Production

In an interview with Otaku USA, Rei Hiroe stated that Black Lagoon was inspired by James Ellroy, John Woo, Quentin Tarantino and Stephen King, as well as hearing about actual piracy cases in the East China Sea]] in the 1990s.[3]

Black Lagoon includes a considerable amount of graphic violence, often involving violent gun fights and spectacular physical feats in battle. Many of the characters who are most skilled with weapons (mainly guns) are women, thereby bearing a similarity with "girls-with-guns" genre with the six strongest women in the series adhering to some type of stereotype (dragon lady, referring to Revy, maids, referring to Roberta and Fabiola, nuns, referring to Eda, etc.). Some of the scenes and dialogue are within the realm of dark comedy, as humorous moments occur or are mentioned during and after many violent battles.

The character concept, gritty atmosphere and violence blending with black comedy depicted in Black Lagoon pays a homage to the films by Quentin Tarantino and the Coen Brothers. The Yellow Flag bar and Mexican standoff scenes in the series pays a tribute to spaghetti westerns; Tarantino is known for making references to spaghetti westerns in his films. It also make references to Tarantino's favorite films, such as The Wild Bunch poster (titled The Wild Punch) seen in Revy's bedroom in episode 11 of the anime and Revy mentioning My Bloody Valentine in episode 24.

The "Fujiyama Gangsta Paradise" arc showed that most of the characters throughout the series actually speak English, with the Japanese simply being done for the audience.[4] While the English voice acting in the anime is heavy in Japanese pronunciation, nearly all occurrences of English lines in the manga are accurate. However, the instances of Cyrillic script tend to be less so.

Media

Manga

Main article: List of Black Lagoon chapters

Written and illustrated by Rei Hiroe, Black Lagoon premiered in Monthly Sunday Gene-X on April 19, 2002. Chapters run monthly and are later collected into tankōbon volumes by Shogakukan. The first was released on December 12, 2002, and to date nine have been published, the last in 2009. After having been on hiatus since mid-2010, the series resumed in the February 2013 issue of Sunday GX, which was released on January 19.[5]

The manga was licensed for an English-language release in North America by Viz Media.[6] The first volume was released on August 12, 2008. Madman Entertainment distributes Viz's release of the series in the United Kingdom. Black Lagoon has also received domestic releases in many other countries; in France, Germany, Hong Kong, Italy, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Mexico, Poland and Finland, by Kabuto, Carlsen Comics, Jade Dynasty, Panini Comics, Chuang Yi, Haksan Publishing, Norma Editorial, Grupo Editorial Vid, Waneko and Punainen jättiläinen respectively.

Anime

Main article: List of Black Lagoon episodes

An anime adaptation of Black Lagoon, produced by Madhouse, aired on Chiba TV from April 8, 2006 to June 24, 2006 for twelve episodes. A second season, labeled Black Lagoon: The Second Barrage and consisting of twelve more episodes, ran from October 3, 2006 to December 19, 2006. The second season focuses less on character development than the first season and more on the jobs they do. A five volume original video animation titled Black Lagoon: Roberta's Blood Trail was released in July 2010.

The anime was licensed in the United Kingdom and Australasia by Madman Entertainment. On July 3, 2008, Geneon Entertainment and Funimation Entertainment announced an agreement to distribute select titles in North America. While Geneon will still retain the license, Funimation will assume exclusive rights to the manufacturing, marketing, sales and distribution of select titles. Black Lagoon was one of several titles involved in the deal.[4] Geneon's English dub premiered on G4 Canada on October 26, 2007 and Starz Edge began airing it on February 29, 2008 to American audiences. The series aired in Australia on the Sci Fi Channel.

The first season was released on six DVDs, each containing two episodes, between August and December 2006.[7][8] The second season mirrored this, being released from January to June 2007.[9][10] The Blu-ray Disc releases of the two seasons included a total of seven short omake specials, each no longer than five minutes, that depict the characters in various humorous situations. In 2010, the series was released in four, two for each season, boxsets from August to September.

Geneon's North American dub was released on three DVD compilations, each containing four episodes, between May 22 and September 18, 2007. After being released individually, with volume one having a limited edition version containing a steelbook box that comes with a bonus disc with slots for all 3 volumes, the boxset of the entire first season was released December 30, 2008. The fourth bonus disc, available in the season one box set or the volume one steelbook edition, has a 15 minute behind the scenes with the English crew and voice actors, the "Red Fraction" music video performed by Mell, promotional videos, the creditless opening and ending, and Japanese opening. The Second Barrage volumes were released in the same manner, with the box set released in North America on April 14, 2009, case with episodes 13–24 on three discs with English/Japanese audio and English subtitles. The box set/steelbook version bonus disc includes promotional videos and the creditless opening and ending. At Anime Expo 2010, Funimation announced their licensing of the Roberta's Blood Trail OVA, which was released in 2013.[11] The first and second seasons were re-released on Blu-ray Disc/DVD combo pack on December 4, 2012.[12]

The series returned to American television on the Funimation Channel on February 15, 2013.[13]

The anime has also aired in Italy on MTV Italy, in Sweden on ZTV and on Animax in Spain, Portugal and Germany.

Music

Opening
  • "Red Fraction" by Mell (Episodes #1-23)
  • "Red Fraction (IO Drive Mix)" by Mell (Episodes #25-29)
Closing
  • "Don't Look Behind" by Edison (Episodes #1-14, 16-23)
  • "The World of Midnight" by Minako "mooki" Obata (Episode #15)
  • "Preach Headz Addiction" by Breath Frequency (Episode #24)
  • "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" by Edison (Episodes #25-28)
  • "This Moment: Prayer in the Light" by Minako "mooki" Obata (Episode #29)
Original Soundtrack
Black Lagoon OST Cover

Case cover of the Black Lagoon Original Soundtrack

  1. Red Fraction (Opening version) 1:32
  2. Tear Drops to Earth 1:26
  3. Asian Comfort 1:29
  4. Don't Stop! 4:25
  5. Samara Samanda 1:23
  6. A Cold Wind in My Mind 1:26
  7. Make a Bet 2:15
  8. El Sol se Recuesta 4:15
  9. Seasonal Wind 1:20
  10. 66 steps 2:25
  11. The World of Midnight 1:48
  12. Dark Side of the Moon 2:06
  13. Tadpole Dance 1:32
  14. Let Me Know Your Name 4:17
  15. After the Rain 1:27
  16. It's an Easy Afternoon 1:24
  17. Behind the Clouds 1:36
  18. The Anthem of the Aryan Socialist Union 1:32
  19. Melting Brain 3:24
  20. The Way to Last Night 1:44
  21. Peach Headz Addiction 3:14
  22. Don't Look Behind (Requiem version) 2:06
  23. Father's Chest 1:58
  24. Don't Let Me Join Now 2:02
  25. Foxy Doll 2:07
  26. Rock the Carnival 2:53
  27. Mad Club 1:27
  28. Don't Stop! (Guitar version) 3:41
  29. Don't Look Behind (Ending version) 1:39

Reception

As of October 2007, the manga series has sold over 3 million copies in Japan.[14] About.com's Deb Aoki listed Viz Media's English release of Black Lagoon as the best new seinen manga of 2008, along with Gantz.[15] The anime series has received internationally positive reviews.[16][17][18] With Chris Beveridge of Anime on DVD going so far as to say: “To my surprise, knowing practically nothing about the show beyond a two minute clip at a convention, Black Lagoon manages to kick all kinds of ass. In English no less. The draw of a full bitrate 5.1 mix got me to watch it in English only to find that with most of the characters being western and in settings outside of Japan it works very well.”[17]

References

  1. In the El Baile de la Muerte arc (Japanese version), the tombstone of Diego Jose San Fernando Lovelace showed that he died in the year 1991, but there is something that looks like year 1996 in the next picture, the North American translation/publication showed that he died in 1996 and that can be seen in both pictures. Also, in the same arc, American soldiers are seen using EO Tech holographic weapons sights, which were not developed until the mid-to-late 1990s. Also there is timeline problem because of MVR (The Fifth Republic Movement) political party founded by Hugo Chavez in July 1997. Because of that we can assume that El Baile de la Muerte arc is placed somewhere between late july and early september 1997 (according to Dutch statement about finding news reports from last month).
  2. Based on the map sen in episode 26, at 6:32 seconds in
  3. Otaku USA August 2011 Issue, Page 106.
  4. a b "FUNimation Entertainment and Geneon Entertainment Sign Exclusive Distribution Agreement for North America" (Press release). Anime News Network. 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2008-07-03.
  5. "Black Lagoon Manga's Return Slated for January 19". Anime News Network. 2012-12-17. Retrieved 2012-12-18.
  6. "Hiroe: Black Lagoon Manga to Resume in January/February". Anime News Network. 2012-12-17. Retrieved 2012-12-17.
  7. "BLACK LAGOON 001" (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  8. "BLACK LAGOON 006" (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  9. "BLACK LAGOON The Second Barrage 001" (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  10. "BLACK LAGOON The Second Barrage 006" (in Japanese). Amazon.com. Retrieved 2008-06-01.
  11. "Funi Adds Live Action Moyashimon Live Action, More". Anime News Network. 2010-07-02. Retrieved 2010-07-03.
  12. "Black Lagoon DVD/Blu-ray Complete Series (Hyb) – Anime Classics (Seasons 1–2)". Rightstuf.com. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
  13. "Funimation Week 7 of 2013". Funimation Entertainment. Retrieved February 9, 2013.
  14. The Obi strip of the manga Vol. 7.
  15. Aoki, Deb. "2008 Best New Manga". About.com. Retrieved 2009-08-20.
  16. Theron Martin (2007-05-18). "Black Lagoon DVD 1". Anime News Network. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
  17. a b Chris Beveridge (2007-05-22). "Black Lagoon Vol. #1 (also w/limited edition)". Mania.com/Anime on DVD. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
  18. Rob Lineberger (2007-06-04). "Black Lagoon: Volume 1". DVD Verdict. Retrieved 6 January 2009.

External links

  1. In the El Baile de la Muerte arc, the tombstone of Diego Jose San Fernando Lovelace showed that he died in the year 1991, although the North American translation/publication showed that he died in 1996. Also, in the same arc, American soldiers are seen using EO Tech holographic weapons sights, which were not developed until the mid-to-late 1990s.
  2. Based on the map sen in episode 26, at 6:32 seconds in
  3. Otaku USA August 2011 Issue, Page 106.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Template:Cite press release
  5. Template:Cite web
  6. Template:Cite web
  7. Template:Cite web
  8. Template:Cite web
  9. Template:Cite web
  10. Template:Cite web
  11. Template:Cite web
  12. Template:Cite web
  13. Template:Cite web
  14. The Obi strip of the manga Vol. 7.
  15. Template:Cite web
  16. Template:Cite web
  17. 17.0 17.1 Template:Cite web
  18. Template:Cite web