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Wounded Man
First tankōbon volume cover
傷追い人
(Kizuoibito)
Manga
Written byKazuo Koike
Illustrated byRyoichi Ikegami
Published byShogakukan
English publisher
MagazineBig Comic Spirits
Original run19821986
Volumes11
Original video animation
Directed by
Written byKazumi Koide
Music byNorimasa Yamanaka
Studio
Released July 5, 1986 August 25, 1988
Episodes5
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Wounded Man (Japanese: 傷追い人, Hepburn: Kizuoibito) is a Japanese manga series written by Kazuo Koike and illustrated by Ryoichi Ikegami. It was serialized in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Big Comic Spirits from 1982 to 1986. A five-episode original video animation (OVA) adaptation produced by Madhouse and Magic Bus and directed by Toshio Takeuchi was released from July 1986 to August 1988.

Media

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Manga

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Written by Kazuo Koike and illustrated by Ryoichi Ikegami, Wounded Man was serialized in Shogakukan's seinen manga magazine Big Comic Spirits from 1982 to 1986.[1] Shogakukan collected its chapters in eleven tankōbon volumes.[2]

ComicsOne published the manga in English in 9 volumes.[3]

OVA

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A 5-episode original video animation (OVA) adaptation, produced by Madhouse and Magic Bus,[4][5] was released from July 5, 1986, to August 25, 1988.[6] It was directed by Yoshio Takeuchi [ja] (first episode) and Satoshi Dezaki (episodes 2–5), written by Kazumi Koide and the music was composed by Norimasa Yamanaka.[7][8][9][10][11]

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Wound Man is a diagrammatic figure featured in European surgical manuscripts and printed texts from the late medieval and early modern periods, portraying a nude male body pierced, slashed, burned, and afflicted by diverse injuries, with marginal labels specifying treatments for each condition.[1][2] This illustration served as a practical compendium for surgeons, particularly those treating battlefield trauma, by consolidating knowledge on wound types—from arrow punctures and sword cuts to animal bites and chemical burns—into a single visual index, facilitating rapid reference amid the era's frequent conflicts.[1][3] The archetype first appears in manuscript form around the 1460s, with the earliest printed versions in the 1490s, including in Johannes de Ketham's Fasciculus Medicinae and Hans von Gersdorff's Feldbuch der Wundarznei (1517), where it evolved to incorporate gunpowder-related injuries like cannonball impacts.[4][5] Beyond its utilitarian role in medical education, the Wound Man embodies the period's empirical approach to anatomy and pathology, drawing from direct observation of human suffering rather than abstract theory, and has persisted in cultural memory as a stark emblem of vulnerability and resilience, influencing later artistic and symbolic representations.[1][6]

Publication History

Manga Serialization

Kizuoibito (傷追い人), known in English as Wounded Man, is a Japanese seinen manga written by Kazuo Koike and illustrated by Ryoichi Ikegami.[7] It was serialized in Shogakukan's Big Comic Spirits magazine, a semimonthly anthology targeted at adult male readers, from January 1982 to March 1986.[8] The series appeared irregularly within the magazine's issues over this four-year period, reflecting the episodic nature common to anthology serializations of the era.[7] Koike, a prolific scriptwriter recognized for his contributions to hard-edged narratives like Lone Wolf and Cub (1970–1976, with Goseki Kojima), brought his signature focus on intense personal conflicts and societal undercurrents to the project.[7] Ikegami, whose illustrative style emphasizes anatomical precision and dramatic shading, had previously collaborated with Koike on works such as Crying Freeman (starting 1986) and was noted for elevating visual realism in seinen titles.[7] Their partnership in Kizuoibito aligned with Koike's established approach to extended serials exploring raw human drives, serialized in outlets like Big Comic Spirits that catered to mature audiences seeking unvarnished depictions of adversity.[8] The serialization concluded after accumulating material for 11 tankōbon volumes under Shogakukan's Big Comics imprint, with the final chapter published in early 1986.[8] This run exemplified the mid-1980s trend in seinen manga toward prolonged, character-driven arcs in weekly or semimonthly formats, amid Big Comic Spirits' growing prominence since its 1980 launch.[7]

Collected Volumes

Shogakukan compiled the manga's chapters, originally serialized in Big Comic Spirits from 1982 to 1986, into 11 tankōbon volumes released in Japan during the mid-to-late 1980s.[9] These volumes encompassed the full narrative arc centered on themes of vengeance and survival, with artwork by Ryoichi Ikegami and story by Kazuo Koike.[10] ComicsOne licensed and published an English-language edition in 9 volumes from 2001 to 2002, adapting the content under titles such as Wounded Man: The White Haired Demon.[11] This release targeted international audiences interested in Ikegami's mature seinen style but faced distribution limitations due to the publisher's operational challenges.[12] The English volumes, printed in limited quantities, have since gone out of print and attained rarity status among collectors.[13] Complete sets and individual issues frequently appear on secondary markets like eBay, where they fetch premiums reflecting niche demand for out-of-print Koike-Ikegami collaborations, often exceeding $200 for full collections in good condition. Japanese tankōbon remain more accessible domestically but are primarily sought by enthusiasts of vintage Shogakukan editions.[14]

Adaptations

OVA Production

The five-episode original video animation (OVA) adaptation of Wounded Man, titled Kizuoibito, was produced by studios Madhouse and Magic Bus, with primary animation handled by Magic Bus.[15][16] Released between July 5, 1986, and August 25, 1988, the series adapted select elements from the manga, amplifying its themes of vengeance and violence to align with the era's demand for sensational content in direct-to-video releases.[15][17] Directed by Toshio Takeuchi, the OVA reflected the stylistic hallmarks of mid-1980s anime productions, prioritizing graphic depictions of brutality and mature subject matter—such as organized crime and personal vendettas—to exploit the burgeoning home video market's appetite for uncensored, niche titles sold via VHS tapes.[18][19] Production decisions emphasized rapid output over refinement, capitalizing on the OVA format's flexibility outside broadcast television constraints, which allowed for unrated content but often at the expense of polish. Resource allocation mirrored the low production thresholds typical of exploitative anime OVAs during this period, with limited budgets and staffing resulting in variable animation fluidity, reused assets, and accelerated episode pacing to meet episodic release schedules spanning two years.[20] Background art was outsourced to entities like Film Magic, Studio CATS, and Studio Easter, contributing to a patchwork visual consistency that underscored the project's commercial rather than artistic priorities.[15] These constraints were emblematic of the era's "hentai-adjacent" OVA ecosystem, where studios like Magic Bus focused on volume over quality for marginal profitability in a saturated market.[21]

OVA Episodes

The Kizuoibito OVA adaptation comprises five episodes, each approximately 35 minutes in length, released sporadically on VHS in Japan from July 5, 1986, to August 25, 1988.[15][17] The first episode, "Wounded Man," establishes the protagonist Rio Baraki's personal vendetta against a pornography syndicate responsible for his family's ruin, setting the vengeful tone central to the narrative.[22] Subsequent installments relocate the action to Brazil, integrating gold rush exploitation and illicit smuggling networks as Baraki pursues leads amid escalating confrontations.[15] Episode 2, "Golden Revenger," released on August 28, 1987, intensifies the pursuit with resource-driven conflicts tied to illicit mining operations.[15] Episode 3, "White Haired Devil," issued December 16, 1987, advances Baraki's alias and alliances in the Brazilian underbelly.[15] The final two episodes—"Misty Connection" and "Final Touchdown," culminating in the 1988 release—incorporate increasingly outlandish scenarios, including indigenous tribal encounters and exotic animal trafficking, which amplify sensationalism over the manga's more grounded revenge progression, resulting in a looser adaptation that prioritizes episodic spectacle.[18][17] These OVAs received primarily domestic VHS distribution through labels like Bandai Visual, with negligible subtitled or dubbed exports due to graphic depictions of violence, rape, and exploitation, factors that have perpetuated the series' marginal status internationally despite its creators' prominence in seinen manga.[15][23]

Plot and Setting

Main Narrative Arc

The central storyline of Wounded Man revolves around Keisuke Ibaraki's vendetta against GPX, a powerful pornography conglomerate that orchestrated acts of betrayal and exploitation targeting individuals close to him.[24] [25] This pursuit of revenge propels Ibaraki from Japan into international shadows, intersecting with Yuko Kusaka, a journalist investigating Brazil's 1980s gold rush, where rapid wealth from alluvial mining drew global opportunists and fueled underground economies.[15] [26] Kusaka's reporting uncovers layers of illicit operations, including resource plundering, as her path collides with Ibaraki's during violent disruptions in remote mining sites.[27] The narrative shifts dramatically to the Amazonian jungles, where the protagonists navigate dense wilderness amid clashes with smugglers and indigenous groups guarding territorial claims.[17] Encounters escalate involving brutal survival tactics, forced labor in extraction rackets, and confrontations that expose raw power dynamics between corporate exploiters, local enforcers, and tribal defenders.[28] Ibaraki's infiltration of these networks amplifies the stakes, blending personal retribution with broader cycles of predation and retaliation in unforgiving terrain. The arc builds to climactic showdowns marked by unrelenting violence, where alliances fracture and exploitation begets further depravity, resulting in ambiguous outcomes that perpetuate conflict rather than resolution.[22] This progression in both the manga serialization and OVA adaptation underscores a trajectory from calculated urban schemes to primal jungle warfare, driven by themes of vengeance amid moral erosion.[18]

Key Events and Locations

The narrative begins in 1980s Japan, amid urban decay and yakuza influence, where protagonist Keisuke Ibaraki, a former star college quarterback, witnesses the brutal murder of his girlfriend by a gang of criminals involved in illicit activities.[25] This inciting event propels Ibaraki into a path of vengeance, as the perpetrators flee to Brazil to evade justice, setting the stage for his pursuit across continents. The Japanese urban setting, evoking Tokyo's underbelly of organized crime and economic pressures, underscores the initial revenge motivation without portraying it as heroic.[19] The story shifts to Brazil during the 1970s-1980s Amazon gold rush, where illegal mining by garimpeiros exploded, drawing fortune-seekers and criminals to remote jungle sites amid widespread environmental devastation and violence.[29] Ibaraki tracks the gang to these lawless mining camps and black market hubs, such as those near Manaus, encountering ritualistic confrontations with indigenous-influenced outlaws and poisonous environmental hazards exaggerated from real mercury contamination in rivers used for gold extraction.[30] Japanese journalist Yuko Kusaka, investigating the gold boom's rapid wealth creation and exploitation, arrives independently and is kidnapped by elements of the same criminal network, intersecting with Ibaraki's vendetta.[15] Subsequent events unfold in the Amazon's dense jungles and makeshift mining outposts, featuring black market dealings in smuggled gold and brutal challenges, including ambushes with toxic substances mirroring the era's real health crises from mining chemicals.[29] These locations symbolize a progressive descent into primal savagery, with no narrative endorsement of the protagonists' violent methods, as encounters escalate through ritualistic duels and betrayals among miners, culminating in unresolved cycles of retribution rather than triumph. The Brazilian settings draw causal parallels to historical illegal booms, where unregulated extraction led to territorial conflicts and ecological ruin, though dramatized for tension.[31]

Characters

Protagonists

Keisuke Ibaraki functions as the primary anti-hero in Wounded Man, embodying a vengeful figure scarred by betrayal and loss, with his white hair and back scar symbolizing enduring trauma from a violent past. His actions prioritize retribution over ethical restraint, manifesting in ruthless confrontations driven by primal survival instincts rather than altruistic motives, as evidenced by his pursuit of adversaries in Brazil's lawless gold mining regions.[25] [32] This depiction positions Ibaraki as deliberately unappealing, a man whose base impulses—fueled by personal vendettas—propel the narrative without romanticization of his brutality.[24] Yuko Kusaka emerges as a secondary protagonist, an ambitious reporter dispatched to Brazil to cover the explosive gold rush that promised overnight fortunes for miners. Her professional drive for acclaim leads her to chase sensational leads, entangling her with dangerous elements and exposing flaws in her judgment, particularly her underestimation of perils in unregulated frontier settings.[22] [18] Kusaka's role underscores a critique of journalistic overreach, where curiosity overrides caution, resulting in her reluctant immersion in Ibaraki's orbit.[33] The interplay between Ibaraki and Kusaka reveals a utilitarian partnership forged in adversity, where shared vulnerabilities enable episodic cooperation—such as Ibaraki recounting fragments of his history to her—yet remains shadowed by inherent distrust and the ever-present risk of exploitation.[34] This alliance lacks idealization, reflecting pragmatic necessities in a world rife with treachery, without evolving into unearned loyalty or redemption arcs.

Antagonists and Supporting Roles

The executives of G.P.X., a pornography production company, function as the story's core antagonists, initiating the primary conflict by abducting Keisuke Ibaraki's high school sweetheart to coerce her into their exploitative operations, thereby provoking Ibaraki's retaliatory rampage against their organization.[32][25] Their profit-driven tactics extend to sourcing unwilling participants for degrading films, which directly escalates violence as Ibaraki dismantles their operations, prompting the executives to retaliate by assembling Classic Army, a squad of ex-Green Beret mercenaries equipped for paramilitary confrontations.[24][35] This corporate greed not only sustains the revenge arc but also exposes the underbelly of illicit entertainment industries, where financial imperatives override ethical boundaries, forcing Ibaraki into increasingly lethal engagements.[36] In the Brazilian Amazon sequences, opportunistic smugglers and indigenous tribal warriors emerge as secondary adversaries, intensifying logistical and survival threats during pursuits involving gold rushes and diamond trafficking. Smugglers utilize anacondas to internally transport diamonds, a method leveraging the reptiles' biology for evasion of detection, which intersects with protagonists' paths and triggers ambushes rooted in territorial control over illicit trade routes.[10] Tribal groups, depicted engaging in headhunting and ritualistic defenses, impose cultural barriers through poisonous traps and ambushes, causally hindering escapes and alliances by enforcing isolation in hostile terrain, thereby compounding the physical toll of cross-continental chases.[25] Among supporting roles, Black Snake operates as a pragmatic intermediary in smuggling networks, forging expedient partnerships with protagonists to navigate Brazilian underworlds, such as sharing resources against common pursuers, but consistently prioritizes personal gain, withdrawing aid when risks outweigh benefits and thus amplifying isolation in high-stakes maneuvers.[37] This self-interested dynamic underscores opportunistic alignments amid chaos, where temporary collaborations serve immediate evasion rather than enduring fidelity.[10]

Themes and Style

Core Themes

The narrative of Wounded Man centers on the inexorable consequences of human greed, depicted through Brazil's gold rush, where rapid wealth accumulation draws opportunists into cycles of exploitation without ethical restraint.[15] The pornography company's operations exemplify this, as it kidnaps prominent individuals, including the protagonist's girlfriend, and coerces them into filmed degradation for monetary gain, portraying ambition's causal trajectory toward moral collapse rather than any corrective redemption.[19] Revenge, in turn, functions as a deterministic outgrowth of these personal failings, with Rio Baraki's violent pursuit against the perpetrators—initiated after his girlfriend's murder—perpetuating savagery without resolution or character growth, emphasizing innate drives over external justifications.[19] Corporate structures in the pornography industry amplify individual depravity, transforming private vices into scalable commodification, as seen in the firm's systematic profiting from coerced acts that degrade participants and viewers alike.[19] Agency remains unambiguously with the actors: Baraki's own initiatory rape of journalist Yuko Kusaka in the Amazon underscores complicity in the cycle, rejecting equivocations that attribute such behaviors to systemic forces alone.[19] This critique extends to media involvement, where Kusaka's reporting on the gold rush inadvertently intersects with these undercurrents, highlighting how informational pursuits can entangle with exploitative realities without altering their foundational causality. In the Brazilian setting, interactions evoke mutual predation rather than unidirectional oppression, with the Amazon's perils—piranha-infested waters and local threats—mirroring the protagonists' imported aggressions amid resource-driven frenzy.[19] Greed-fueled gold prospecting parallels the pornography syndicate's ventures, presenting savagery as a universal human response to scarcity and desire, unbound by cultural boundaries or victimhood narratives.[15]

Artistic and Narrative Style

Ryoichi Ikegami's illustrations in Wounded Man employ a hyper-detailed, photorealistic approach, characterized by meticulous line work, precise anatomy, and immersive environmental rendering that distinguishes his contributions from more stylized manga contemporaries.[28] This visual density accentuates the manga's violent confrontations and character expressions, creating a sense of tangible intensity in scenes of pursuit and combat.[38] Kazuo Koike's narrative scripting adopts a pulpy, episodic format, with self-contained vignettes linked by the protagonist's vengeful odyssey, which occasionally disrupts overall pacing through sudden tonal shifts and reliance on exaggerated pulp tropes for propulsion.[32] These elements prioritize visceral sensationalism—manifest in graphic depictions of injury and retribution—over seamless continuity, yielding a structure that favors immediate impact across installments serialized from 1982 to 1986 in Big Comic.[39] The OVA adaptation, released between July 1986 and August 1988, features subdued animation marked by prevalent static frames, limited character movement, and synchronization issues, hallmarks of cost-limited productions during the era's OVA boom.[40] Such techniques conserve resources by recycling poses and backgrounds, resulting in a visually stagnant experience that undercuts the source material's dynamic pursuits despite retaining Ikegami-inspired character designs.[40]

Reception and Criticism

Initial Release Response

The manga series received serialization in Shogakukan's Big Comic magazine from 1981 to 1986, spanning 11 volumes and drawing initial interest among seinen readers due to the established reputation of writer Kazuo Koike and illustrator Ryoichi Ikegami from prior collaborations like Crying Freeman.[41][19] Early commentary noted its reliance on conventional revenge-driven narratives typical of Koike's oeuvre, limiting broader acclaim beyond core audiences.[33] The OVA adaptation, comprising five episodes directed by Toshio Takeuchi and animated by Madhouse and Magic Bus, launched on July 5, 1986, amid Japan's burgeoning OVA market, where direct-to-video releases surged from dozens in 1984 to over 100 annually by 1987.[15] It achieved moderate commercial performance in this environment, with VHS volumes distributed via labels like Bandai Visual's C.Moon, but drew immediate criticism for subpar animation quality, erratic pacing, and overt inclusions of violence, nudity, and sexual assault scenes.[42][43] International exposure remained constrained during the initial phase, with no widespread licensing until Comics One's English manga editions beginning in 2001, signaling niche rather than mass appeal.[10] The production garnered no major industry awards or breakthroughs in Japan or abroad at the time, reflecting its position as a routine adaptation rather than a standout title.[22]

Modern Evaluations and Controversies

In contemporary discussions, particularly on platforms like Reddit and anime review sites since the 2010s, Wounded Man has been frequently labeled as one of the worst anime OVAs ever produced, with critics and fans citing its incoherent narrative, unlikable protagonists driven by simplistic revenge against a pornography syndicate, and failure to transcend exploitative sensationalism despite Kazuo Koike's involvement in more acclaimed works like Crying Freeman.[44][20][45] Reviewers highlight the OVA's poor execution, including subpar animation from Magic Bus studio, inconsistent sound design, and a plot riddled with illogical twists, such as bizarre rituals and unchecked violence that prioritize shock over coherence.[46][47] While predominant empirical assessments from user aggregates and retrospective lists emphasize its status as "terribad" fare—often ranked alongside titles like The Dark Myth for baffling production decisions—niche defenses occasionally frame it as "so-bad-it's-good" due to unintentional cheesiness in character designs and over-the-top action sequences.[20][48][49] These positives, however, remain marginal against widespread condemnations of its depraved elements, including romanticized sexual assault and gratuitous nudity tied to real-world porn industry critiques that devolve into endorsement of vigilante brutality without substantive moral or causal exploration.[50][51] Controversies in modern reevaluations center on the OVA's promotion of taboo themes without artistic justification, such as graphic depictions of violence and exploitation that some viewers argue normalize harmful behaviors under the guise of "edgy" revenge fantasy, contrasting sharply with Koike's capacity for nuanced storytelling in other adaptations.[52][19] Forums have debated its cultural insensitivity, particularly in stereotypical portrayals of foreign elements like Brazilian settings amid the yakuza-porn underworld, which amplify perceptions of lazy world-building over genuine critique.[53] These issues persist in 2020s discussions, where the OVA's obscurity—due to limited availability and dated subs—has not redeemed it but instead solidified its reputation as a cautionary example of 1980s anime excess failing to age into cult status.[44][27]

References

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