agentspot.blogg.se

Usagi yojimbo characters
Usagi yojimbo characters






That is followed in the collection by the 2017 IDW crossover, “Namazu,” which uses the same method of summoning the Turltes into a Usagi story as “Shades of Green” (This time the ninja turtles who arrive are a different quartet though, owing to the fact that this is the first and only crossover with the IDW versions, whereas it was the Mirage versions who had previously met Usagi). A sorcerer who resembles the Turtles’ Master Splinter plucks four turtles from a river, performs a magical rite, and the turtles magically transform into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, summoned through time and space to aid the sorcerer, Usagi and Gen. The first of these is the three-part “Shades of Green” story from 1993, which filled the first three issues of the Mirage-published Usagi Yojimbo.

usagi yojimbo characters

Then there are the two longer stories, featuring all four turtles journeying to Usagi’s world. This is the first time we get to see Sakai draw the other Turtles, as well as the sole time we see his version of April O’Neil (human beings are, in general, something of a rarity for the master cartoonist).īetween these two stories is a 1988 Peter Laird story, “The Crossing.” A riff on a Robin Hood story, this is basically a rematch bout between Leonardo and Usagi, notable for how unusual it is to see anyone other than Sakai draw Usagi (Laird’s is a much more realistic design, in which the character resembles a three-dimensional animal man more than a cartoon character). When Leonardo returns, the other Turtles don’t believe his story of a sword-wielding rabbit. This time, the pair spend more time together in conversation, and there’s a bit more of a plot. It’s much the same in Sakai’s next crossover, the 10-page, 1989 short “The Treaty.” This time, Leonardo is running across the rooftops of New York, bringing a pizza back to his brothers, when he is randomly returned to Usagi’s Japan for another adventure. Between his appearance and disappearance, he fights a band of samurai, Usagi fights a band of ninja and the two heroes briefly cross swords. Sakai bridged the gap in this first story in a way that befits the loose, anything-goes style of the early ninja turtles comics: Leonardo simply randomly appears in Usagi’s Japan, and randomly disappears near the end of the six-page story. Usagi, however, is a rabbit in the same way that Donald Duck is a duck in Disney comics that is, he’s a human being drawn as an anthropomorphic animal, and his world is a faithfully recreated feudal Japan…in which all of the humans are drawn as one kind of animal or another. The turtles are, as the name states, mutants, and they are meant to be read as literal turtle-men in a more-or-less realistic, modern version of New York City. Despite the similarities between the two milieus, there are somewhat challenging differences, too. They had still more in common behind the scenes, as Sakai and Eastman and Laird were fans of one another’s work, and they occupied similar space in the comics scene of the time (Eastman and Laird even published Usagi Yojimbo for a time through their Mirage Studios company).Īside from some early fan art Sakai sent the Turtles guys, the first crossover was 1987’s “Turtle Soup and Rabbit Stew,” which, like all but one of the stories in this trade, is written, drawn and lettered by Sakai.

usagi yojimbo characters usagi yojimbo characters

On paper, the characters bear much in common, being anthropomorphic animals whose seriocomic adventures are inspired to a greater or lesser degree by Japanese history and culture (for the turtles, it was definitely a lesser degree), and who originally appeared in early 1980s, black-and-white, small-run comics. Exactly how long? This new hardcover collection of every single one of their comic crossovers provides the answer: Five stories over 31 years. It was the latest in a long line of meetings between the ninja turtles and the samurai rabbit.

USAGI YOJIMBO CHARACTERS LICENSE

Last year IDW, the publisher that currently holds the license to publish comics starring Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird’s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles characters, enlisted Stan Sakai to create a brand-new, full-color crossover between the TMNT and Sakai’s own Usagi Yojimbo character. Writer/artists: Stan Sakai and Peter Laird Usagi Yojimbo/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Complete Collection






Usagi yojimbo characters