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The Original Astro Boy

The Original Astro Boy is a twenty-issue 1980s comic book series (with one Astro Boy short story in Speed Racer #17) by NOW Comics, based on the original Japanese Mighty Atom series by Osamu Tezuka. The series was based mostly on the 1963 Astro Boy anime series, but began to include elements from the 1980 series in later issues. The comic went through three writers and artists, and embellished the original plotline, despite only covering the first episode of the 1963 series.

The Original Astro Boy
Publication information
PublisherNOW Comics
ScheduleMonthly
Publication dateSeptember 18, 1987 - June 23, 1989
No. of issues20
Creative team
Written byKen Steacy, Michael Dimpsey
Artist(s)Ken Steacy, Brian Thomas, Andrew Pratt
Letterer(s)Andrew Pratt, Marc Hansen

Main story edit

The series begins with Dr. Boynton (Doctor Tenma) putting together Astro Boy, and immediately adopting him under the name "Astor." After only a few days, Boynton becomes fed up with Astro's cold, unchildlike behavior, and plans to shut down and discard him. However, Astro begins to discover that he has powers and was based on Boynton's dead son. In the meantime, the army attempts to capture Astro, as it is hinted that Boynton borrowed money from the military and couldn't repay them. Dr. Elefun (Professor Ochanomizu) is also trying to find Astro, as well as keep the Institute of Science under control. Astro is sold to the circus with an implanted robot named Bruno (a sentient bomb looking like a spider), where he discovers his fellow robots are constantly in anguish. From there, Astro is pulled into the middle of the robot rights revolution. This story was covered in issues 1–10.

Megathreat edit

Following the end of the initial storyline, issue 12 focused on the president of a large company called Megacorp hiring a cloaked figure named Agent R to lure in and destroy Astro. Agent R (shown later to be Lance Lumiere, former Institute of Science researcher) used a bulky robot named 'Megathreat' to kidnap a boy named Archie from Astro's school. Archie happens to be the Megacorp president's son, and the plan begins to fail. Astro, in the meantime, is recovering from an internal overload after saving a police car from sinking in the bay. Despite Elefun's warning, Astro goes out to save Archie, destroys Megathreat and earns the Megacorp president's respect.

The Cybot Arc edit

This was the point in the series when Brian Thomas took over as the main artist, adopting Astro's 1980 character design. Issues 16-18 featured Astro going on a rocket to space, with General Hawkins hoping to find out the reason for multiple shuttle disappearances around a certain area. As Astro and the flight crew prepare to depart, Astro Girl hides on board, with Dr. I.Q. Plenty and Spud doing the same. Dr. Boynton appears one last time and gives Astro a special back-up battery cell, but warns Astro not to let it overload. While in space, the ship is attacked by a grotesque monster, and crashes on the planet of the Cybots. Astro and the crew are dragged to the palace of King Cosmo, the leader of the Cybots. The Cybots, as it was hinted in earlier issues, were a brand of extremely advanced androids who faced human discrimination and were forced to flee to space. King Cosmo finds Astro Girl and orders his men to destroy her, forcing Astro to fight them. After Astro tells Cosmo that humans and robots are equals now, he explodes from the overloading battery. While I.Q. and the shuttle crew try to repair Astro, King Cosmo announces that the population of Cybots will be returning to Earth, along with the members of the previously captured ships.

The series edit

The Astro Boy license was sold to Tony C. Caputo by a "Japanese national", whom actually had no legal access to Tezuka's characters. (Since the bankruptcy of Mushi Production in 1973, and due to the ensuing court-ordered settlement, ownership of Tezuka's copyrights came into question and would not be resolved for almost thirty years.[1]) This person is only credited as Suzuki & Associates in the fine print of most issues.

Brian Thomas was originally assigned as the lead artist in 1987, with Ken Steacy as the cover artist, but Steacy offered to do full-colour artwork and be paid in Canadian dollars. Ken Steacy became the artist until issue #16 and writer for issues #8-17, before Brian Thomas took over fully. Sales rose, but the series was cancelled after NOW! Comics got a deal for newsstand distribution for all of their titles.[2]

While dedicating itself to the 1960s anime's continuum, the first nine issues were a longer, drawn-out version of only the anime's first episode. Despite taking quite a few elements and character designs from the 1980s series, the editors claimed that the then-newer anime "did not stand up to (the) old black-and-white version". The comic possessed a greater level of war and robot-to-human violence, greatly differing from Osamu Tezuka's original morals. The comic seemed to be intended for an older audience until halfway through the series, when Michael Dimpsey left NOW Comics and Ken Steacy became the main writer. After this change of writers, there were a string of light stand-alone plots, going until the cancellation of the series.

Characters edit

  • Dr. Boynton - Astro's creator and "father". Boynton went slightly insane, following his divorce and the death of his son Astor, and became a recluse. He built Astro as a replacement for his son, but soon became disappointed with the result. Boynton clashes with Astro Boy constantly, at one point putting a tracker named Bruno in Astro and selling him to a circus. Later on, he appears to regret his actions, and secretly shows up to help Astro. He is based directly on the character Dr. Tenma.
  • Dr. Elefun - A scientist vying for Boynton's role as Director of the institute, whom later saves Astro from the robot circus. In addition to teaching and taking care of Astro for a few issues, he enrolls Astro in school and builds him two parents and a sister. He is directly based on Professor Ochanomizu.
  • Mr. Cacciatore - The ringmaster and owner of the Robot Circus. He buys Astro from Dr. Boynton and sets him through various jobs and dangerous stunts in the circus, threatening to activate a robot spider bomb that Boynton has implanted in Astro's chest cabinet. He is directly based on Osamu Tezuka's character Ham Egg.
  • General Hawkins - A short, portly woman in charge of the local army base. Before the current storyline, Hawkins lends money to Boynton to help with building Astro. However, she expected Astro to be able to work with the military, and tries to recapture him at the cost of destroying a neighborhood.
  • Tas Tamil - A man at the Institute of Science who is attempting to take Boynton's place as director. Tas begins working with General Hawkins and Cacciatore. Despite being much more meeker and scheming, he is based directly on the character Duke Red.
  • Bruno - A robotic spider built by Boynton, which is a combined tracker and bomb. It is connected to a remote, and designed to give a disobedient Astro an electric shock at the push of a button.
  • Simon - A male android at the Robot Circus. He befriends Astro immediately, and tells him of the horrible conditions he and the robots are in. Simon, later on, attempts to remove Bruno from Astro's system, but Bruno detonates in Simon's hand and kills him.
  • Rebecca and Elmer - Two researchers at the Institute of Science. Elmer pines after Rebecca, only to neutral response from her. Late into the 10th issue, they are killed by a creature called the Cyber Shark, but rebuilt by Elefun as robots. They then go to live with Astro as his parents. The whole time, they look identical to Astro's robot parents in the 1980s series.
  • Astro Girl - Astro's sister, built and given to him by Dr. Elefun. She is very much identical-looking to her animated version, there known as Uran. She is much more curious and willing to get into trouble.
  • Dr. I.Q. Plenty - A short, arrogant scientist who tries to become the new leader of the Institute of Science. He is pushy and indignant about becoming the director, and on the side, he attempts to woo Rebecca. I.Q. lives alone, his only companion a dog named Spud, who wears a special collar that enables him to talk. I.Q. is based entirely on Dr. Fooler, an obscure character in Tezuka's manga.
  • Astor Boynton - Boynton's deceased son. Astor did not get a lot of character development, but he was shown to be an energetic and loving boy. He sees firsthand the divorce of Boynton and his wife Jean. One day, Boynton breaks his promise to take Astor to the zoo, but programs a robotic car to take Astor there alone. Halfway through the truck, a large truck hits Astor's car and kills him. He is based directly on Tobio Tenma.
  • Kristal Kleer - A young girl in Astro's class, whom he meets in issue #11. She is very friendly and, later on, affectionate to Astro, whom calls her "Kris".

End of the series edit

There was a small team of artists working on the series, many of them completing two or more tasks. NOW Comics was slowly reaching bankruptcy,[3] and company president Tony C. Caputo would reportedly "forget" to pay his employees, or simply cut down their payrolls.[4] This began to greatly affect the quality of Ken Steacy's later issues.[5] Eventually, despite rising sales for Brian Thomas's issues, the series was cancelled and removed from circulation, while NOW's version of Speed Racer continued on for a few years afterwards. A short Astro Boy story by Thomas, originally made in mid-1987, did appear in issue #17 of NOW Comics's Speed Racer comic.[6] It was published February, 1989; the same month as Osamu Tezuka's death.

References edit

  1. ^ Schodt, Frederik L.; The Astro Boy Essays: Osamu Tezuka, Mighty Atom, and the Manga/Anime Revolution Pages 95 and 96 Stone Bridge Press (2007) ISBN 978-1-933330-54-9
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-08-10.
  3. ^ "It's So Long For NOW: Caputo Files for Bankruptcy Liquidation," The Comics Journal #140 (February 1991), pp. 11-12.
  4. ^ "Creators Accuse NOW of Non-Payment," The Comics Journal #127 (February 1989), p. 5-15.
  5. ^ "Editorial Direction Lacking at NOW," The Comics Journal #127 (February 1989), p. 9.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-08-10.

External links edit

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This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources The Original Astro Boy news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Original Astro Boy is a twenty issue 1980s comic book series with one Astro Boy short story in Speed Racer 17 by NOW Comics based on the original Japanese Mighty Atom series by Osamu Tezuka The series was based mostly on the 1963 Astro Boy anime series but began to include elements from the 1980 series in later issues The comic went through three writers and artists and embellished the original plotline despite only covering the first episode of the 1963 series The Original Astro BoyPublication informationPublisherNOW ComicsScheduleMonthlyPublication dateSeptember 18 1987 June 23 1989No of issues20Creative teamWritten byKen Steacy Michael DimpseyArtist s Ken Steacy Brian Thomas Andrew PrattLetterer s Andrew Pratt Marc Hansen Contents 1 Main story 1 1 Megathreat 1 2 The Cybot Arc 2 The series 3 Characters 4 End of the series 5 References 6 External linksMain story editThe series begins with Dr Boynton Doctor Tenma putting together Astro Boy and immediately adopting him under the name Astor After only a few days Boynton becomes fed up with Astro s cold unchildlike behavior and plans to shut down and discard him However Astro begins to discover that he has powers and was based on Boynton s dead son In the meantime the army attempts to capture Astro as it is hinted that Boynton borrowed money from the military and couldn t repay them Dr Elefun Professor Ochanomizu is also trying to find Astro as well as keep the Institute of Science under control Astro is sold to the circus with an implanted robot named Bruno a sentient bomb looking like a spider where he discovers his fellow robots are constantly in anguish From there Astro is pulled into the middle of the robot rights revolution This story was covered in issues 1 10 Megathreat edit Following the end of the initial storyline issue 12 focused on the president of a large company called Megacorp hiring a cloaked figure named Agent R to lure in and destroy Astro Agent R shown later to be Lance Lumiere former Institute of Science researcher used a bulky robot named Megathreat to kidnap a boy named Archie from Astro s school Archie happens to be the Megacorp president s son and the plan begins to fail Astro in the meantime is recovering from an internal overload after saving a police car from sinking in the bay Despite Elefun s warning Astro goes out to save Archie destroys Megathreat and earns the Megacorp president s respect The Cybot Arc edit This was the point in the series when Brian Thomas took over as the main artist adopting Astro s 1980 character design Issues 16 18 featured Astro going on a rocket to space with General Hawkins hoping to find out the reason for multiple shuttle disappearances around a certain area As Astro and the flight crew prepare to depart Astro Girl hides on board with Dr I Q Plenty and Spud doing the same Dr Boynton appears one last time and gives Astro a special back up battery cell but warns Astro not to let it overload While in space the ship is attacked by a grotesque monster and crashes on the planet of the Cybots Astro and the crew are dragged to the palace of King Cosmo the leader of the Cybots The Cybots as it was hinted in earlier issues were a brand of extremely advanced androids who faced human discrimination and were forced to flee to space King Cosmo finds Astro Girl and orders his men to destroy her forcing Astro to fight them After Astro tells Cosmo that humans and robots are equals now he explodes from the overloading battery While I Q and the shuttle crew try to repair Astro King Cosmo announces that the population of Cybots will be returning to Earth along with the members of the previously captured ships The series editThe Astro Boy license was sold to Tony C Caputo by a Japanese national whom actually had no legal access to Tezuka s characters Since the bankruptcy of Mushi Production in 1973 and due to the ensuing court ordered settlement ownership of Tezuka s copyrights came into question and would not be resolved for almost thirty years 1 This person is only credited as Suzuki amp Associates in the fine print of most issues Brian Thomas was originally assigned as the lead artist in 1987 with Ken Steacy as the cover artist but Steacy offered to do full colour artwork and be paid in Canadian dollars Ken Steacy became the artist until issue 16 and writer for issues 8 17 before Brian Thomas took over fully Sales rose but the series was cancelled after NOW Comics got a deal for newsstand distribution for all of their titles 2 While dedicating itself to the 1960s anime s continuum the first nine issues were a longer drawn out version of only the anime s first episode Despite taking quite a few elements and character designs from the 1980s series the editors claimed that the then newer anime did not stand up to the old black and white version The comic possessed a greater level of war and robot to human violence greatly differing from Osamu Tezuka s original morals The comic seemed to be intended for an older audience until halfway through the series when Michael Dimpsey left NOW Comics and Ken Steacy became the main writer After this change of writers there were a string of light stand alone plots going until the cancellation of the series Characters editDr Boynton Astro s creator and father Boynton went slightly insane following his divorce and the death of his son Astor and became a recluse He built Astro as a replacement for his son but soon became disappointed with the result Boynton clashes with Astro Boy constantly at one point putting a tracker named Bruno in Astro and selling him to a circus Later on he appears to regret his actions and secretly shows up to help Astro He is based directly on the character Dr Tenma Dr Elefun A scientist vying for Boynton s role as Director of the institute whom later saves Astro from the robot circus In addition to teaching and taking care of Astro for a few issues he enrolls Astro in school and builds him two parents and a sister He is directly based on Professor Ochanomizu Mr Cacciatore The ringmaster and owner of the Robot Circus He buys Astro from Dr Boynton and sets him through various jobs and dangerous stunts in the circus threatening to activate a robot spider bomb that Boynton has implanted in Astro s chest cabinet He is directly based on Osamu Tezuka s character Ham Egg General Hawkins A short portly woman in charge of the local army base Before the current storyline Hawkins lends money to Boynton to help with building Astro However she expected Astro to be able to work with the military and tries to recapture him at the cost of destroying a neighborhood Tas Tamil A man at the Institute of Science who is attempting to take Boynton s place as director Tas begins working with General Hawkins and Cacciatore Despite being much more meeker and scheming he is based directly on the character Duke Red Bruno A robotic spider built by Boynton which is a combined tracker and bomb It is connected to a remote and designed to give a disobedient Astro an electric shock at the push of a button Simon A male android at the Robot Circus He befriends Astro immediately and tells him of the horrible conditions he and the robots are in Simon later on attempts to remove Bruno from Astro s system but Bruno detonates in Simon s hand and kills him Rebecca and Elmer Two researchers at the Institute of Science Elmer pines after Rebecca only to neutral response from her Late into the 10th issue they are killed by a creature called the Cyber Shark but rebuilt by Elefun as robots They then go to live with Astro as his parents The whole time they look identical to Astro s robot parents in the 1980s series Astro Girl Astro s sister built and given to him by Dr Elefun She is very much identical looking to her animated version there known as Uran She is much more curious and willing to get into trouble Dr I Q Plenty A short arrogant scientist who tries to become the new leader of the Institute of Science He is pushy and indignant about becoming the director and on the side he attempts to woo Rebecca I Q lives alone his only companion a dog named Spud who wears a special collar that enables him to talk I Q is based entirely on Dr Fooler an obscure character in Tezuka s manga Astor Boynton Boynton s deceased son Astor did not get a lot of character development but he was shown to be an energetic and loving boy He sees firsthand the divorce of Boynton and his wife Jean One day Boynton breaks his promise to take Astor to the zoo but programs a robotic car to take Astor there alone Halfway through the truck a large truck hits Astor s car and kills him He is based directly on Tobio Tenma Kristal Kleer A young girl in Astro s class whom he meets in issue 11 She is very friendly and later on affectionate to Astro whom calls her Kris End of the series editThere was a small team of artists working on the series many of them completing two or more tasks NOW Comics was slowly reaching bankruptcy 3 and company president Tony C Caputo would reportedly forget to pay his employees or simply cut down their payrolls 4 This began to greatly affect the quality of Ken Steacy s later issues 5 Eventually despite rising sales for Brian Thomas s issues the series was cancelled and removed from circulation while NOW s version of Speed Racer continued on for a few years afterwards A short Astro Boy story by Thomas originally made in mid 1987 did appear in issue 17 of NOW Comics s Speed Racer comic 6 It was published February 1989 the same month as Osamu Tezuka s death References edit Schodt Frederik L The Astro Boy Essays Osamu Tezuka Mighty Atom and the Manga Anime Revolution Pages 95 and 96 Stone Bridge Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 933330 54 9 Astro Boy Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2010 08 10 It s So Long For NOW Caputo Files for Bankruptcy Liquidation The Comics Journal 140 February 1991 pp 11 12 Creators Accuse NOW of Non Payment The Comics Journal 127 February 1989 p 5 15 Editorial Direction Lacking at NOW The Comics Journal 127 February 1989 p 9 Astro Boy Archived from the original on 2011 07 06 Retrieved 2010 08 10 External links editAstro Boy at the Grand Comics Database Astro Boy at the Comic Book DB archived from the original Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Original Astro Boy amp oldid 1186742243, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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