Area 88

Area 88 (エリア88, Eria Hachi-Jū-Hachi) is a Japanese manga series by Kaoru Shintani serialized between 1979 and 1986. The story is about a young pilot named Shin Kazama and his experiences at Area 88, a mercenary air force base secluded in the desert of a war-torn country. Shin goes from head of his class at a world-renowned aviation school, dating the beautiful daughter of an airline president, to a mercenary fighter pilot bound to Area 88 by a three-year contract that he was duped into signing by a jealous and competitive childhood friend. He is determined to earn $1.5 million to buy his way out of the obligation and return home, and killing becomes second nature to him as he quickly rises to the top rank at Area 88. Overwrought with shame and self-loathing for what he has become, Shin begins to question whether he is still fighting for survival, or, like his fellow mercenaries, for the sheer excitement and camaraderie of battle.

Area 88
Cover for the first manga volume, featuring Shin Kazama.
エリア88
(Eria Hachi-Jū-Hachi)
Manga
Written byKaoru Shintani
Published byShogakukan
English publisher
MagazineShōnen Big Comic
DemographicShōnen
Original run19791986
Volumes23
Original video animation
Directed byHisayuki Toriumi
Produced byYuji Nunokawa
Written byAkiyoshi Sakai
Music byIchiro Nitta
StudioStudio Pierrot
Licensed by
ADV Films
Released February 5, 1985 August 15, 1986
Runtime
Episodes3
Notes
  • First two films have been compiled into a single film in some versions.
Anime television series
Directed byIsamu Imakake
Produced byRyōsuke Takahashi
Written byHiroshi Ōnogi
Music byKazunori Miyake
StudioGroup TAC
Licensed by
Madman Entertainment
ADV Films
ADV Films
Original networkAnimax, Asahi Broadcasting
Original run January 8, 2004 March 25, 2004
Episodes12

Area 88 was among the first three manga to be translated into English and published in North America.[1] It has been adapted into an OVA in 1985,[2][3] a 12-episode anime television series in 2004, and a video game in 1989 (released in North America as U.N. Squadron in 1991). It is also a brand of model aircraft in Japan. While it appeals to aviation fans for its realistic depictions of aircraft and aerial combat, it has also been critically acclaimed for its strong character development and Shintani's poignant storytelling, combining action, tragedy, romance, and comedy. In 1985, the manga received the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen.[4]

Story

Area 88 takes place between the late 1970s to early 1980s and is largely set in a war-embroiled Middle Eastern country called the Kingdom of Arslan. The war uses mercenary fighter pilots, with its headquarters at a secret desert air force base called Area 88. Up-and-coming airline pilot Shin Kazama gets tricked into signing up by his "friend" Satoru Kanzaki. Facing execution for deserting from Area 88, Shin reluctantly turns into a fighter pilot and attempts to serve his three-year contract.

Area 88 attracts all kinds of people with all kinds of assorted and often sordid pasts. Among the other mercenaries are Mickey Simon, an American who previously served as a fighter pilot in the United States Navy and couldn't adjust to normal life after his tour of duty in the Vietnam War. Mickey becomes Shin's best friend at Area 88. Another familiar sight at Area 88 is McCoy, a greedy weapons dealer who sells everything the mercenaries need from toilet paper to their planes. The commander of Area 88 is Arslanian Prince Saki Vashutal, though his royal heritage means nothing there. Also prominent on the base are war photographer Go "Rocky" Mutsugi (presented as Makoto Shinjou in the 2004 anime), Danish pilot Greg Gates (later featured in the video game adaptation), and the numerous pilots with whom Shin flies (most of them die over the course of the series, often in the issue in which they were introduced). Though the series focuses mostly on Shin, other characters (notably Rocky and Mickey) did have their own individual storylines.

There are only three ways to leave Area 88: Survive three years, pay off a USD 1.5-million contract in bounties, or desertion, which is a capital offense. With each enemy plane brought down, Shin faces his shifting acceptance of the violence and killing that fills every day, as well as suppressing his feelings of wrongdoing.

Time setting

Area 88 is usually placed during the late 1970s, or early 1980s, although evidence points towards the latter in the OVA's case. First, during Act 1 of the OVA when the calendar in Shin's room is first seen, Shin marks off the date Wednesday, April 11. Then, during the flashback where Shin unknowingly signs the contract from Kanzaki, the date on the contract reads 'le 29 avril 1979' or April 29, 1979. Based on the calendar marking, it is some point past 1979, and the nearest year where April 11 falls on a Wednesday is 1984. Secondly, the OVA featured the F/A-18 Hornet, which entered service in 1983. From the OVA's conclusion it is reasonable to suggest the end date is sometime in early 1986, given Shin's term in Arslan (two years, five months). However, this is directly contradicted by a scene in the third part of the OVA in which we see a calendar in Shin's room during his discharge, on Monday, Sept. 22, 1982. It is more likely that the animators were in error, both about the days of the week, and about the date of service of the F/A-18 (although its predecessor, the YF-17 could explain the date inconsistency, considering the similarity of design). They had made a similar error with the F-14 Tomcat in the second part of the OVA, depicting the F-14 in a bombing run over Vietnam, when the plane did not see actual combat and was not capable of air-to-ground attack until the 1990s (however, it did participate in the American withdrawal from Saigon by providing fighter escort to the helicopters carrying fleeing refugees).[5]

Variations

Each version of the Area 88 told slightly different variations on the same basic premise, and often shared individual story arcs. However, there are several key differences between each version, especially in the endings.

The original manga ending had Shin returning to Japan, but having lost all memory of Area 88. The English-language version published by Eclipse Comics was left unfinished and incomplete: Shin does not return to Japan. The rebels, operating unmanned fighter jets from a giant, mobile base - a "land-carrier" - have targeted Area-88 with a nuclear-armed, computer controlled drilling machine. Saki, meanwhile, has acquired an American B-1B bomber armed with nuclear weapons.

The first three-episode OVA adaptation from 1985 had Shin return to Area 88 in his F-20 fighter while the Area was being overrun by a devastating massive force of anti-government Mig-21 jets. His fate and those of Saki, Mickey, Greg and some other pilots is left uncertain.

The 2004 anime series truncated the story to just after Shin lost his F-5E, but in that continuity Shinjou, the photographer, manages to return to Japan just in time to derail Kanzaki's plot to marry Ryoko. The series also introduced the permanent characters of Kim, from the manga, and Saki's cousin Kitori, who appeared in the manga as Seilane Balnock.

Despite the consistent use of existing aircraft, the manga - unlike the anime adaptations - introduced, as the series progressed, a number of elements that may have been considered science fiction at the time but at least used existing technology. Such devices include a land-based aircraft carrier with its fleet of AI-controlled F/A-18 fighters. A rebel weapon called the Grand Slam is basically a ballistic missile modified with a drill machine. There was also other exotic weaponry, none of which appeared in either anime adaptation.

Media

Manga

The original Japanese manga of Area 88 was serialized in 23 volumes between 1979 and 1986 by Shogakukan.[6] Each volume was black and white with a painted color cover and contained several short stories called "missions." In all, there were 172 such missions across the 23 volumes. Shōnen Sunday later repackaged the 23 volumes into ten thick books under its Wide Volume product line.

Area 88, along with Mai, the Psychic Girl and The Legend of Kamui, was one of the first three manga to be translated to English and published in North America by Eclipse Comics and VIZ Media in May 1987.[1] It was published bi-weekly with each issue containing a single mission, of which the editors had planned to release all 172. The first 28 issues featured covers from the original manga plus some original artwork by Shintani, but as these resources were limited, the covers of issues #29-36 featured stills from the OVA film. With issue #37 in December 1988, VIZ Media took over the series, and in addition to featuring photographs of actual fighter jets on the cover, the publication went from bi-weekly to monthly and the price from $1.50 to $1.75. The series did not adjust well to the dramatic change, and with issue #42 in May 1989, without resolving the storyline, it was canceled. It was later run as a feature in Viz's Animerica Magazine, but only lasted until January 1995 without the series being completed.

OVA films

Area 88: Original OVA Series

Between February 5, 1985 and August 15, 1986,[7][8] Studio Pierrot produced a direct-to-video animated film trilogy for VHS and laserdisc. In 1992, Central Park Media's U.S. Manga Corps released the OVA series, subtitled in English, in North America for VHS and laserdisc, and re-released the first volume for DVD on 14 July 2000.

After Central Park Media's films license lapsed, ADV Films published a two episode theatrical edit of the OVA trilogy for DVD on 25 July 2006. Although having one less episode, the episodes themselves are longer. They have been reedited so that episode II is divided and added onto the first and the last episode respectively. As such, nothing is actually missing from the ADV collection, despite having a smaller episode count. The 2006 ADV collection is a two-DVD set, and features the original Japanese soundtrack as well as the dubbed English track, performed by the same cast who voiced the English dub of the TV series. The DVD content also includes an interview with Kaoru Shintani, and an introduction to the fighter jets portrayed in the series.[9]

Discotek Media acquired the license for the OVA series in 2018. It is scheduled to be reissued by Discotek on October 30, 2018.

Media

  • Area 88: Act I: Blue Skies of Betrayal (1985, VHS/LD; 1992, VHS; July 14, 2000, DVD)
  • Area 88: Act II: The Requirements of Wolves (1985, VHS/LD; 1992, VHS)
  • Area 88: Act III: Burning Mirage (1986, VHS/LD; 1992, VHS)
  • Area 88: Original OVA Series (July 25, 2006, DVD)

Anime television

An updated 12-episode anime television series with CG graphics, produced by Animax, Group TAC and Media Factory, began production in 2003 and premiered across Japan on the anime satellite television network, Animax from 8 January 2004 – 5 March 2004, who later aired the series across its other respective networks worldwide, including Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, South Asia, South Korea, Taiwan and other regions. The series featured the work of several prominent contemporary trance music artists during combat scenes, such as Rank 1, DJ Tiësto, and Svenson & Gielen. ADV Films licensed the series for North American distribution, releasing the series across the region, with the first DVD volume release being published on June 22, 2005[10] and the last volume being released on January 17, 2006.[11] The DVD release notably removed the licensed trance music, replacing it with a handful of original compositions by Miyake Kazunori reused across the series.

Video games

A shoot 'em up video game by Capcom was released in the arcades in 1989. It was released in the West as UN Squadron. Ports were released for the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Commodore 64, Super NES and ZX Spectrum.

In the game, the player could choose either Shin, Mickey, or Greg as the pilot to play. Each came with a different plane and various advantages; for example, Mickey could handle air-to-air dogfights well while Greg excelled at air-to-ground attacks. Each pilot also had special abilities; Shin mastered normal weaponry at the highest speed, Mickey inflicted extra damage with his armaments, and Greg recovered from attacks almost before they occurred. The Super NES release offered six fighter planes, with the F-8 Crusader as the default aircraft. The game also included various elements from the series, such as the land carrier.

In 1995, Family Soft produced two Area 88 games for the PC-9801.

An October 2014 crossover update for Ace Combat: Infinity added new aircraft used by the main characters of Area 88 in the game.

Board Game

Two special board games based on the franchise were released in the 1980s, but as so-called "Coterie" games, which are preordered editions and only go on limited sale at Japan's Game Market trade show. With mechanics based on the GDW board game Imperium, the Area 88 in Desert War and Peace in the Aslan Kingdom have the game counters, instructions and battle map (a fictional representation of the Sinai Peninsula) printed in standard bond paper, with players left to cut up the counters and attach them and the map in cardstock.

Toys/Model Kits

A line of Area 88 model kits was also produced, which are basically aircraft that are painted as they appeared in the series. Takara released a 1/100 line of aircraft kits, each with a 1/24 pilot figure in the early 1980s to coincide with the original manga stories. Kits included Shin's Crusader, F-5G Tiger II and F-20 Tigershark, Mickey's F-100 and F-14, Saki's Kfir, Greg's A-10 and two planes from the Counter-Governmental Air Force - a Yak-36 Forger and a Mig-27 Flogger-D.

The first release of 1/144 kits by Hasegawa in the early 1990s consisted of Mickey's F-14, Shin's F-8 and F-5, Seilane Balnock's Harrier, and Saki Vashtar's Kfir. Each kit had a 1/12 scale figure of the pilot in resin while the 1/144 plane kits were styrene plastic tooled up by Dragon models in Hong Kong. The third wave, released by Hasegawa in 1996, featured 1/72 kits of the same jets, but this time Hasegawa's own kit moldings were used. They comprised Saki's Kfir, Gregg's A-10, Shin's F-8, F-20, X-29 and Draken, and Mickey's F-14. Hasegawa also produced a 1/48 two-pack set in line with the 2004 TV series, consisting of Shin's F-8 and Mickey's F-14, plus a DVD.[12]

From January 2004 to December 2005, trading figure company The Other Corp released a line of 1/144 gashapon miniatures of various modern military aircraft that are painted as according to their actual appearance in the series, despite one of the offerings - the Su-47 Berkut - never having appeared at all.

Soundtracks

  • Area 88 Opening Theme: Mission - Fuga
Area 88: Sound File 1 (Released March 17, 2004) - Track listing[13]
No.TitleLength
1."MISSION (FUGA) (TV size)" 
2."Awakening" 
3."Dawn" 
4."Frontier land" 
5."Dry" 
6."Fight" 
7."Tension" 
8."The Anthem 2003" 
9."Desert Night" 
10."Desert Star" 
11."Desert Sun" 
12."Desert sunset" 
13."True makoto" 
14."Loneliness" 
15."Ambition" 
16."Convocation" 
17."Strategy meeting" 
18."Sortie" 
19."Out Of The Blue (Mauro Picotto Remix)" 
20."Flowers of one wheel" 
21."Heart shaking" 
22."Tenshi" 
23."Speed of sound" 
24."Bombed" 
25."Counterattack" 
26."Symsonic (Vocal Mix)" 
27."Ryoko..." 
28."Smile" 
29."Warm" 
30."Wrapped" 
31."Far" 
32."Sun also rises" 
33."Wings" 
34."angels theme (G-Aria) (TV size)" 
35."Dance in the Battlefield (TV size)" 
Area 88: Sound File 2 (Released March 17, 2004) - Track listing[14]
No.TitleLength
1."plot" 
2."ambition" 
3."destiny" 
4."trap" 
5."good job" 
6."dancer" 
7."On The Move (DuMonde Remix)" 
8."dogfight" 
9."Temptation" 
10."a hell on earth" 
11."stand by" 
12."lock on" 
13."Spread Your Wings" 
14."step by step" 
15."sin" 
16."Solstice" 
17."ryoko #1" 
18."ryoko #2" 
19."ryoko #3" 
20."memories" 
21."peace" 
22."serenity" 
23."light" 
24."We Know What You Did" 
25."True Sin" 
26."Dance in the Battlefield (English Version)" 
Area 88: Mission Cyber Trance (Released March 25, 2004) - Track listing[15]
No.TitleLength
1."Mission (FUGA) - (Original Extended Mix)" 
2."Awakening" 
3."The Anthem 2003" 
4."Out of The Blue (Mauro Picotto Remix)" 
5."Symsonic (Vocal Mix)" 
6."Tenshi" 
7."Traffic" 
8."Temptation" 
9."angels theme (G-Aria) - (Wippenberg Dub)" 
10."Solstice" 
11."We Know What You Did..." 
12."Obsession" 
13."On The Move (DuMonde Remix)" 
14."Spread Your Wings" 
15."Mission (FUGA) - (Rock in Heaven Mix)" 
16."angels theme (G-Aria) - (Cyber Trance Mix)" 

Development

For the release of the English dub to English-speaking countries, the ADR team at ADV Films sought the assistance of Capt. Kevin "Dumpster" Divers, a USAF officer to ensure that dialogue had proper air force jargon.[16]

Reception

Martin A. Stever reviewed Area 88 Space Gamer/Fantasy Gamer No. 83.[17] Stever commented that "The art is impressive, especially the ability to render moving jet aircraft. True to real war, characters are killed with regularity but not without remorse."[17]

Anime News Network praised Area 88's English dub released by ADV, especially with most of it done with the assistance of a consultant from the US Air Force.[18] Freetype gave the series a 7.0 out of 10, citing "Intense, fast, adrenaline-pumping dogfight action" while criticizing it for being one-dimensional for lack of some character development, lack of emphasis on action with the morals and drama watered down.[19]

gollark: It also might work out worse on consequentialist grounds to do it all the time.
gollark: I wouldn't expect them to put the entire image in or something, but IPFS URLs aren't that long.
gollark: I think someone made one which displays differently on different platforms, but I can't dig it out of my web history.
gollark: I'd expect at least IPFS or something.
gollark: Apparently most NFTs aren't actually remotely decentralized, and are just hosted on random servers somewhere without even validation that the served content matches a hash or something.

References

  1. Ward, Cynthia (2004-06-02). "Manga: Another SF/F Trend Missed by SF/F?". Archived from the original on 24 June 2006. Retrieved 2006-05-29.
  2. 映画 アニメ エリア88 [Theatrical Anime: Area 88] (in Japanese). AllCinema Movie & DVD Database. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  3. エリア88 [Area 88] (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Archived from the original on March 14, 2013. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  4. 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
  5. "Navy retires F-14, the coolest of cold warriors". USA Today. 2006-09-22. Retrieved 2010-04-25.
  6. Kaoru Shintani. コミックスリスト2 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  7. "第269回 OVAの時代始まる" (in Japanese). Anime Style. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  8. "第325回 1986年のOVA" (in Japanese). Anime Style. Retrieved June 10, 2013.
  9. "ADV Announces July 25 Releases". 2006-05-23. Archived from the original on 2006-10-20. Retrieved 2006-05-30.
  10. "ADV Deploys Area 88 July 19". Anime News Network. 2005-06-22. Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  11. "Gantz 10 Leads Off ADV's Jan 17 Releases". Anime News Network. 2005-12-17. Archived from the original on 25 February 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-01. Retrieved 2009-05-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. "Release "エリア88 SOUND FILE 1" by 三宅一徳". MusicBrainz. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  14. "Vol. 2-Area 88 Sound File: Japanimation: Amazon.co.uk: Music". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  15. "Area 88 Mission Cyber Trance: Japanimation: Amazon.co.uk: Music". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-14.
  16. "A Few Words from the ADR Director". ADV Films. Archived from the original on 2005-12-21. Retrieved 2012-10-28.
  17. Stever, Martin A. (October–November 1988). "The Ruler". Space Gamer/Fantasy Gamer. World Wide Wargames (83): 28.
  18. Theron Martin (2005-08-19). "Area 88 DVD 1 Review". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2012-10-28.
  19. "Area 88 (エリア88)". Freetype. Archived from the original on 2007-08-13. Retrieved 2012-10-28.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.