"Dragon Ball" is one of the best-selling manga franchises of all time, spawning countless anime series, films and video games. Millions have been paying tribute on social media, including Emmanuel Macron.
Image: JIJI Press/AFP/Getty Images
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Japanese comic creator Akira Toriyama has died, his studio said Friday, aged 68.
Creator of the best-selling "Dragon Ball" series and other popular anime, Toriyama's genre-defining artwork enchanted millions around the world and helped propel the genre beyond Japan and into international markets.
In just six hours, some 2.5 million messages were posted on social media website X (formerly Twitter), paying tribute to Toriyama. Among them was French President Emmanuel Macron, who wrote: "To Akira Toriyama and the millions of fans who grew up with him," sharing one of his images.
Global hit
The "Dragon Ball" manga series was first serialized in 1984, with millions of copies sold worldwide. It was also adapted into an animated TV series distributed in more than 80 countries. It made the large screen as well as the small, and was the feature of video games too.
Toriyama died on March 1 of a blood clot in his brain, Bird Studio said in a statement. His death comes as a shock, as the studio wrote: "He was working enthusiastically on many projects, and there was still much he was looking forward to accomplishing."
'Dragon Ball' gave Toriyama international acclaimImage: Richard A. Brooks/AFP/Getty Images
Eiichiro Oda, creator of the blockbuster manga "One Piece," said Toriyama's influence was like a "big tree" to younger people in the industry.
"He showed us all these things manga can do, a dream of going to another world," Oda said in a statement. His passing leaves "a hole too big to fill."
Bird Studio thanked fans and said: "We hope that Akira Toriyama's unique world of creation continues to be loved by everyone for a long time to come."
Born in the Japanese city of Nagoya in 1955, his first works first appeared in 1978 in the manga section of the magazine Weekly Shonen Jump.
A series, "Dr Slump," about a female robot, Arale Norimaki, living in Penguin Village was his first hit, before embarking upon "Dragon Ball" with its alien, earth-defending protagonist Son Goku.
Fans posed with a statue of Goku in Tokyo on Friday Image: Miho Takahashi/Yomiuri Shimbun/AP/picture alliance
The sequel to the original series, "Dragon Ball Z," also introduced Goku's son Gohan, and the 2022 movie continued this story with "Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero" by seeing him team-up with his father's old rival Piccolo.
In 2019, Toriyama was made a French knight of the Order of Arts and Letters and was announced as a 2024 winner of Tokyo Anime Award Festival's lifetime achievement honor along with "Dragon Ball" voice actor Toshio Furukawa.
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Family call for privacy
Toriyama's website statement also said: "We inform you this sad news, with gratefulness for your kindness during his lifetime. Funeral service was held with his family and very few relatives."
Following his wishes for tranquillity, we respectfully inform you that we would not accept flowers, condolences gifts, visiting, offerings and others," though a "commemorative gathering" is planned for the future.
Manga and anime beyond Japan
Akira, Dragonball and Pokemon: Manga is more than just hype among teenagers. Japanese comics have a long history, and have been successful in Europe for years.
Image: Naoki Urasawa/Big Comic Spirits/Shogakukan
Huge variety
There is a huge variety of manga, "Kodomo" for young children, "Shojo" for female teenagers, "Shonen" for male teenagers, "Seinen" for (young) men and "Josei" for (young) women. The last three, which explore Japanese everyday life, are expanded by a variety of science fiction worlds or the depiction of sexual fantasies.
Image: Naoki Urasawa/Big Comic Spirits/Shogakukan
Heidi, anime-style
In Germany, anime first became known to a wider (children's) audience in the 1970s and 1980. Children's series including "Heidi," "Maya the Bee" and "Vicky the Viking" were co-productions that used material from Western children's literature. The anime style was introduced to audiences via familiar stories suitable for children.
Image: ddp images
Sailor Moon and other female heroes
Anime and manga, which were usually their templates, grew in popularity at the same time. Popular anime series in the 1990s included "Sailor Moon" and "Mila Superstar." The strong female characters have a considerable fan base in Germany to this day.
"Akira" is a 2,200-page epic by Katsuhiro Otomo about the struggle for survival of a group of teenagers and children with special powers in a post-apocalyptic Tokyo. The first volume published in Germany in 1991 was in color and adapted to Western habits. Today, manga are mostly in black and white and are read from back to front, as they are in Japan.
Image: Carlsen
Breakthrough with Dragonball
At least in Germany, the Dragonball series were the breakthrough for Japanese comics in 1998. Akira Toriyama's 8,000-page adventure saga was a huge success. In black and white and in Japanese reading style, in an inexpensive paperback format, the manga was a hit with young people and children.
Image: Joel SagetAFP/Getty Images
Historical manga
Manga have a historical dimension, too — many refer to the picture stories in woodblock printing, which became a mass phenomenon in Japan from 1680 onward. The most famous graphic storyteller of the Edo period (1603 to 1868), Katsushika Hokusai (1760-1849, seen in a self-portrait), called them manga.
Image: CPA Media Co. Ltd/picture alliance
Pokemon: Manga around the world
The original folding books of the Edo period feature the same whimsical creatures that found their way into children's rooms in the 21st century as Pokemons. They all come from the rich cosmos of the Yokai, the Japanese demons. These wondrous, at times ludicrous creatures inspired the manga and games culture, and Japanese horror and monster films.
Image: United Archives/kpa/picture alliance
Netflix moves in
"Spirited Away," the story of a little girl's visit to a bathhouse for Japan's more than 40 million gods, also originated in this fantastical world. Hayao Miyazaki fleshed it out into an anime that reached a worldwide audience via Netflix.
Image: United Archives/picture alliance
Manga goes Hollywood
Hollywood too discovered the manga/anime/video game connection. In 2017, "Ghost in the Shell" by Masamune Shirow, one of the best-known manga, was released as a blockbuster film adaptation starring Scarlett Johansson, a casting that brought accusations of whitewashing.
Image: Paramount Picturesx/ZUMA/IMAGO
God of Manga, Osamu Tezuka
Osamu Tezuka (1928-1989) is considered the founder of modern manga. He regarded himself as a humanist and pacifist, skeptical of swift technological and social developments and was sensitive in his examination of his era. "Astro Boy," "Black Jack," "Princess Sapphire" and "Kimba" are his best-known works.
Image: Kyodo/MAXPPP/dpa/picture-alliance
Naoki Urasawa and other mangaka
In the West, too, major exhibitions and retrospectives celebrate the artistic quality of the works of mangaka — the people who create manga — including Naoki Urasawa (pictured), Jiro Taniguchi and the recently deceased Kazuki Takahashi. Manga is increasingly recognized as a valuable cultural asset, not just a temporary youth cult.
Early on, manga addressed taboo subjects in the West. There are entire manga sections on homosexuality, the Shonen manga for male love. Tsumuji Yoshimura's "The Gender of Mona Lisa" poses the question of gender identity. The manga is after all set in a world in which all people are born genderless.