Gin to Kin
Gin to Kin | |
銀と金 | |
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Genre | Gambling[1][2] |
Manga | |
Written by | Nobuyuki Fukumoto |
Published by | Futabasha |
Imprint | Action Comics |
Magazine | Action Pizazz |
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | 1992 – 1996 |
Volumes | 11 |
Television drama | |
Directed by |
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Produced by |
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Written by |
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Music by | Kuniyuki Morohashi |
Studio | Dai-Ei TV Film |
Original network | TV Tokyo |
Original run | January 7, 2017 – March 25, 2017 |
Episodes | 12 + 1 |
Gin to Kin (銀と金, lit. "Silver and Gold") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Nobuyuki Fukumoto. It was serialized in Futabasha's Action Pizazz from 1992 to 1996, and compiled in 11 tankōbon volumes. The series portrays the machinations of men living in the underworld, including speculative stock wars and backroom deals with politicians, deadly struggles for life against vengeful and crazed murderers, and Fukumoto's signature gambling games. After running for 108 chapters, the serialization ended abruptly and discontinued. Gin to Kin has also been adapted into seven direct-to-video movies and a 12-episode television drama.
Characters
[edit]Ginji's Group
[edit]- Ginji Hirai (平井 銀二, Hirai Ginji)
- Portrayed by: Kiyoshi Nakajō (Direct-to-video movies), Lily Franky (TV drama)
- He works as a fixer in the underground society under the alias "Silver King". His nickname is "Gin". He has outstanding capabilities in every respect and a unique philosophy of life. He draws Morita into the underworld as a man who fits the "conditions" and expects him to grow and develop his talents. With his demonic train of thought, he squeezes money out of the weak and the wicked, but his greatest ambition is to use powerful politicians such as Izawa to control the country's economic world, believing that it takes a greater evil to defeat evil.
- Tetsuo Morita (森田 鉄雄, Morita Tetsuo)
- Portrayed by: Kōsuke Toyohara (Direct-to-video movies), Sosuke Ikematsu (TV drama)
- Though he was no more than a penniless gambling addict, after being approached by Ginji Hirai at the racetrack, he decides to live in the underworld where the wicked hold on to the money. On one hand, he has the sharpness and genius to see through his opponents' lies and win, but he also possesses monstrous luck, sometimes acting on the principle of profit or loss, which Ginji and the others do not have. He admires Ginji's villainous nature and his genius for acquiring money, and aspires to surpass him by becoming the "gold" to his "silver."
- Iwao Yasuda (安田 巌, Yasuda Iwao)
- Portrayed by: Makita Sports (TV drama)
- A former member of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department. Of all the members, he is often portrayed as trusting Morita in particular.
- Yūzō Tatsumi (巽 有三, Tatsumi Yūzō)
- Portrayed by: Asami Usuda (as Kyōko Tatsumi (巽 京子, Tatsumi Kyōko), TV drama)
- A former newspaper reporter. Using his experience from the occupation, he supports Ginji by gathering information. He always wears sunglasses and never exposes his face.
- Masashi Funada (船田 正志, Funada Masashi)
- Portrayed by: Jun Murakami (TV drama)
- A retired public prosecutor who belonged to the Tokyo District Public Prosecutor's Special Criminal Investigation Department and is a broker who deals with companies based on their background. Of all the members, he appears in the story the least.
- Ryōhei Kawamatsu (川松 良平, Kawamatsu Ryōhei)
- Portrayed by: Ken Kaneko (Direct-to-video movies)
- A young man who joined the group after the horse racing match. Like Morita, he got engrossed in gambling and ended up shouldering a debt of 4 million yen. The resemblance between him and his target, Yōichi Kōno's fourth son, leads Ginji to come up with a secret plan and put the operation into action.
Miscellaneous
[edit]- Takeshi Domon (土門 猛, Domon Takeshi)
- Portrayed by: Gorō Ōishi (TV drama)
- President of Teinichi Bank. He was caught to be in a collusive relationship by Ginji's group. The collusion was out of the kindness of wanting to support his daughter's marriage partner, Diet member Kaidō. At first he was hostile, but Ginji persuaded him, and from then on, they put their trust in each other and became powerful collaborators.
- Atsushi Izawa (伊沢 敦志, Izawa Atsushi)
- The number 2 of Takemoto Party, the largest faction of the Constitutional Democratic Party (modeled after the Liberal Democratic Party). He is asked by Morita to help save Ginji and the others, and although he is successfully deceived in the end, he admires Morita's imposing attitude and cooperates with Ginji's team.
- Tetsu Umeya (梅谷 哲, Umeya Tetsu)
- Portrayed by: Dankan (TV drama)
- The top manager of Marutomi General Business Group, which develops hotels and real estate businesses nationwide. He has a complex about his ugly looks, which is why he is aware that he is a "monkey who does not have money" and believes in the power of cash. However, Ginji rescued him from his role when he was about to go bankrupt after spending most of his assets in a stock purchase war. After Ginji was captured, he introduced Izawa, with whom he had a previous relationship, to Morita.
- Kenji Ariga (有賀 研二, Ariga Kenji)
- Portrayed by: Tōru Tezuka (TV drama)
- A murderer who has brought about seven serial murder incidents in one city and six prefectures of the whole district of Kanto, and shook the world with atrocities such as cutting the body with the victim still alive.
- Akio Nakajō (中条 明夫, Nakajō Akio)
- Portrayed by: Shirō Sano (as Akio Nakajima (中島 昭夫, Nakajima Akio), TV drama)
- An art dealer whose business is failing due to the recession. In his early life he was a naive young man who wanted to become a painter after being struck by Paul Cézanne's work in an art museum, but his mind was warped by years of peering into the dark side of the business.
- Mitsunari Kawata (川田 三成, Kawata Mitsunari)
- A swindler who reached out to Morita when he was about to be charged an outrageous fee at Nakajō's club. Later, with the promise of splitting the rewards evenly, he went along with Morita's plan, helping him to purchase a counterfeit from a Spanish syndicate.
- Mio Itō (伊藤 美緒, Itō Mio)
- Portrayed by: Sara Takatsuki (live-action TV series)[3]
- A waitress at the coffee shop Morita used to visit. She was the catalyst for the match against Saijō. She is in love with Morita and asks for a relationship with him after the fight is settled, but is declined.
- Shinya Saijō (西条 進也, Saijō Shinya)
- Portrayed by: Shunsuke Daitō (as Tatsuya Saijō (西条 達也, Saijō Tatsuya), TV drama)[3]
- The second son of the president of Saijō Constructions, a first-class corporation. With his mates Arita, the eldest son of the president of a real estate company and Okabe, the eldest son of the president of a pharmaceutical company, they play poker and cheat on young women, keeping their money and bodies in their hands.
- Hitoshi Kuramae (蔵前 仁, Kuramae Hitoshi)
- Portrayed by: Akira Emoto (TV drama)[3]
- The chairman of the massive group "Seikyō," which has risen to the top in one generation, and an old man with a huge amount of wealth. He holds gambling parties for politicians and pays them if they win, and even if they lose, he pays them with a letter of credit with a low interest rate, and cozies up to political power by not charging those who give him something in return for his policies. On the other hand, he calls those who can not pay his bills "domesticated," literally locking them in cages "until they die," feeding them nothing but food and pornographic videos, without even a clock in sight. As a result, he takes great pleasure in watching the destruction of human dignity in modern society while having a drink in hand.
- Hidemine Kamui (神威 秀峰, Kamui Hidemine)
- The seventh patriarch of the Kamui family, he is 85 years old and insane enough to be willing to kill his sons for himself and the Kamui family. Prehistoric traditions passed down through the clan forced the brothers to fight with each other, and as a result, a horrible revenge tragedy was born. His given name is derived from Shūhō Satō (same kanji spelling), a manga artist who worked as Fukumoto's assistant at the time.
- Katsuteru Kamui (神威 勝輝, Kamui Katsuteru)
- The eldest son of the Kamui family and a member of the Lower House. Fed up with the patriarchal power that has made the brothers compete with each other, he tries to murder them all. Unlike the other brothers, he is a cunning leader.
- Katsunobu Kamui (神威 勝信, Kamui Katsunobu)
- The second son of the Kamui family and the governor of G Prefecture. He is weak-minded and only thinks about his own self-preservation. Unlike Katsuteru and Katsuyuki, his spirit is still in the realm of the everyman. He is the only one of his older brothers who is not depicted as bullying Katsuhiro in the past.
- Katsuyuki Kamui (神威 勝幸, Kamui Katsuyuki)
- The third son of the Kamui family and the president of Kamuy, a major consumer electronics manufacturer. He was told by Katsuhiro that he would make him one of the surviving siblings because he once ran away from home with Katsuhiro when he failed his university entrance examinations, but in reality he was hated because he treated Katsuhiro coldly after the runaway was over.
- Katsuhiro Kamui (神威 勝広, Kamui Katsuhiro)
- The fourth son of the Kamui family. He was subjected to bizarre discrimination in his family for more than 20 years due to his poor performance. Together with Kunio, he plots revenge against Hidemine and his brothers.
- Kunio Yoshizumi (吉住 邦男, Yoshizumi Kunio)
- The fifth son of the Kamui family, who is a half-brother to the above-mentioned brothers and has been kept a secret from everyone around him. He was confined and abused at an early age because he had a mild brain injury and could not go to school, currently living as a manservant. He had never received any affection from anyone but his mother and Katsuhiro. Together with Katsuhiro, they decide to take revenge on the Kamui family.
- Saori Tanaka (田中 沙織, Tanaka Saori)
- The nurse in charge of Hidemine who was locked up in the hospital. She becomes Morita's sidekick in the Hidemine rescue mission and takes the lead, but behind the scenes, she is teaming up with the Kamui brothers to lure Hidemine out.
- Yukinori Okabe (岡部 幸範, Okabe Yukinori)
- The strongest horseman in Japan with an unprecedented 2,000 victories. He is antagonistic towards Kōno, who has a penchant for money and power, but he initially tries to stop what appeared to be a reckless contest with Kōno. He resonates with Ginji's persuasion and sides with Ginji's camp. He is modeled after Yukio Okabe, a former horseman.
- Yōichi Kōno (河野 洋一, Kōno Yōichi)
- The last boss of the story. He is president of the Constitutional Democratic Party (modeled after the Liberal Democratic Party) and boss of the agro-industrialists. He joins Ginji in a horse race to become the next prime minister. He is modeled after Yōhei Kōno.
Media
[edit]Manga
[edit]Volume list
[edit]No. | Release date | ISBN | ||
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1 | July 17, 1992[4] | 4-575-81810-0 | ||
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2 | January 12, 1993[5] | 4-575-81845-3 | ||
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3 | April 12, 1993[6] | 4-575-81864-X | ||
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4 | September 11, 1993[7] | 4-575-81898-4 | ||
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5 | December 11, 1993[8] | 4-575-81918-2 | ||
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6 | June 13, 1994[9] | 4-575-81964-6 | ||
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7 | November 28, 1994[10] | 4-575-82010-5 | ||
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8 | May 27, 1995[11] | 4-575-82057-1 | ||
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9 | December 9, 1995[12] | 4-575-82109-8 | ||
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10 | March 12, 1996[13] | 4-575-82130-6 | ||
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11 | July 11, 1996[14] | 4-575-82163-2 | ||
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Direct-to-video films
[edit]A total of seven movies with the title Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold (闇金の帝王 銀と金, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin) starring Kiyoshi Nakajō as Ginji Hirai were released on VHS and later DVD between 1993 and 1997. The films feature Kōsuke Toyohara as Tetsuo Morita in volumes 1-5, and Ken Kaneko as Ryōhei Kawamatsu in volumes 6-7. In the fourth volume, some story developments were changed due to inconsistencies in depictions in the original manga.
Vol. | Title | Written by | Directed by | Original release |
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1 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold (闇金の帝王 銀と金, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin)" | Masato Katō | Shun Nakahara | September 22, 1993[15] |
2 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 2 (闇金の帝王 銀と金2, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 2)" | Itsumichi Isomura | January 28, 1994[15] | |
3 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 3 (闇金の帝王 銀と金3, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 3)" | Midori Kogane | Katsuji Kanazawa | April 28, 1994[16] |
4 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 4 - Hellish Underworld Mahjong (闇金の帝王 銀と金4 地獄の裏麻雀, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 4 Jigoku no Ura Mājan)" | June 2, 1995[17] | ||
5 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 5 - Hereditary Homicide (闇金の帝王 銀と金5 相続殺人, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 5 Sōzoku Satsujin)" | April 5, 1996[18] | ||
6 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 6 - Trap of Fear (闇金の帝王 銀と金6 戦慄の罠, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 6 Senritsu no Wana)" | Noboru Sugimura | Hiroyuki Tsuji | January 1, 1997[19] |
7 | "Black Market Emperor: Silver and Gold 7 - Underworld Horse Racing Hell (闇金の帝王 銀と金7 裏競馬地獄, Yamikin no Teiō Gin to Kin 7 Ura Keiba Jigoku)" | Noboru Sugimura Hiroyuki Tsuji |
March 28, 1997[20] |
Drama
[edit]A 12-episode Japanese television drama series adaptation with the same title starring Sosuke Ikematsu aired on TV Tokyo's "Saturday Drama 24" drama slot from January 7 to March 25, 2017, every Sunday (Saturday midnight) from 0:20-0:50 AM.[21][22][23] Of the 12 episodes, episodes 1 to 3 cover the Stock Speculation arc, 4 to 6 are the Cézanne arc, 7 to 9 are the Poker arc, and 10 to 12 are the Mahjong arc. The series was later made available on Amazon Prime Video US with English subtitles.[24] In addition, a bonus 13th episode adapting the Serial Killer Ariga arc was released exclusively on Amazon Prime Video in Japan on March 25, 2017. A Blu-ray/DVD box containing "director's cut" versions of all 12 episodes, as well as the Amazon-exclusive episode, was released on October 4, 2017. Pre-order bonuses included a mug illustrated by Fukumoto offered by the TV Tokyo main shop, and a B2-sized poster signed by Ikematsu, Lily Franky and Fukumoto offered by Amazon.[25]
Episode list
[edit]# | Title | Written by | Directed by | Original airdate |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | "The Worst Money Game (最悪のマネーゲーム, Saiaku no manēgēmu)" | Junpei Yamaoka | Tomoyuki Furumaya | January 7, 2017[22] |
2 | "The Mind Game Between Two Evils Begins (悪VS悪の心理戦始まる, Aku VS aku no shinrisen hajimaru)" | January 14, 2017[26] | ||
3 | "Psychological Battle With Heretic Politicians (外道政治家との心理戦, Gedō seijika to no shinrisen)" | January 21, 2017[27] | ||
4 | "700 Million Fraud VS Black-Market Picture Dealer (7億騙し合いVS闇画商, 7-oku damashiai VS yami gashō)" | Nonji Nemoto | Yūji Nakamae | January 28, 2017[28] |
5 | "Crossing the Bridge of 600 Million Yen Bills (6億の札束の橋を渡れ, 6-oku no satsutaba no hashi o watare)" | February 4, 2017[29] | ||
6 | "The 700 Million Fraud is Settled! (決着! 7億の騙し合い, Ketchaku! 7-oku no damashiai)" | February 11, 2017[30] | ||
7 | "Life-Risking Poker For 1.5 Billion (15億命賭けのポーカー, 15-oku inochi-gake no pōkā)" | Junpei Yamaoka | Tomoyuki Furumaya | February 18, 2017[31] |
8 | "No-Limits Poker From Hell (地獄の青天井ポーカー, Jigoku no aotenjō pōkā)" | February 25, 2017[32] | ||
9 | "The Hellish Poker Concludes! (決着! 地獄のポーカー, Ketchaku! Jigoku no pōkā)" | March 4, 2017[33] | ||
10 | "One Draw, 100 Million, the Unluckiest Mahjong (1ツモ1憶 最凶の麻雀, 1 tsumo 1-oku saikyō no mājan)" | Nonji Nemoto | March 11, 2017[34] | |
11 | "600 Billion Mahjong, the Miraculous Move (6000億麻雀 奇跡の一手, 6000-oku mājan kiseki no itte)" | March 18, 2017[35] | ||
12 | "The Mahjong Game For 600 Billion Concludes! (決着!! 6000億麻雀, Ketchaku!! 6000-oku mājan)" | March 25, 2017[23] | ||
13 | "Serial Killer: Ariga Arc (連続殺人鬼・有賀編, Renzoku satsujinki Ariga-hen)" | Yōsuke Masaike | Yūji Nakamae | March 25, 2017[36] |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Chapman, Paul (December 7, 2016). "Lily Franky Joins Cast of "Kin to Gin" Live-Action TV Drama". Crunchyroll. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
Adaptation based on high-stakes gambling manga by Nobuyuki Fukumoto hits TV Tokyo in January of 2017
- ^ Titsoff, Ader (January 22, 2018). "10 High Stakes Gambling Anime & Manga Japanese Fans Love". GoBoiano. Archived from the original on January 25, 2018. Retrieved July 24, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ a b c "池松壮亮、主演ドラマの刺客解禁に「楽しみしかない」". コミックナタリー. 2016-12-27. Retrieved 2017-01-07.
- ^ 銀と金 1 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 2 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 3 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 4 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 5 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 6 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 7 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 8 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 9 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 10 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ 銀と金 11 (in Japanese). Futabasha. Archived from the original on August 25, 2019. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ a b "闇金の帝王 銀と金". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ "闇金の帝王 銀と金3". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ "闇金の帝王 銀と金4 地獄の裏麻雀". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ "闇金の帝王 銀と金5 相続殺人". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ "闇金の帝王 銀と金6 戦慄の罠". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ "闇金の帝王 銀と金7 裏競馬地獄". Yahoo! Movies.
- ^ Yuan, Kevin (December 6, 2016). "Live-Action Gin to Kin Television Series Announces Additional Cast Members". Anime News Network. Retrieved October 6, 2018.
- ^ a b "第1話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ a b "第12話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "Silver and Gold". Amazon. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "DVD&Blu-ray" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第2話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第3話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第4話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第5話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第6話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第7話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第8話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第9話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第10話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "第11話" (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ "銀と金" (in Japanese). Amazon. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
Further reading
[edit]- Torai, Eisu (August 4, 2015). 『カイジ』『天』『アカギ』『黒沢』『銀と金』……どれから読めば良い? 福本伸行作品ガイド. Manga Honz (in Japanese). Honz. Archived from the original on August 8, 2015.
- Kobayashi, Takuma (June 12, 2017). ギャンブル漫画史上最も痺れる台詞が登場する福本漫画の最高傑作『銀と金』. Manga Honz (in Japanese). Honz. Archived from the original on June 12, 2017.
External links
[edit]- Gin to Kin official drama website at TV Tokyo (in Japanese)