Gokū no Daibōken
Japanese anime television series
Gokū no Daibōken | |
悟空の大冒険 | |
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Genre | Comedy, fantasy, shenmo |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Gisaburô Sugii |
Produced by | Eichi Kawabata |
Music by | Seichiro Uno |
Studio | Mushi Productions |
Original network | Fuji TV |
Original run | January 7, 1967 – September 30, 1967 |
Episodes | 39 |
Gokū no Daibōken (悟空の大冒険, lit. Adventures of Wukong) is a Japanese anime series that was directed by Gisaburō Sugii. Made by Mushi Productions, the anime's 39 episodes were broadcast on Fuji TV between January 7 and September 30, 1967. The anime is based on the 16th-century novel Journey to the West.
Characters
- Goku (悟空, Gokū) Based on Sun Wukong, the monkey king of legend, from Journey to the West. Voiced by: Kazuko Ute
- Tatsuko (竜子, Tatsuko) Voiced by: Eiko Masuyama
- Hakkai (八戒, Hakkai) Based on Zhu Bajie from Journey to the West. Voiced by: Junpei Takiguchi
- Sa Gojo (沙悟浄, Sa Gojō) Based on Sha Wujing from Journey to the West. Voiced by: Kinya Aikawa
- Sanzo (三蔵法師, Sanzō Hōshi) Based on Tang Sanzang, the monk from Journey to the West. Voiced by: Nachi Nozawa
- Narrator Voiced by: Shinsuke Chikaishi
References
External links
- Gokū no Daibōken (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Official Tezuka Gokū no Daibōken website (in Japanese)
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- A Supplement to the Journey to the West (c. 1640)
Animated |
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Live action |
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- Monkey: Journey to the West (play)
- Patalliro Saiyuki! (1978)
- Starzinger (1979)
- Dragon Ball (1984)
- Saiyūki (1997)
- The Monkey King (1998)
- Shinzo (2000)
- Monkey Typhoon (2001)
- Xin (2003)
- American Born Chinese (2006)
- Saint
- Ether Saga Odyssey
- Enslaved: Odyssey to the West
- Fantasy Westward Journey
- Ganso Saiyūki: Super Monkey Daibōken
- Legend of Wukong
- Monkey Hero
- Monkey King: Hero Is Back
- Monkey Magic
- Pokémon
- Saiyuki: Journey West
- SonSon
- Westward Journey Online II
- Whomp 'Em
- Yūyūki
- Black Myth: Wukong
- Monkey (1942 novel)
- Griever: An American Monkey King in China (1986 novel)
- Tripmaster Monkey (1989 novel)
- Four Great Classical Novels
- Gao Village
- Gao Village Arc
- Mount Huaguo
- Shuilian Cave
- Tongtian River
- Liusha River
- List of media adaptations of Journey to the West
- Monkey King Festival
- Ruyi Jingu Bang
- Journey to the West (2008 soundtrack)
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