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Sukeban Deka

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Sukeban Deka
Cover of the first tankōbon volume, featuring Saki Asamiya
スケバン刑事
GenreAction, Detective
Manga
Written byShinji Wada
Published byHakusensha
ImprintHana to Yume Comics
MagazineHana to Yume
DemographicShōjo
Original run19751982
Volumes22
Television drama
Directed by
Written by
  • Noboru Sugimura
  • Tokio Tsuchiya
  • Akira Umino
  • Umihiko Tōno
  • Ichirō Yamanaka
  • Izō Hashimoto
StudioFuji Television
Toei Company
Original networkFNS (Fuji TV)
Original run April 11, 1985 October 30, 1985
Episodes24
Television drama
Sukeban Deka II: Shōjo Tekkamen Densetsu
Directed byHideo Tanaka, Toshio Ōi, Tarō Sakamoto, Morio Maejima
Written byTokio Tsuchiya, Izō Hashimoto, Noboru Sugimura, Hiroshi Toda, Ichirō Yamanaka
StudioFuji Television
Toei Company
Original networkFNS (Fuji TV)
Original run November 7, 1985 October 23, 1986
Episodes42
Television drama
Sukeban Deka III: Shōjo Ninpō-chō Denki
Directed byHideo Tanaka, Toshio Ōi, Tarō Sakamoto, Morio Maejima
Written byTokio Tsuchiya, Izō Hashimoto, Masayoshi Azuma, Junki Takegami, Kazuhiko Gōdo
StudioFuji Television
Toei Company
Original networkFNS (Fuji TV)
Original run October 30, 1986 October 29, 1987
Episodes42
Original video animation
Directed byHirota Takeshi
Produced byKazuyoshi Hirose
Written byHirota Takeshi
Music byTakatsugu Takao
StudioSido Limited
Licensed byADV Films
Released April 21, 1991 July 21, 1991
Runtime50 minutes each
Episodes2
Live-action films
Manga
Sukeban Deka If
Written byShinji Wada
Published byMedia Factory
ImprintMF Comics
PublishedJune 23, 2004
Volumes1
Manga
Toki o Kakeru Sukeban Deka
Written by
  • Shinji Wada (original story)
  • Saori Muronaga
Published byAkita Shoten
MagazineMonthly Princess
DemographicShōjo
Original runJanuary 6, 2021 – present
Manga
Re: Sukeban Deka
Written by
Published byAkita Shoten
MagazineMonthly Princess
DemographicShōjo
Original runFebruary 5, 2021 – present
Manga
Sukeban Deka Pretend
Written by
Illustrated byShingi Hosokawa
Published byAkita Shoten
MagazineMonthly Princess
DemographicShōjo
Original runAugust 6, 2021 – present

Sukeban Deka (スケバン刑事デカ, lit. "Delinquent Girl Detective") is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Shinji Wada. It was serialized in Hana to Yume from 1975 to 1982 and collected into 22 volumes. Sukeban Deka has been adapted into three live-action television series, an original video animation (OVA) series, and three feature films, the last of which was released as Yo-Yo Girl Cop in 2006. It has also inspired four spin-off manga: Sukeban Deka If (スケバン刑事if), a short story collection published in 2004, and Toki o Kakeru Sukeban Deka (時をかけるスケバン刑事), Re: Sukeban Deka (Re:スケバン刑事), and Sukeban Deka Pretend (スケバン刑事 Pretend), three ongoing series that premiered in Monthly Princess in 2021.

Plot

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A 16-year-old sukeban (delinquent schoolgirl) named Saki Asamiya is offered by the police to become an undercover detective to escape prison. She initially refuses, so the police blackmail her by offering to pardon her mother, who is on death row for killing her husband, eventually forcing her to accept. Put under the tutelage of officer Kyouichiro Jin, she is given a metal yo-yo that doubles as a weapon as well as a police badge, and is made to infiltrate high schools around Japan to investigate and stop criminal activities. Her first destination is her former school, Takanoha High School, where Saki's place has been taken by the three Mizuchi sisters and their ring of illegal activities.

Characters

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Saki Asamiya (麻宮 サキ, Asamiya Saki)
The bitter heroine of the story, a natural born fighter who enjoys getting into scuffles with various people. Saki is blackmailed into becoming a secret investigator. She never backs down and is very stubborn. Her main weapon is a steel loaded yo-yo capable to function as a weapon.
Kyoichiro Jin (神 恭一郎, Jin Kyōichirō)
Saki's mentor in the police, a long-haired, English-Japanese man who worked for Scotland Yard. He is cold-blooded and protective of Saki.
Dark Director (暗闇 警視, Kurayami Keishi)
The man who recruited Saki, a shady police officer who is in charge of the Sukeban Deka program.
Natsu Asamiya (麻宮 ナツ, Asamiya Natsu)
Saki's mother. She only loved her other daughter Miyuki and abused Saki as a result, and was arrested for beating her husband to death in front of Saki. Despite Saki's efforts to save her from execution, Natsu hates her, especially after Miyuki's death, and later joins Shigaraki in order to have Saki dead. In the TV series, she is a completely different character. She never abused Saki and was not guilty of her husband's death, although she certainly thought so and could not forgive herself for it.
Sanpei Nowaki (野分 三平, Nowaki Sanpei)
Saki's ardent admirer, who calls her "his goddess" and follows her all over the school campus.
Junko Yuina (唯名 純子, Yuina Junko)
Saki's best friend. A shy, quiet girl, Junko is a talented artist and she is seen as a threat by Emi Mizuchi who vows to sabotage her. In the OVA after Emi finds her beautiful painting, she has it stolen. Junko is kidnapped, forcefully drugged and then left dead on train tracks. Her death makes Saki's mission personal. In the manga, she was killed by Ayumi and her gang, who made it look like a suicide initially, but Saki noticed that Junko was bitten by a venomous snake.
Agura (アグラ)
Saki's rival in prison. Agura is a tough, masculine looking woman who dislikes Saki at first but then begins to respect her. Eventually she is released from reform school with Chie, and acts as her bodyguard. She only appeared in the manga.
Chie Mishio (美汐 千江, Mishio Chie) / Chii (チイ, Chī)
Saki's kind friend in prison. She only appeared in the manga. She has a pleasant demeanor and is less aggressive than the other girls. She is released from reform school and returns to high school. Chie joins a biology club that loves to collect insects, and since then discovered a species of butterfly that was named after her. She and Agura are eventually involved in a missing persons case that Saki investigates.
Kaoru (カオル)
Saki's hyper friend who is also very vulnerable and ends up being attacked a lot by the other girls in the prison. To help Saki escape from prison, she ends up seducing the prison warden who is a lesbian. She used to be in a drama club, and often played the roles of men. She only appeared in the manga.
Mio Kaido (海堂 美尾, Kaidō Mio)
Jin's partner. She only appeared in the manga.
Hikuidori
A scheming, sly cellmate of Saki's. She has a mole under one eye. Hikuidori becomes friends with Saki at first but then betrays her and turns out to be an informant of Remi's. She only appeared in the manga.
Gozo Mizuchi (海槌 剛三, Mizuchi Gōzō)
The patriarch of the antagonist Mizuchi crime family. Gozo uses his influence to control his family's power over Takanoha High school. He is a politician, and frames his rivals for the crimes committed by his daughters.
Emi Mizuchi (海槌 詠巳, Mizuchi Emi)
The youngest sister who is an artist. Emi is an egomaniac who sees herself as a great artist when at best her talent is borderline, which leads her to use her father's influence to bribe judges and copy the works of other artists. Emi steals Junko's work and copies from it to win an art contest. In the OVA she is killed along with her father by a brainwashed assassin sent by Remi. In the manga, Emi is shot by an assassin sent by Remi but survives and is taken to the hospital.
Ayumi Mizuchi (海槌 亜悠巳, Mizuchi Ayumi)
The dark haired middle child of the Mizuchi family. She has four hulking bodyguards who follow her around for protection. Ayumi is a drug addict and dealer, and is extremely greedy. However, she is the least evil out of the Mizuchi sisters. Despite her cold demeanor, she is loyal to her father and sisters. In both the OVA and manga, she is betrayed and killed by Remi, who gives her a malfunctioning shotgun that backfires, and steals all her money. In the manga, Ayumi rides a motorcycle and controls her own biker gang. She bets on the races for money, and anything goes, including harming the other racers, using traps, or killing other racers. Her favorite tactic is to throw venomous snakes at racers behind her, which bite and kill them.
Remi Mizuchi (海槌 麗巳, Mizuchi Remi)
The eldest daughter, a beautiful blonde who is completely ruthless and sociopathic. When Remi first arrives at the high school, many of the students admire her because of her striking beauty. She is a former friend to Saki, but she serves as a deadly antagonist to her. She seems to be the least dangerous of the three sisters but in fact is the most. She is responsible for Junko's death, setting up Ayumi's death to steal her money with a malfunctioning shotgun to fight Saki, and a brainwashed assassin to kill her father Gozo and sister Emi. She refers to Saki about their "blood of madness" but the drama version expands on it by using Saki's mother's past. Throughout the manga series, Remi goes as far to impersonate Saki's sister Miyuki. She even cruelly murders Sanpei to get revenge on Saki as well.
The Elite Four (四天王, Shitenno)
Ayumi's four bodyguards. Only one does all the talking. He is the tallest and his weapon is a wooden sword.
Another bodyguard uses brass knuckles, the third uses a bike chain, and the fourth bodyguard uses a pair of nunchucks. They appear in the OVA only.
Ayumi's followers
In the manga, Ayumi's followers are two girls, one named Chibi and the other one's name is not mentioned. Chibi is small and thin with dark hair while the other girl has feathered blonde hair and is obese. These two girls are very skilled fighters.
Remi's followers
In the OVA, Remi's control method is explained as computer programs and drugs.
Aoko Narumi (鳴海 碧子, Narumi Aoko)
Her true name being Aoko Shigaraki, she is the adoptive granddaughter of Ro and a former close friend of Remi Mizuchi. Trained by Natsu to defeat Saki, she seeks revenge for the death of Remi.
Rou Shigaraki (信楽 老, Shigaraki Rō)
The elderly founder of the world-famous evil organization Cat (Neko), he's implied to be superhuman, as he has been alive since the Tokugawa shogunate. He manipulates Aoko into following his plans.
Kazuhiko Haniwa (埴輪 一彦, Haniwa Kazuhiko)
The leader of the Blue Wolf League (青狼会, Seiroukai), a sinister organization bent on controlling the schools of the country. He allies dangerously with Shigaraki.

Media

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Manga

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The creation of Sukeban Deka was the result of a misunderstanding between the author Shinji Wada and the editors at Hakusensha. Wada was developing a high school drama, but the publisher expected a detective story starring a high school student. At an impasse, Wada decided to combine the two concepts.[1] Wada first published a pilot chapter titled "Kōsha wa Moete Iruka?" (校舎は燃えているか?, lit. "Is the School Building Burning?") in the August 5, 1975 (No. 15) issue of Hana to Yume magazine.[2] Later, Sukeban Deka became a serial, starting in the January 5, 1976 (No. 1) issue of the same magazine, released in 1975.[3][4] Disappointed by the fact he could never end a complete serial before, Wada planned earlier in production a dramatic final scene in which the protagonist would die.[5] The last chapter of this original planning was serialized in the December 20, 1977 (No. 24) issue,[6] and was followed by an epilogue in the January 20, 1978 (No. 2) issue.[7]

Following Sukeban Deka's conclusion, Wada started a new serial, Pygmalio [ja], in the March 20, 1978 (No. 6) issue of Hana to Yume.[8] However, after one year of serialization, the series was poorly-received by readers, and Wada stopped it to restart Sukeban Deka.[5] Wada dubbed it as "part 2",[5] and Sukeban Deka resumed in the February 5, 1979 (No. 3) issue, announced as a "new series".[9] The manga ran regularly in Hana to Yume until its December 5, 1982 (No. 24) issue.[3]

Since the original serialization, Sukeban Deka has been printed in four different collected editions; the original twenty-two volume tankōbon publication started on April 20, 1976, and ended on April 25, 1983.[10][11] Hakusensha released a six-volume aizōban edition between March 3, 1987, and April 29, 1987,[12][13] and a twelve-volume bunkoban edition between March 23, 1995, and June 21, 1995.[14][15] The last reprint was done by Media Factory, who published twelve collected volumes between August 23, 2004, and July 23, 2005.[16][17]

Spin-offs

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Wada published two Sukeban Deka short stories set in a parallel universe in the October 1998 and May 1999 issues of Hakusensha's Melody magazine.[18] He published two more installments in the March and April 2003 issues of Media Factory's Monthly Comic Flapper magazine.[18] Media Factory later collected the chapters in a tankōbon volume titled Sukeban Deka If (スケバン刑事if), which they published under the MF Comics imprint on June 23, 2004.[19]

In 2021, almost a decade after Wada's death, Akita Shoten launched three spin-off manga series in Monthly Princess magazine. The first, Toki o Kakeru Sukeban Deka (時をかけるスケバン刑事, lit. "The Delinquent Girl Detective Who Leapt Through Time"), is written and illustrated by Saori Muronaga. It premiered in the February 2021 issue of Monthly Princess on January 6, 2021.[20][21] The second, Re: Sukeban Deka (Re:スケバン刑事), is written and illustrated by Ashibi Fukui [ja]. It premiered in the March 2021 issue of the magazine on February 5, 2021.[20][22] The third, Sukeban Deka Pretend (スケバン刑事 Pretend), is written by Sai Ihara [ja] and illustrated by Shingi Hosokawa. It premiered in the September 2021 issue of Monthly Princess on August 6, 2021.[23]

Television series

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The television series, though technically one series made up of three seasons, are essentially self-contained and separate, aside from sharing the same basic themes and premise, and starring popular Japanese idol singers in the main roles, each one replacing the previous as the new Saki Asamiya, taking on her cover identity and yo-yo weapon.

Sukeban Deka, the first series from 1985, starred Yuki Saito as the titular character Saki Asamiya. Saito's own song "Shiroi Honō" was used as the theme song. Actress Yasuko Endō played Ayumi Mizuchi. Lasting 24 episodes, the series adapted the first part of the manga and was relatively faithful to it, only changing minor points, though it deviated more towards its conclusion. Unlike the manga, where Saki died at the end of a late arc unrelated to the Mizuchi sisters, the series produced an early ending in which Saki seemingly died in a burning building along with her enemy Remi Mizuchi.

The popularity of the first series allowed it to be followed up by Sukeban Deka II: The Legend of the Girl In The Iron Mask (スケバン刑事II 少女鉄仮面伝説) in November 1985. This sequel starred Yoko Minamino, as Saito chose not to return in order to focus on her singing career. In accordance, although the series did base most of its storylines in the second part of the manga, Minamino portrayed an original character named Yoko Godai, a mysterious girl from Kansai forced to wear iron masks for most of her childhood. Yoko was liberated from the mask by a police agent named Nishiwaki (Keizo Kanie) that offered her a place in the Sukeban Deka program, and she accepted in exchange for help to find her disappeared dad. In the process, Yoko would be given the name of her presumably dead predecessor, Saki Asamiya, and a similar yo-yo weapon.

Sukeban Deka II contained connections to the first series, as Hiroyuki Nagato returned periodically to his role as the Dark Director, while Nishiwaki was revealed to be a former coworker of Kyoichiro Jin. However, in a departure from both the first series and manga, where Saki worked alone most of the time, Sukeban Deka II added two sidekicks for the main character: Yukino Yajima (Akie Yoshizawa), the refined heiress of a rich family from Kyoto who was also a Japanese martial arts expert, and Kyoko "Marble Okyo" Nakamura (Haruko Sagara), a street-wise Osaka native who excelled at street fighting and the usage of marbles as weapons. Despite those changes, the series actually surpassed the first in popularity, lasting 42 episodes and bringing the possibility of a third installment.

After the closure of the second season, Toei conceived an independent spin-off named Sukeban Ninpucho (スケバン刑事) to air before Sukeban Deka III. It would be based around ninjas, taking inspiration from Sho Kosugi's ninja cinema and Shinji Wada's own manga Ninja Flight, as well as from Star Wars. However, early into production it was decided to merge both Ninpucho and III into a single series.[24] The result was the official third season, Sukeban Deka III: Ninja Girl Romance (スケバン刑事III 少女忍法帖伝奇). Launched in October 1986, it starred Yui Asaka as another original character after Minamino declined to return. Yui Kazama, a country girl from Kyushu who was recruited by the Dark Director and given the role of the third Saki Asamiya.

In the story, Yui, the youngest of the Kazama sisters and known as the Great Sukeban in Miyazaki, was sent to Tokyo by her foster parent, the monk Osho Taian (Hiroyuki Tanaka). She joined her long lost sisters, Yuka (Yuka Onishi) and Yuma (Yuma Nakamura [ja]), at Seiryu Academy and together, they inherited the family's ninja art. Their mission was to confront Koji Kashin, a mysterious entity who had been lurking in the shadows for centuries, intending to shroud and dominate the world in darkness. Transformed into a trio of kunoichi, they battled Koji Kashin and his army, aided by their mentor Kazuya Yoda (Nagare Hagiwara) and the agent Reia Kido (Satomi Fukunaga). Towards the end of the story, it is revealed that Yui has a twin sister named Sho, who was taken by Koji Kashin and given psychic abilities. Sho was cursed to stop growing physically at the age of 10 and initially opposed Yui but later learned of their kinship. Yui herself rarely used the Saki Asamiya moniker and showed a very different personality compared to Saki and Yoko, and the series was more focused on fantasy than serious urban crime drama.

Despite a strong premiere and an ambitious length of 42 episodes scheduled in advance, Sukeban Deka III rapidly lost its momentum and didn't do well. During its airing the first feature movie of the franchise was released, Sukeban Deka The Movie, which acted as a crossover between II and III (it also starred Ayako Kobayashi, the winner of a national audition grand prix), but it didn't help the franchise to recover its success. Ninja Girl Romance had its last episode in October 1987, and it was only followed by the feature film Sukeban Deka the Movie 2: Counter-Attack from the Kazama Sisters, which featured the characters in a more traditional plot and gave conclusion to their series.

Feature films

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Two feature films of the TV series were made, followed by a sequel 18 years later.

Original video animation

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Released in 1991, the original video animation (OVA) follows closely the events of the first volumes of the manga. It is drawn in the style of the manga, particularly the character designs. One such example is the style of the Mizuchi sisters' eyes, an example being Reimi Mizuchi, whose eyes would often shift to show off a more villainous appearance, or would narrow like a snake's.

Saki Asamiya is given a chance to delay her mother's execution by working as an undercover cop and infiltrating Takanoha High School to investigate some mysterious deaths among the student body. Once there, she comes face-to-face with the powerful Mizuchi sisters, who moved in and have taken control after her previous expulsion.

Video games

[edit]

Two games based on the TV series were made at the time: Sukeban Deka II, developed and published in 1987 by Sega for the Master System,[27] and Sukeban Deka III, developed by Shouei System and published by Toei Animation in 1988 for the Famicom.[28] Both were only released in Japan.

Reception

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The original manga has been described as a "massively popular gang girl series",[29] and has sold over 20 million copies in Japan.[30] Erica Friedman of Yuricon classified it as "one of the three classic girl-gang series" along with Hana no Asuka-gumi and Yajikita Gakuen Dōchūki.[31][32] Moreover, Friedman said Sukeban Deka influenced both and is "the origin of the whole girl-gang madness that filled the 1980s".[32] She also stated the series paved the way for series such as Revolutionary Girl Utena and PreCure.[29] The series' popularity has proven to be longstanding as the TV drama's DVD rerelease sold 130,000 copies in 2005, which prompted Toei to produce the third live-action film.[33] By 2013, it still had impact on popular culture with the TV drama ending inspiring the anime ending of Kill la Kill.[34]

Regarding the content, Friedman commented on the atypical level of violence and sex for a shōjo manga.[32] She also noted the mix of shōnen and shōjo art style,[29] and concluded that it is a shōjo that can appeal for the shōnen public.[32] Carlos Ross, writing about the OVA for THEM Anime Reviews, stated that Sukeban Deka "is Asian action drama faithfully translated into the cel medium, and done well, to boot."[35] Chris Beveridge, writing for Mania Entertainment, felt the OVA was "a middle of the road release".[36] Helen McCarthy in 500 Essential Anime Movies states that the characters "are nicely drawn", the blossoming relationship between Saki and Sanpei "is handled convincingly", and that "teenagers will relate to the story's themes of betrayal, powerlessness, and being an outsider".[37] Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy's The Anime Encyclopedia description of the series said it had an "essential silliness", although it is an "entertaining one-joke knockabout".[33]

References

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  1. ^ "The Making of Sukeban Deka: Part One". Sukeban Deka. Vol. 1. Hakusensha. 1995. pp. 322–325. ISBN 4-592-88121-4.
  2. ^ "Title on Magazine:花とゆめ 校舎は燃えているか?(和田慎二)". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Title on Magazine:花とゆめ スケバン刑事(和田慎二)". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  4. ^ References for the serialization starting in 1975:
  5. ^ a b c "The Making of Sukeban Deka: Part Four". Sukeban Deka. Vol. 4. Hakusensha. 1995. pp. 300–303. ISBN 4-592-88124-9.
  6. ^ "Magazine Issue:花とゆめ 1977/12/20 表示号数24". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  7. ^ "Magazine Issue:花とゆめ 1978/01/20 表示号数2". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  8. ^ "Title on Magazine:花とゆめ ピグマリオ(和田慎二)". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  9. ^ "Magazine Issue:花とゆめ 1979/02/05 表示号数3". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  10. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事(花とゆめコミックス)第1巻". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  11. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事(花とゆめコミックス)22". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  12. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事 スペシャル版(ジェッツコミックス)1". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  13. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事 スペシャル版(ジェッツコミックス)第6巻". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  14. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事(白泉社文庫)1". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  15. ^ "Book:スケバン刑事(白泉社文庫)12". Media Arts Database (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  16. ^ "スケバン刑事 1" (in Japanese). Media Factory. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  17. ^ "スケバン刑事 12" (in Japanese). Media Factory. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  18. ^ a b スケバン刑事if. Mangapedia (in Japanese). Heibonsha, Shogakukan, et al. Archived from the original on February 14, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  19. ^ スケバン刑事if. Monthly Comic Flapper (in Japanese). Kadokawa Corporation. Archived from the original on March 14, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  20. ^ a b Pineda, Rafael Antonio (December 7, 2020). "Sukeban Deka Gets 2 New Manga in January, February (Updated)". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on February 17, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  21. ^ 新たな「スケバン刑事」がプリンセスで、和田慎二版のレアエピソードを収録した付録も. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). January 6, 2021. Archived from the original on February 8, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  22. ^ 「スケバン刑事」原作に“超準拠”したリメイク版がプリンセスで開幕. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). February 5, 2021. Archived from the original on February 5, 2021. Retrieved February 6, 2021.
  23. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (July 10, 2021). "Sukeban Deka Gets New Manga Spinoff in August". Anime News Network. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  24. ^ Making of Toei Hero: Action Hero World 1, 1987, Kodansha
  25. ^ Amazon US listing: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000OU6XVG Archived 2021-03-14 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Product listing at official company site: http://www.4digitalmedia.com/index.php/details/4 Archived 2009-01-31 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ "Sukeban Deka II: Shoujo Tekkamen Densetsu (game)". Giant Bomb. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  28. ^ "Sukeban Deka III (game)". Giant Bomb. Retrieved 24 October 2022.
  29. ^ a b c Friedman, Erica (July 3, 2012). "Hooliganism, High School Crime and Giant Snakes". Hooded Utilitarian. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  30. ^ スケバン刑事 コードネーム=麻宮サキ (in Japanese). TV Tokyo. Archived from the original on February 21, 2014. Retrieved November 29, 2013.
  31. ^ Friedman, Erica (July 5, 2011). "R.I.P. Wada Shinji". Okazu. Archived from the original on September 2, 2018. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  32. ^ a b c d Friedman, Erica (March 3, 2004). "Yuri Manga/Yuri Anime: Sukeban Deka". Okazu. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved September 1, 2018.
  33. ^ a b Clements, Jonathan; McCarthy, Helen (2015). The Anime Encyclopedia, 3rd Revised Edition: A Century of Japanese Animation. Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 9781611729092. Archived from the original on 2021-03-14. Retrieved 2019-01-02.
  34. ^ Yomimaid (October 20, 2013). "Inspiration For Kill la Kill Ending Identified By Fans". Crunchyroll. Archived from the original on September 6, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2018.
  35. ^ "THEM Anime Review". Archived from the original on 2009-09-08. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  36. ^ Mania Entertainment review Archived 2012-10-05 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 245. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
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