Previously on the Bastard!! Review:
"Even if it's technically unfinished, Crime & Punishment is
Bastard!! at its most ambitious, taking the manga into a direction that only makes one wonder "Where the hell can it possibly go from here?!"... And that's likely what all the fans in Japan were wondering once the Seasonal Specials came to an end."
As mentioned in the final part of the Crime & Punishment review, Kazushi Hagiwara was hit with a double-whammy in the middle of 1996. First, Shueisha decided to put an end to the Shonen Jump Seasonal Specials, with the 1996 Summer Special being the last one, & in its place was Akamaru Jump starting at the end of the year, which returned to being solely about one-shots; Akamaru's later replacements, Jump NEXT! & Jump Giga, would bring back regular serializations, though. Second, in some sort of unexplained freak accident, Hagiwara & his Studio Loud in School staff of assistants no longer had any of the pre-production work for what was going to come next in
Bastard!!'s storyline. Now they did get some stuff done, as seen in the self-published
Unused・Revised Edition book from 2000, but it was scattershot & pretty much unusable for actual serialization; simply put, Hagiwara was up S*** Creek without a paddle.
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Huh, didn't know Jump still did the mangaka group shot covers as late as 1997...
I wish Jump still did those, but I totally understand why it doesn't anymore. |
So, how were each of these problems resolved? In regards to the loss of the Seasonal Specials, Shueisha simply decided to bring
Bastard!! back to Weekly Shonen Jump at the start of 1997, and Hagiwara would be allowed to publish new chapters on an irregular basis, i.e. whenever he felt a new chapter was ready to go. Interestingly enough,
Bastard!! missed all of the second half of the "Golden Age" by finding its own place to call home, so the Jump it was returning to was a
wildly different one, compared to the one it had left back in 1989. For example,
Rokudenashi Blues debuted just a couple of months after
Bastard!! did, but when Hagiwara's series returned, Masanori Morita's was not only one of only three manga that was "familiar to it", the others being
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure &
Kochikame, but it was actually nearing its end; in fact, they'd share just a single issue before Morita's yankii manga icon finished. Not just that, but after that one issue in early 1997,
Bastard!!'s next appearance would be about 30 issues later, during which a manga named
One Piece debuted. As for Hagiwara's pace, 1997 would see only five chapters, 1998 saw eight, & 1999 saw seven. At the very least, after that initial 30-issue gap, Hagiwara stayed semi-consistent, putting out a new chapter about every month or two. Following that last chapter in late 1999, though, Hagiwara wouldn't release
another chapter until mid-2000, almost a solid year later; during that gap, another new manga named
Naruto had debuted, &
JoJo had even soft-rebooted. It's easy to see that
Bastard!! was likely feeling pretty out of place in the magazine it originally debuted in, as things entered the 21st Century.
At this point, it was decided that
Bastard!! would leave Weekly Shonen Jump once again, this time for good, though all new tankouban from this point forward would still be published under the "Jump Comics" label. Combined with Hagiwara's more violent & sexual storytelling tendencies, Shueisha moved
Bastard!! over to seinen magazine Ultra Jump, where it'd make its "debut" in the first issue of 2001. Eventually,
Bastard!! would be joined by
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure (via
Steel Ball Run) &
Ninku (via
Second Stage: Etonin-hen) to create a sort of exclusive "Shonen-to-Ultra" club. Unfortunately, after only four issues of consistency, Hagiwara quickly moved
Bastard!! into irregular serialization in Ultra Jump, resulting in this new story arc of
Bastard!! not actually ending until 2008, 11 years after the manga returned to Weekly Shonen Jump; at the very least, Hagiwara switched over to longer chapters, much like the Seasonal Specials. In other words, it took longer for the chapters of these next eight books, Volumes 19 to 26, to come out than
literally everything that had been published in Bastard!! before said story arc even started in early 1997... & that's including the original
Wizard!! one-shot published in late 1987! As for the English release in North America, Viz Media sadly stopped releasing
Bastard!! after Volume 19's release in July of 2009, though
Volume 20 was solicited & scheduled for an early 2010 release. Yes, Viz stopped releasing the manga right as it started a new story arc, and because of that I will be relying on English scanlations for Volumes 20 to 26, which are fine, if hit with the occasional spelling & grammatical error; them's just the breaks, sometimes.
Meanwhile, in regards to what Hagiwara did to combat the loss of his pre-production work, he simply invoked a large time skip, which brings us to the final (completed) story arc of
Bastard!!,
The Immoral Laws/
Defender of the Faith.