Monday, March 10, 2025

Oh Me, Oh My, OVA! η: ♪Samurai Soul, Hey Hey Oh♪

Last year I wrote a piece about three anime that all debuted in 2004 & featured the word "Samurai" in their titles, despite the three having literally nothing else in common. Naturally, the concept of the samurai is no stranger to anime, and that's especially true when it comes to the good-ol' Original Video Animation. Therefore, let's revisit the concept of "Anime that Feature the Word 'Samurai' in Their Titles", but this time instead of going with full TV series let's instead check out four short-form OVAs that fit this description, all of which predate 2004's "Inadvertent Samurai Trilogy"... even if two of them can only be included in Volume Eta of OM, OM, OVA! by way of a technicality.

So put on some "Samurai Soul" by Ulfuls as we take a look at a bunch of examples of people who may or may not be literal samurai, but they've at least got it deep within them & that's what really counts!... right?


First up we have an OVA with what seriously sounds like something some fly-by-night dollar-bin distributor would have come up with out of sheer laziness... but, no, this is literally its name in Japanese: The Samurai. Now, to be fair, this is actually what the original manga by Mitsuhiro Kasuga is also called, a manga that debuted in the pages of Weekly Young Jump back in 1984 & would run for 20 volumes before eventually getting a semi-sequel (with a different lead), Samurai Deka, that ran in Weekly Comic Bunch from 2002 to 2007 for a further eight volumes (which were later re-released as 20 eBooks). The Samurai was successful enough to warrant the production of both a live-action theatrical film adaptation by Toei that was directed by Norifumi Suzuki (Truck Yaro) & a live-action TV special adaptation by Tsuburaya Productions, which was actually one of Shusuke Kaneko's earlier directorial works, & aired on Fuji TV's Monday Drama Land program. Shockingly enough, both of these came out in 1986, with the TV special airing literally just nine days after the movie starting running in theaters! The following year a 45-minute OVA adaptation of The Samurai would come out on November 1, 1987 & was co-produced by CBS Sony Group, the precursor company of what's now Aniplex. Before it would eventually get locked away in "Aniplex Jail" ADV Films actually licensed & released The Samurai on dual-audio DVD in early 2003, keeping its immensely generic title intact. No one really knows why The Samurai was licensed that long after it first came out in Japan, but it was likely part of a package deal from Aniplex, so I won't judge. To be fair, reviews at the time generally felt that The Samurai was perfectly fine, if nothing especially noteworthy, so time to see if I feel the same about it as those reviews back in the day did over 20 years after its English release