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Crunchyroll Adds Ashita no Joe Anime

posted on by Alex Mateo
Service streams 1st season on Thursday, 2nd season on December 3

ashita-no-joe.png
Image courtesy of Kodansha USA
Crunchyroll announced on Thursday that it is streaming Tomorrow's Joe, the anime of Ikki Kajiwara (pen name Asao Takamori) and Tetsuya Chiba's Ashita no Joe boxing manga, in English, Spanish, and Portuguese in North America, Central America, and South America. The first season will begin streaming on Thursday at 7:00 p.m. EST, and the second season will launch on December 3 at 7:00 p.m. EST.

TMS Entertainment began streaming the anime's first three episodes for the first time in the U.S. on its YouTube channel on November 1. The episodes are streaming for a limited time on YouTube.

Kodansha USA will publish the manga in English with the name Ashita no Joe: Fighting for Tomorrow. The company will release the manga physically in eight oversized hardcover volumes as well as digitally, starting on December 24. The release marks the manga's first official English translation.

The manga ran in Kodansha's Weekly Shōnen Magazine from 1968 to 1973, and it had 20 compiled book volumes. The series has remained a mainstay in Japanese popular culture for decades. The manga has inspired two television anime in 1970 and 1980, as well as two anime films in 1980 and 1981. The manga inspired a live-action film that opened in Japan in 2011 starring Tomohisa Yamashita. A stage play adaptation ran in Tokyo in 2015.

Ashita no Joe revolves around an orphan named Joe Yabuki who rises from the Tokyo slums under the tutelage of a former boxer. Takamori and Chiba's original manga is among the most critically acclaimed stories in Japanese popular culture, and Osamu Dezaki's television series added to the story's iconic status. The manga would later influence two generations of sports and shonen manga, including Hajime no Ippo (Fighting Spirit). A crucial twist in the Ashita no Joe television anime's plot made headlines in Japan as people marked the occasion with public ceremonies.

The manga's story was re-imagined in a new sci-fi setting with new characters in 2018's Megalobox anime, which credits the original manga as its origin. The sequel series for Megalobox, Megalobox 2: Nomad, premiered in April 2021.

Source: Crunchyroll (Kyle Cardine)


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