Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} by Chiaki Ogishima Heat Guy J.

Heat Guy J ( ヒートガイジェイ , Hīto Gai Jei ? ) is a 26 episode science fiction series created by Escaflowne director and . Heat Guy J was licensed and distributed in the U.S. in 2003 by Pioneer (which subsequently became Geneon Entertainment). It is set for re- release by Entertainment in the fall of 2009. The first 13 episodes of the show also was broadcast on the cable channel MTV2. A one volume was created based on the series, and was licensed and distributed by . The show was picked up for a UK DVD release by Manga Entertainment starting in March 2006. It was packaged in double DVD sets to make up for the long delayed release of the series. Contents. Heat Guy J chronicles the adventures of a young Special Services officer named Daisuke Aurora and his android partner known simply as "J". The pair live and work in the fictional, futuristic Metropolis of "Judoh" (Jewde), where the understaffed and underfunded Special Services Division of the Bureau of Urban Safety has its headquarters. Characters. Special Services.

Daisuke Aurora ( ダイスケ・アウローラ , Daisuke Aurōra ? , romanized as "Aurola" on his ID card seen in episode 10 ) - Department of Security, Central Headquarters Special Services Employee, age 21 J ( ジェイ , Jei ? ) (also known as "Heat Guy J") - Special Services Android, 3, Appearance of a 40-year-old Man Kyoko Milchan ( キョウコ・ミルシャン , Kyouko Mirushan ? ) - Department of Security, Central Headquarters Special Services Auditor/Accountant, age 21. Friends.

Antonia Belucci ( アントニア・ベルッチ , Antonia Berucchi ? ) - Sect Employee, age 24 Ken Edmundo ( ケン・エジムンド , Ken Ejimundo ? ) - Galea Police Investigation Inspector, age 33 Monica Gabriel ( モニカ・ガブリエル , Monika Gaburieru ? ) - Photographer, age 10 Cynthia , Janis , and Vivian age 20, age 21, and age 19 Shun Aurora ( シュン・アウローラ , Shun Aurōra ? , romanized as "Aurola" by default considering Daisuke's ID card in episode 10 ) - Government Investigative Office of Department of Security, Central Headquarters General Manager, age 27 Phia Oliveira - Central Headquarters, General Manager's Secretary, age 27. Enemies.

Clair Leonelli ( クレア・レオネリ , Kurea Reoneri ? ) - Current leader, or "Vampire" of the Company Vita Crime Syndicate, age 19 Giobanni Gallo - Clair's bodyguard, age 27 Mauro - Advisor to the Leonelli family, age 63 Mitchal Rubenstein - Clair's Bodyguard, age 25 Ian Nulse - Clair's Bodyguard, age 21. Other.

Shogun - Dry Goods store owner, age 72 Boma ( # ボマ ? ) - Mercenary, age . Manga. Coinciding with the anime series in 2002, a manga version of Heat Guy J was released. It was eventually distributed in the U.S. by TOKYOPOP in 2005. It was written and drawn by Chiaki Ogishima. While the main characters and general setup were similar to the anime, the manga has its own unique storyline and supporting characters. There is only one volume in the series, and it includes several pages of bonus material related to the show. Theme songs.

Opening "FACE" by Tryforce Ending "心の隙間 [Kokoro no Sukima - Gap in the Heart]" by WYSE "Hikari [Light]" - by Saeko Chiba. Episode list. Guy (City) War (Blaze) Bomb (Rumor) Chaos (Beast) Doll (Child) Money (Desire) Circulation (Revenge) Brother (Sound) Trust (Ties) Guns (Bullet) Mirage (Illusion) Visitor (Light) Encounter (Shooter) Arrow (Soul) Angel (Hostage) ( unaired in Japan ) Target (Bloom) Survival (Land) Independence (Fissure) Truth (Heart) Fake (Thought) Tears (Friend) Fortress (Island) Play (Father) Alteration (Mania) Revolution (Snow) Guys (Real Man) External links. Anime series Manga series Anime of 2002 Anime with original screenplays Detective anime and manga Cyberpunk anime and manga Geneon Universal Entertainment Manga of 2003 Science fiction anime and manga Tokyopop titles Tokyo Broadcasting System shows 2002 Japanese television series debuts 2003 Japanese television series endings. Wikimedia Foundation . 2010 . Look at other dictionaries:

Heat guy J — ヒートガイジェイ (Hīto Gai Jei) Genre aventure, mecha, police, science fiction Anime Réalisateur(s) Kazuki Akane Studio d animation … Wikipédia en Français.

Heat guy j — ヒートガイジェイ (Hīto Gai Jei) Genre aventure, mecha, police, science fiction Anime Réalisateur(s) Kazuki Akane Studio d animation … Wikipédia en Français.

Heat Guy J — ヒートガイジェイ (Hīto Gai Jei) Genre aventure, mecha, police, science fiction Anime japonais Réalisateur Kazuki Akane Studio d’animation Satelight … Wikipédia en Français. Heat Guy J — Este artículo o sección sobre anime y manga necesita ser wikificado con un formato acorde a las convenciones de estilo. Por favor, edítalo para que las cumpla. Mientras tanto, no elimines este aviso puesto el 27 de agosto de 2007. También puedes… … Wikipedia Español. Heat (film, 1995) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Heat. Heat Données clés Titre québécois Tension Titre original Heat Réalisation Michael Mann … Wikipédia en Français. Heat Vision and Jack — Infobox Television show name = Heat Vision and Jack caption = A frame from the title credits format = Sitcom runtime = approx. 22 minutes (per episode) creator = written and executive produced by Dan Harmon and Rob Schrab starring = Jack Black… … Wikipedia. Deep Heat (compilation series) — Telstar Records range of Deep Heat compilations were one of the first house music collections to be released by a Specialist Marketing firm in the United Kingdom. Contents 1 Format 2 Chart Success 3 Cover Artwork 4 … Wikipedia. ECW Heat Wave — fue un evento de lucha libre profesional producido por la empresa Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW). A contar de la edición del año 1998, este evento fue transmitido por pague por ver. Contenido 1 Resultados 1.1 1994 1.2 1995 1 … Wikipedia Español. Heat Guy J by Chiaki Ogishima. Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. 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You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 6557916a89cbcadc • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. Heat Guy J Anime Review. Nothing extraordinary, but does what it does with style and skill. It’s Like. . A police show crossed with Armitage III. Vital Stats. Original Title. Romanized Title. US Release By. Genre. Futuristic Martian Starsky and Hutch. Series Type. Length. 26 25-minute episodes. Production Date. What's In It. Categories. Look For. Objectionable Content. Violence: 2 (moderate) Nudity: 2 (moderate) Sex: 2 (moderate) Language: 2 (moderate) See Also. Sequels/Spin-offs. None. You Might Also Like. Armitage III. Other Stuff We Have. Plot Synopsis. In the future on Mars in some mega futuristic city, the mafia is really hitting hard. The city has laws against the building of androids, but decides since the crime problem is so bad to break their own law and build an android policeman named J (who amazingly, is not a pretty girl but is instead a hulking male). They team him up with Daisuke Aurora in a new special unit, and together the two of them fight crime (and if he had been a pretty girl, he would be in love with Daisuke. But luckily he is neither a pretty girl nor in love with Daisuke, especially since the latter without the former would be extremely creepy). Reader Review. Reviewer: Animonster Review Date: 2004-04-13 (updated 2004-04-13) 4 stars out of 5 (?) I've done something horrible. No, I remembered to do the dishes. No, I turned in my homework. No, I didn't assassinate John F. Kennedy. I watched MTV. Okay, only I think that's horrible, but man do I think it's horrible. I'm not gonna cash in my chips because anime becomes a teeny-bopper trend, but I sure don't fancy having to sit through a bunch of dumb frat boys using the three brain cells bouncing around the insides of their heads to put forth their idiotic and unsolicited opinions on my favorite hobby. It is MTV, more than anything, which causes me to believe that there is no hope left for humanity. And no, I don't think the faithful will go to heaven. We'll all be stuck together as society sinks down the crapper. Yes, I know I'm an old curmudgeon. But this isn't a review of MTV or of my analysis of American society. This is a review of Heat Guy J, and I want to ask what TechTV was doing licensing that pile of #$%* Geneshaft when this was sitting in, um, Geneon's product lineup. In fact, that question became even more relevant when I found out that not only was this published by the same company as Geneshaft, it was also made by the same director (Kazuki Akane) and the same animation company (Satelight). I can find only two differences between the production of Heat Guy J and that of Geneshaft: One had character designs by Escaflowne's Nobuteru Yuuki (maybe he was the real brains behind Escaflowne). And one is a form of cruel and unusual punishment. What Outlaw Star, , and do for westerns, Heat Guy J does for police shows. That is basically to take the conventions of the genre and plunk it in the future, adding some more anime-like characteristics on the way. The episodes are all pretty self-contained and most simply exercise modern-day crimes the way they would be in the future, many having to do with the mafia I mentioned in the synopsis. A few focus on more futuristic crimes, such as the guys who make guns (which is illegal) and the man who coaxes people into leaving the city so he can steal their identities and give them to illegal immigrants (that's sort of modern, I guess). Daisuke even has a nickname ("Dice") and visits mysterious informants to get word from the streets. All the characters in Heat Guy J are given the same type of personality as those in : basically, you can explain it pretty simply, but it's still original and never gets blown out of proportion. Daisuke is a slacker, but he's very competent and you can tell he really does care about his job, he just doesn't liking working very much. J acts even more like an android than Dorothy in Big O, and is always spouting platitudes that sound very much like what someone would program into an android. Kyoko, Daisuke's superior, is harried, rigid, and demanding, but not the screaming chief of most cop shows (especially since she isn't really the chief; Daisuke's brother is). The informants all have unique motifs (of course there's the mysterious old guy in the dark warehouse), and most of the bad guys are unique too. Of course, the most unique is Clair Leonelli, the young leader of the mafia that Daisuke and J spend most of their time fighting against. He's a weird-looking transvestite with an absurd amount of body piercings and a personality lifted right from Dilandau (unlike Sora from .Hack or the Beyblade Kid from Geneshaft, Heat Guy J actually manages to pull this off, so I won't pan it). The dub is also extremely well-done. Clair Leonelli's and J's voices are the two best, and some of the best I've seen since. well, Last Exile, I guess. Clair Leonelli is played by Johnny Yong Bosch, the same former Power Ranger who did Claus in Last Exile, but here he's completely different. Crazy, insane, whacked out, creepy, the same magical transformation Joshua Seth did in Last Exile to play Dio. J's voice was a low, deep bass, done monotone so that it actually sounds like an android, rather than monotone so it sounds like the actor can't act. It sounds exactly like a computerized voice that the programmer attempted to put some emotion into. Everyone else's voices were well done too; Daisuke sounds like a believable slacker, and Kyoko is played by the same actress who did Miyu Menazure in Gatekeepers Full Throttle, except much less grating and more natural. The animation is on a level just below Last Exile, but the computer animation is quite a bit below it. It wasn't integrated nearly as well, and some of the vehicles done in it (like Daisuke's motorcycle) look silly. Whenever a fight breaks out, however, everything stays together, and I'd say the martial arts battles are equal to Cowboy Bebop's. J's fights are also good; since he's a robot, he can fight various freaks of nature like wolf-headed guys with swords and other robots, which helps break up the monotony of the common street thugs. Since Daisuke practically never has a gun, there isn't much in the way of gunfights, which is probably a good thing. There's a type of magical bullet like the Caster shells in Outlaw Star, but whenever one is fired it's shown going towards its target in a lame slow-motion CG sequence. Since I hadn't seen Last Exile yet when I first watched this, it was a really nice surprise to break up the monotony of all the crappy Dragonball Z reruns on Cartoon Network. I didn't expect anything MTV was licensing to be worth crap, but this was worth a considerable amount more. But since it is on MTV, why don't you go buy the DVDs instead? Please? Have something to say about this anime? Join our newly-resurrected forums and speak your mind. Notes and Trivia. The official Heat Guy J webiste has plenty of info and a number of video clips to browse. There is a short comic adaptation (available in English from Tokyopop) by Chiaki Ogishima, but it's based on the anime, not the other way around. Being on MTV, you'd expect this to be unedited, and it is, as far as content, but I'm not terribly impressed with MTV's efforts. The opening was cut and replaced with a lame montage of scenes from the show, along with a voiceover, and they show commercials right afterward. Aside from that they only show commercials one other time, which is better than TechTV, but I don't really like seeing a minute of show, opening, then right to commercials. Also, a purely personal nitpick is that the majority of the commercials on MTV are even more infantile than those on other channels. I'm reticent in calling Pioneer by their new name because it seems like the reason they changed their name is because the new one is more "extreme", possibly anticipating a day when anime is a teeny-bopper fad. They certainly seem to doing their best in trying to make it one, since they probably offered this to MTV, but apparently MTV doesn't agree since they shoved it off on MTV2 and only show it at noon on Saturdays. I know a lot of people think anime fans are just being nerds when they try to exclude new people from getting in on anime, but I really think we're better left alone. If other people want to become fans, that's fine. But they should go to the anime, not the other way around. Anime should not become the twenty-first century version of disco. Like I said, I'm a curmudgeon. US DVD Review. The bilingual DVDs feature some additional artwork, anamorphic widescreen video, and two seperate artboxes, one for each half of the series. Parental Guide. Almost exactly on a level with average network TV; 13-up. Violence: 2 - A few humans die in explosions and gunfights, and J whacks apart some robots. Nudity: 2 - Some super-skimpy outfits, but like I said no worse than network TV. Sex/Mature Themes: 2 - A few brothels, strip clubs, and prostitutes, but no acts beyond bikini-clad dancing. Language: 2 - Clair drops a few F-bombs, but MTV beeps them out. Staff & Cast. English Dub Cast. Kyoko Milchan: Kay Jensen Clair Leonelli: Johnny Yong Bosch. Director: Kazuki Akane Character Designs: Nobuteru Yuuki. Availability. Available in North America from Geneon on seven bilingual DVDs. Volume One and Volume Seven are both available with a box for the entire series and some extra content. Heat Guy J.

Heat Guy J ( ヒートガイジェイ , Hīto Gai Jei ? ) is a 26 episode science fiction anime series created by Escaflowne director Kazuki Akane and Satelight. Heat Guy J was licensed and distributed in the U.S. in 2003 by Pioneer (which subsequently became Geneon Entertainment). It is set for re- release by Funimation Entertainment in the fall of 2009. The first 13 episodes of the show also was broadcast on the cable channel MTV2. A one volume manga was created based on the series, and was licensed and distributed by TOKYOPOP. The show was picked up for a UK DVD release by Manga Entertainment starting in March 2006. It was packaged in double DVD sets to make up for the long delayed release of the series. Contents. Heat Guy J chronicles the adventures of a young Special Services officer named Daisuke Aurora and his android partner known simply as "J". The pair live and work in the fictional, futuristic Metropolis of "Judoh" (Jewde), where the understaffed and underfunded Special Services Division of the Bureau of Urban Safety has its headquarters.