Kamishibai . The Kitarō story began life as a in 1933, written by and illustrated by . Itō's version was called ''''''; the title is generally written in
katakana to distinguish it from Mizuki's version of the tale. According to Itō, her Kitarō was based on local legends describing the same or similar stories. It is also said to be a loose reinterpretation of the similar Japanese folktale called the or , which were inspired by Chinese folklore from 12th to 13th centuries. In 1954, Mizuki was asked to continue the series by his publisher, Katsumaru Suzuki.
Manga Kitarō of the Graveyard was published as a
rental manga in 1960, but it was considered too scary for children. In 1965, renamed to
Hakaba no Kitarō, it appeared in
Shōnen Magazine (after one of the editors came across the
kashibon and offered Mizuki a contract) and ran through 1970. The series was renamed
GeGeGe no Kitarō in 1967 and continued in
Weekly Shōnen Sunday,
Shōnen Action,
Shukan Jitsuwa and many other magazines. In 2002,
GeGeGe no Kitarō was translated by Ralph F. McCarthy and compiled by
Natsuhiko Kyogoku for Kodansha Bilingual Comics. Three bilingual (Japanese–English) volumes were released in 2002. Since 2013, compilation volumes of selected manga chapters from the 1960s have been published by
Drawn & Quarterly, with English translations by
Zack Davisson and an introduction by Matt Alt in the first compilation volume. Drawn & Quarterly later published a large collection of Kitaro manga under the title
Kitaro, with Jocelyne Allen as the translator.
Zack Davisson wrote the volume's afterword.
Anime Seven anime adaptations were made from Mizuki's manga series. They were broadcast on
Fuji Television and animated by
Toei Animation. The opening theme to all six series is "GeGeGe no Kitarō", written by Mizuki himself. It has been sung by
Kazuo Kumakura (1st, 2nd),
Ikuzo Yoshi (3rd), Yūkadan (4th),
Shigeru Izumiya (5th), the 50 Kaitenz (6th) and
Kiyoshi Hikawa (7th). The song was also used in the live-action films starring
Eiji Wentz. In the first film, it was performed by Wentz'
WaT partner
Teppei Koike. In January 2008, a series based on , (also produced by Toei) premiered on
Fuji TV during the late night hours in the
Noitamina block. and unlike the usual anime versions, it is closer to Mizuki's manga and is not part of the existing remake canon. It also features a completely different opening theme song ("Mononoke Dance" by
Denki Groove) and ending theme song ("Snow Tears" by
Shoko Nakagawa). A seventh series, announced in early 2018, directed by Kōji Ogawa and written by
Hiroshi Ohnogi started airing on Fuji TV on April 1, 2018, to celebrate the anime's 50th anniversary. The series concluded on March 29, 2020, as it entered its final arc, the "Nurarihyon Arc", on October 6, 2019. It streamed on
Crunchyroll, making it the first
Kitarō anime to be available in North America. An English dub aired as
Spooky Kitaro on
Animax Asia.
Hakaba Kitaro was released with English subtitles on DVD in Australia and New Zealand. The theme song for the program is a rendition of "" by
Ado while the ending theme for the first half is "Party of Monsters" by
Kiyoshi Hikawa featuring
Tetsuya Komuro. For the second half, the ending theme is titled "Yami ni Goyōshin", performed by .
GeGeGe no Kitarō series Hakaba Kitarō Films ; 1968 series •
GeGeGe no Kitarō (July 21, 1968) (edited version of episodes 5 and 6) ; 1971 series •
GeGeGe no Kitarō: The Divining Eye (July 12, 1980) (edited version of episode 37) ; 1985 series All films in the 1985 series produced by Kenji Yokoyama ; 1996 series •
GeGeGe no Kitarō: The Great Sea Beast (July 6, 1996) •
GeGeGe no Kitarō: Obake Nighter (March 8, 1997) •
GeGeGe no Kitarō: Yokai Express! The Phantom Train (July 12, 1997) ; 2007 series •
GeGeGe no Kitarō: Japan Explodes!! (December 20, 2008) ; 2018 series •
Birth of Kitarō: The Mystery of GeGeGe (2023) ;Other •
Yo-kai Watch Shadowside: Oni-ō no Fukkatsu (December 16, 2017) — crossover film with the
Yo-kai Watch series
Live-action films Two live-action films have been released. The first one,
Kitaro (released in Japan as ), was released on April 28, 2007. It stars
Eiji Wentz as Kitarō and
Yo Oizumi as Nezumi Otoko. The film follows Kitarō as he tries to save a young high school girl, Mika Miura, while also trying to stop the powerful "spectre stone" from falling into the wrong hands. The live-action film makes extensive use of practical costumes and
CG characters to depict the cast of . The second film, , was released on July 12, 2008. Wentz reprised his role as Kitarō. It follows Kitarō and his friends as they try to solve a 1000-year-old curse that threatens the life of his human companion Kaede Hiramoto.
Video games • for the
Famicom (April 17, 1986;
Bandai) • for the Famicom (December 22, 1987; Bandai) • for the
Super Famicom (February 5, 1993; Bandai) • for the Super Famicom (July 19, 1996; Bandai) (requires
Sufami Turbo) • for the
Game Boy (December 13, 1996; Bandai) • for the
Sega Saturn (December 27, 1996; Bandai) • for the
PlayStation (January 24, 1997; Bandai) • for the PlayStation (July 19, 2000;
Sunsoft) • for
Microsoft Windows (August 9, 2001; Unbalance) • for the
PlayStation (December 11, 2003; Konami) • for the
PlayStation 2 (December 11, 2003;
Konami) • for the
Game Boy Advance (December 11, 2003; Konami) • for the
Wii (November 22, 2007;
Namco Bandai Games) • for the
Nintendo DS (July 10, 2008; Namco Bandai Games) ==See also==