Manga Master Keaton was serialized in
Big Comic Original from 1988 to 1994. The 144 chapters were collected into 18 volumes by
Shogakukan between November 1988 and August 1994. A edition of the series, including color pages, was published in 12 volumes between August 30, 2011, and June 29, 2012. During its initial magazine run and release, Hokusei Katsushika was credited as its writer and
Naoki Urasawa as its illustrator. The reissue co-credits Katsushika and
Takashi Nagasaki as the writers for the first five volumes, while Katsushika and Urasawa are co-credited as the writers from volumes six on. From 1989 to 1993, Katsushika and Urasawa serialized in special issues of
Big Comic Original. The 14 chapters were collected into one volume on March 28, 1995, which sees their original two-colored artwork turned into four-colors. Naoki Urasawa and Takashi Nagasaki created a sequel to the series, titled
Master Keaton Remaster. It was published irregularly in
Big Comic Original from March 19, 2012, to August 20, 2014. The chapters were collected into a single volume on November 28, 2014, with a deluxe edition including the full color pages from the magazine run released the same day. In 2014,
Viz Media licensed
Master Keaton for release in North America. Viz Media published the 12-volume edition from December 16, 2014, to September 19, 2017.
Volumes Anime An
anime adaptation covering a portion of the manga's select chapters aired from October 6, 1998, to March 30, 1999, in Japan on
Nippon TV. The series was produced by
Madhouse, Nippon Television,
Shōgakukan and
VAP and directed by
Masayuki Kojima, with Tatsuhiko Urahata handling series composition,
Kitarō Kōsaka designing the characters and
Kuniaki Haishima composing the music. Originally consisting of 24 episodes, an additional 15 episodes were created and released as
original video animations from June 21, 1999, to June 21, 2000, bringing the total to 39 episodes. The anime is narrated by
Keaton Yamada. The opening theme "Railtown" is by Kuniaki Haishima. The ending theme for episodes 1–13 is "Eternal Wind" by Blüe, by
Kneuklid Romance for episodes 14–26, and "From Beginning" by Kuniaki Haishima for episodes 27–39. New ending themes were used for the anime's 2007 rebroadcast; by Kneuklid Romance for episodes 1–13 and "Eber" by Blüe for episodes 14–24. The anime and OVAs were licensed in North America by
Pioneer Entertainment (later named Geneon), with an English dub produced by
The Ocean Group. They released eight DVDs from June 10, 2003, to August 10, 2004. ==Reception==