1985 animated film Vampire Hunter D remains a cult classic among English-speaking audiences. Billed by the Japanese producers as a "dark future science-fiction romance"
Vampire Hunter D is set in the year 12,090 AD, in a post-nuclear holocaust world where vampires, mutants and demons "slither through a world of darkness" (in the words of the film's opening introduction).
1988–1990 audio dramas Asashi Sonorama created
audio drama adaptations of three of the novels, in five parts: •
Raiser of Gales "D" (January 1988) (the book it was based on was published May 1984) •
D – Demon Deathchase (June 1988) •
D – Mysterious Journey to the North Sea I: To the North Sea (March 1990) •
D – Mysterious Journey to the North Sea II: Summer at Last (May 1990) •
D – Mysterious Journey to the North Sea III: When Winter Comes Again (June 1990). Most of the
voice cast for the original OVA reprised their roles. Originally released on cassette tape, in 2005 they were re-released as a special edition, five-disc
Vampire Hunter D Audio Drama Box, including a small supplemental booklet with a new short story by Kikuchi and an "art cloth" with an illustration by Amano.
1999 video game A
video game based on
Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust was also made for the
PlayStation game console, titled
Vampire Hunter D. It is a
survival horror game, but also similar to a standard adventure title. The player can see D from different pre-rendered angles throughout the game, and allow D to attack enemies with his sword. D can also use magic, Left Hand's abilities, and items. The story of the game is similar to that of
Vampire Hunter D Bloodlust, although it takes place entirely within the castle as D fights all the enemies. Only two of the Barbarois mutants appear as enemies. There are three endings, one of which is similar to the end of the anime.
2000 animated film The second film,
Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust garnered respect for its advanced animation techniques, detailed art style and character designs, voice acting originally recorded in English (English voice casting/direction by
Jack Fletcher), and its sophisticated orchestral
soundtrack composed, arranged and conducted by Marco D'Ambrosio. Its art style closely mirrored that of the illustrator and original character designer of the first movie,
Yoshitaka Amano. The storyline features a larger cast than the first film. The second Vampire Hunter D movie (known as
Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust outside of Japan) is based on the third of Hideyuki Kikuchi's Vampire Hunter D novels (
Demon Deathchase in English). Unlike the first film, which was released in 1985, this movie is rated NC-16 in Singapore, M in Australia, 15 in the UK, R13 in New Zealand and R for violence/gore in the USA (except for the Blu-ray release, which is unrated).
2007 manga adaptation In November 2007, the first volume of Saiko Takaki's manga adaptation of Hideyuki Kikuchi's series was published simultaneously in the U.S., Japan, and Europe. The project, overseen by
Digital Manga Publishing and
Hideyuki Kikuchi, aimed to adapt the entire catalogue of
Vampire Hunter D novels into a manga form, however it had concluded after the eighth volume
2022 comic book series On June 30, 2016, a
Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign for a five-issue
Vampire Hunter D comic book series titled
Vampire Hunter D: Message from Mars was announced. Published by Stranger Comics with supervision from series creator Hideyuki Kikuchi and support from the creative teams at Unified Pictures and Digital Frontier,
Message from Mars is an adaptation of the 2005 short story
Message from Cecile and acts as a prequel to the then-in-development animated series. The series is written by
Brandon M. Easton and illustrated by Michael Broussard, with visual development by
Christopher Shy. The campaign's stretch goals also include an official
Vampire Hunter D Pathfinder Roleplaying Game supplement written by
F. Wesley Schneider. The campaign reached its $25,000 funding goal on July 1, 2016, and its initial $50,000 stretch goal on July 7, 2016. The campaign concluded on August 9, 2016, with 1,736 backers pledging a total of $107,025, reaching four out of five stretch goals. As of December 2020 all production work for the five-issue run is complete, but publication plans were placed on an indefinite hiatus due to the ongoing
COVID-19 pandemic. In December 2021 the completion of the project was announced via Kickstarter update, with limited publication planned to begin in 2022 following a recovery from pandemic conditions, to be followed by a wide retail and digital release in the future. The graphic novel Kickstarter campaign was launched on January 26, 2022, offering a limited hardcover collector's edition, variant cover single issue editions, and a digital edition. The campaign achieved its initial $30,000 funding goal within 90 minutes, and surpassed $100,000 within the first day, concluding on February 19, 2020, with 4,095 backers pledging a total of $445,205.
Development of animated series In June 2015, a new animated series tentatively titled
Vampire Hunter D: Resurrection was announced, produced by Unified Pictures and
Digital Frontier. The series would be produced by Kurt Rauer and Scott McLean, and directed by Yoichi Mori, with
Bloodlust director
Yoshiaki Kawajiri acting as supervising director and series creator
Hideyuki Kikuchi providing editorial supervision. The series was currently in pre-production, and is developed as an hour-long
serial drama with the intent of being broadcast on a major American
cable network or
on-demand provider, with Japanese distribution to follow. As of June 2016 the series is still in pre-production, with plans to begin shipping the project to distributors by the end of the year. Given the abundance of source material, the current plan is to produce as many as seven seasons, without revisiting the source material that was adapted into the first two films. In February 2018 it was announced that the
pilot episode would be written by Brandon M. Easton, writer for the
Message from Mars comic book series. Pre-production on the series was put on hold in early 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Other media In July 2008,
Devils Due Publishing announced that it had acquired the rights to publish an English-language
Vampire Hunter D comic book mini-series titled
Vampire Hunter D: American Wasteland, to be written by
Jimmy Palmiotti and pencilled by
Tim Seeley, however the project was cancelled in 2009. Intended to infuse the standard
Vampire Hunter D formula and mythos with more Western sensibilities, it would have told an original story about D departing the Frontier to embark on a journey to a new land still ruled by the vampiric Nobility. In 2010, it was reported in Japanese horror magazine
Rue Morgue that Hideyuki Kikuchi was in talks with one of the producers for
Capcom's
Resident Evil video game series to develop a live-action
Vampire Hunter D adaptation. ==Reception==