LOST PLANET ANIME
May 14, 2013 posted by

“Dame Oyaji” (1974)

Dame_Oyaji_image

In the 1970s, Japanese broadcasters were blessed with studios such as Toei Doga, Tokyo Movie, Tatsunoko, and Nippon Animation supplying them cartoons for their viewers to tune into. Not all of their shows were good, but for the most part they were competently made and suitable for regular TV broadcast, and many of them are memorable enough to be remembered for generations. Then there are studios like Knack.

Knack has the “honor” of being one of the worst animation studios in Japan. Their cartoons are plagued with sloppy layouts, poor animation, awful timing, camera errors, etc. etc. As much as it pains me to say this, Filmation had better quality control than this. Knack managed to produce over two dozen shows from 1970 to 1991. One of them is Dame Oyaji .

oyaji-book200Dame Oyaji (No Good Pop) is a comic by Mitsutoshi Furuya that ran in Weekly Shonen Sunday from 1970 to 1982. The show is a Japanese version of the Casper Milquetoast henpecked husband and shrewd wife archetype that’s been around in American animation for generations, through characters such as Famous Studio’s Henry the Rooster and Terrytoons’ John Doormat. The difference is that Dame Oyaji suffers through domestic abuse, and I mean it when I say it’s physical.

Throughout the series, Oyaji is beaten, tortured, humiliated, and mutilated by his wife Oni-baba (name means Demon Hag) and their two children, Yukiko (eldest daughter) and Takobo (younger son). If that’s not bad enough, he is also ridiculed at his office job, too. The series was meant to make fun of the traditional patriarchy role in Japan, but it just comes off as too cringe-worthy to be taken for laughs.

In spite of the cringe-worthy content, the comic was a success, running for 12 years. The TV cartoon, however, was a flop. The show aired on Tokyo Channel 12 (now known as TV Tokyo) from April 2 to October 9, 1974 for 26 episodes. Originally it aired on Tuesdays at 7:30 PM, but halfway through the run it was moved to Fridays at 7:30 PM. It was moved for the third and final time to Wednesdays at 7:30 PM, where they aired the final two episodes. Here are the opening and closing titles:

oyaji-b-200A typical episode would involve Oni-baba wanting to advance her image in front of other house-wives, whom have more successful husbands than she does. She would then go home and force Dame Oyaji to advance his status (whether it’s getting a promotion at his company, buying a car, disguise himself as his son so he can take the difficult school test), only to fail in the end. The family would then blame the failure on Oyaji and beat him in the end. Fade to black.

One of the few episodes where Dame Oyaji managed to get an upper-hand is when he tried to mimic Uri Geller. Oyaji managed to successfully bend the spoon, but in the process he also bent his body. In the end, not only did Oyaji managed to cure himself, but he managed to turn the tables on his wife by bending her with his will. The episode ends with him torturing her instead, with the kids not being able to help because Oyaji threatened to bend their bodies if they lay their hands on him.

oyaji-a-200To be fair, this got toned down in later episodes, to the point that some of them had no violence at all. Some of those episodes are about the son Takobo with little appearances of the rest of the family. One of them features Takobo realizing that he left his sketchbook home on the day his school is having an art class. He was given an opportunity to get out to retrieve it when his teacher asked for a dog that they could get for a model. Takobo knows of a stray dog nearby and decides to get him as a model, while he rushes off to retrieve his sketchbook. Unfortunately, the dog causes trouble when one of the students laces his food with sildenafil, causing him to chase after Takobo’s female teacher. While this episode was amusing, this was in spite of the show’s shoddy production value.

In spite of Knack’s questionable quality they managed to produce a few hit shows, such as Don Chuck Stories (1975-78; 99 episodes), about a beaver boy and his animal friends, as well as their version of The Little Prince (1978-79; 39 episodes), which had a long life in international distribution, including America, where it aired under cable channel Nickelodeon. However, compared to the shows made by other, superior studios, most of their outputs will always languish in obscurity.

19 Comments

  • What is “sildenafil”?

    • Viagra.

    • You probably know it better as “Viagra”.

    • The bigger question is how they got sildenafil in 1974 when it wasn’t invented until 1996… I call shenanigans.

    • I guess you could generally call it an aphrodisiac.

    • Well, the Japanese are good at making up things before they happen!

  • Thank you for confirming my opinion of Knack’s poor quality. Dax International was pretty bad, too.

  • I find it interesting how domestic abuse from female to a male is played for laughs. However, physical abuse of man to a woman is never considered funny.

    • That one’s always puzzled me too. The images here look really graphic as well.

  • I hear Herman and Katnip gave “Dame Oyaji” two very enthusiastic thumbs up.

  • Yup, this is straight up disturbing. Glad to see general audiences pretty much ignored it.

    • They were still reading it I’m sure.

  • I have to say, that Knack studio would make the worst of Newgrounds animation seem like ’37-’56 Looney Tunes.

  • Wow! Worst anime adaptation ever. Hey Charles Brubaker, Can you review another Lost Planet Anime which I found called “Kaitou Pride” (怪盗プライド) Mysterious Thief Pride or Dr. Zen (in the English dub of course)?

    Other lost animes on You Tube are Pipi the Alien (宇宙人ピピ) and Dolphin Prince (ドルフィン王子), Hang On! Marine Kid (がんばれ!マリンキッド), Johnny Cypher in Dimension Zero (ジョニーサイファー), Marine Boy (海底少年マリン), Freckled Putchy (そばかすプッチー), Pinch & Punch (ピンチとパンチ), Chippo the Mischievous Angel (いたずら天使). Can you review these, Mr. Brubaker. Sincerely, Chad Edwards

    • Incidentally, Dolphin Prince, Hang On! Marine Kid and Marine Boy are roughly the same series/characters. It’s third incarnation wasn’t completely lost as it was seen on American TV and in other English-speaking markets for a number of years though at present Warner Bros. seems to not have much use with it.

    • Shhhh… Marine Boy is coming soon from Warner Archives…. Shhhhh….

  • I’m a Japanese.
    Your this study is earnest.
    I show respect for you.

    It’s comics of “Dame Oyaji” to have become original base.
    The story of the old age of “Dame Oyaji” exists there.
    “Dame Oyaji” lives in the country…. only one.
    And I spend happy days.
    A family sometimes comes to meet.

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