词条 | Seta Sōjirō |
释义 |
| name = Seta Sōjirō | series = Rurouni Kenshin | image = | caption = Seta Sōjirō on the cover of Rurouni Kenshin Kanzenban Volume 13 | creator = Nobuhiro Watsuki | voiced by = Japanese Noriko Hidaka English Tara Jayne (anime episodes 31-47) Lynn Fischer (anime episodes 51-52) Melissa Fahn (anime episodes 54-56, 61) Clint Bickham (New Kyoto Arc) Justin Briner (Live-action film trilogy) | oaux1 name = Portrayed by | oaux1 = Ryunosuke Kamiki | nickname = {{nihongo|"Heaven's Sword"|天剣|Tenken}} | paux1 name = Affiliations | paux1 = Juppongatana }}{{nihongo|Seta Sōjirō|瀬田 宗次郎}}, addressed as Sojiro Seta in the English anime, is a fictional character from the Rurouni Kenshin manga series created by Nobuhiro Watsuki. He is Shishio Makoto's right-hand man. Sōjirō has been favorably popular with the Rurouni Kenshin reader base, placing high in several popularity polls.[1] Creation and conceptionNobuhiro Watsuki has stated that the character design of Sōjirō is loosely based on Okita Sōji, the captain of the first Squad of the Shinsengumi. The name Seta Sōjirō originates from "Okita Sōjirō," the name Okita had in his early life. The specific personality model is from the Okita in Ryōtarō Shiba's novel Shinsengumi Keppuroku ("Record of Shinsengumi Bloodshed"); in that version Okita "lost an important part in his human heart," making him without emotions and "pretty scary." Watsuki reported that some fans did not like the fact that a character modeled on Okita is a villain; Watsuki argued that since Sōjirō is based on the Shinsengumi Keppuroku Okita, the design "works well" and that Sōjirō is "a strong antagonist." Watsuki felt that Sōjirō was more difficult to draw than Watsuki initially anticipated, and that he only accomplished around one fourth of what he imagined the character would appear in his mind. Watsuki had no design model for Sōjirō; Watsuki envisioned Okita as having bangs (fringes), so to Watsuki it was no surprise that Sōjirō also had bangs. Watsuki gave Sōjirō a "slightly feminized air" so that Sōjirō's smile would "look good" on the character. In Volume 9 Watsuki stated that he wants to properly portray Sōjirō since he is a popular character.[2] The fact that Sōjirō has no emotions is also based on Shiba's version of Okita Sōji. Watsuki said that this concept became one of the most difficult aspects to reflect in the drawing. Okita died when he was young, but Watsuki decided not to kill Sōjirō in the story in order to atone for the murders he committed, but instead start living on his own instead of having someone make his decisions for him. He hoped to draw him in more of the next chapters but soon thought that would not be possible.[3] Character outlinePersonalitySōjirō is Shishio's right-hand man, a young assassin trained by Shishio himself. Sōjirō is known for his lack of kenki (offensive aura) in a fight, his apparent emotionless state reflected also in his sarcasm and polite manners with his smile hiding his true feelings. However, he does have a special relationship with Komagata Yumi, who functions as an older-sister figure towards him. Sōjirō usually dresses up in a blue kimono with white handguards. PlotBorn in Kanagawa Prefecture in September of the first year of Bunkyū (1861), Sōjirō is an illegitimate child who was badly mistreated by his father's family to the point of being beaten for faltering in his tasks.[4][5] To build a tolerance to the beatings, Sōjirō put on a smiling face as his tormenters decide to let him be. One night, at age eight, Sōjirō witnessed the recently scarred Makoto Shishio killing two police officers and was spared due to the criminal seeing the boy's smile. While secretly feeding Shishio and providing him with bandages, Sōjirō takes the man's ideals to heart while receiving a wakizashi. When his family learned that he is harboring Shishio and decide to murder the child and pin the blame on the fugitive, Sōjirō uses the wakizashi Shishio gave him to slaughter his family.[5] Soon after, once Shishio's wounds are healed, Sōjirō travels with him as his right hand and member of the Jupongatana. Sōjirō first appears in the storyline when he uses his superhuman speed to reach and assassinate government official Ōkubo Toshimichi, also killing the official's would-be samurai assassins who would historically take credit for Ōkubo's death nonetheless. Later, after Senkaku's defeat, Sōjirō duels with Kenshin using Battōjutsu with the fight ending in a tie when their swords shattered.[4] Sōjirō is then assigned by Shishio to gather the Jupongatana located in the east side of Japan. When Kenshin finally arrives at the Room of Reduced Space in Shishio's lair, he finds Sōjirō waiting for him and at first has the upper hand due to his superior speed. But when the confrontation forces Sōjirō to question Shishio's principles, his true emotions surface with allowing Kenshin now able to read his moves and defeat him. Despite his defeat, Sōjirō informs Yumi of the key to Kenshin's ultimate attack while asking her to give Shishio the wakizashi that kept before leaving. In the aftermath of Shishio's death, Sōjirō becomes a wanderer to find his own truth and ideals. Five years later, he makes his way to Hokkaido where he is reunited with fellow Jupongatana member Yūkyūzan Anji, who was being escorted to Hakodate by Sugimura Yoshie(Nagakura Shinpachi), and joins them. TechniquesSōjirō's apparent lack of emotion, his simple, cold-blooded mentality that {{Nihongo|the strong will live and the weak shall die|弱肉強食|jakuniku kyōshoku|an idiom for "survival of the fittest" or "law of the jungle"}}, and his skills make him a formidable foe for Kenshin. As a master swordsman of his own style, Sōjirō's abilities have earned him the nickname of {{nihongo|"Heaven's Sword"|天剣|Tenken|Ten meaning Heaven and Ken meaning Sword, "Tenken" means swordsmanship of natural endowments}}.[4] His shukuchi utilizes such powerful speed that, to an observer, it appears that the distance between the two fighters has shrunk (hence the name shukuchi, which means "reduced earth"). During his fight with Kenshin, Sōjirō continually states he's only moving "three steps below shukuchi" or "two steps below shukuchi." While moving at the speed his shukuchi utilizes, the only thing that can be seen is Sōjirō's footsteps ripping through the tatami mats. During "one step below shukuchi", he is able to attack from an omni-directional angle, utilizing not only horizontal but veritical space.[6] While performing true shukuchi, he completely disappears and cannot be seen, even by Kenshin. Sōjirō can dodge the {{nihongo|Kuzu-ryūsen|九頭龍閃||lit. "Nine-headed Dragon Flash"}},[7] a move which apparently cannot be evaded even by Kenshin himself. Sōjirō is also the first one ever to slash Kenshin in the back in the series.[7] Sōjirō is also well versed in the Battōjutsu style like Kenshin, as is evident when he decides to use a stance similar to Kenshin's and when he destroys Kenshin's first sakabatō. Combining the true speed of shukuchi with the Battōjutsu, he has created his only named technique, {{nihongo|Shuntensatsu|瞬天殺||lit. "Instant Heaven Kill"}}, meaning "immediate killing by heaven's sword". It is named this because the speed behind the attack is so swift that the opponent not only dies before falling to the floor, but there isn't even time to experience pain. Judging by its appearance in the anime, it appears that the Shuntensatsu is very similar to Kenshin's Amakakeru Ryu no Hirameki, except that it uses speed rather than strength. In other mediaRyunosuke Kamiki is cast as Sōjirō in two live-action sequels to Rurouni Kenshin.[8]In The Hokkaido Arc, Sōjirō has become a wanderer to find his own truth and ideals. He makes his way to Hokkaido where he is reunited with fellow Jupongatana member Yūkyūzan Anji. ReceptionDaryl Surat of Otaku USA said that while Sōjirō is a "kid," the character scored highly in popularity polls among readers because Sōjirō always smiles despite the abuse inflicted upon him. Surat used Sōjirō as an example for labeling Rurouni Kenshin what he calls "neo-shonen"; a work that appeals to both boys and girls.[9] References{{Portal|Anime and manga|Fictional characters}}1. ^{{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 16 |last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro |publisher= Viz Media |year= 2005|chapter=Chapter 135|isbn= 1-59116-854-6 }} {{Rurouni Kenshin}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Seta, Sojiro}}2. ^{{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 9 |year= 2004|last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro |publisher= Viz Media |chapter=The Secret Life of Characters (26), Seta Sōjirō|page= 86|isbn= 978-1-59116-669-6 }} 3. ^{{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 16 |year= 2005|last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro |publisher= Viz Media |chapter=The Secret Life of Characters (26) Amendment, Seta Sōjirō|page= 122|isbn= 978-1-59116-854-6 }} 4. ^1 2 {{cite book|title=Rurouni Kenshin Profiles|publisher=Viz Media|year=2005|isbn=978-1-4215-0160-4}} 5. ^1 {{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 16 |year= 2005|last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro |publisher= Viz Media |chapter=Act 134: The Second Secret|page= 83|isbn= 978-1-59116-854-6 }} 6. ^{{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 16 |last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro|year=2005|publisher= Viz Media |chapter=Chapter 133|isbn= 1-59116-854-6 }} 7. ^1 {{cite book |title= Rurouni Kenshin, Volume 15 |last= Watsuki |first= Nobuhiro|year=2005|publisher= Viz Media |chapter=Chapter 129|isbn= 1-59116-810-4 }} 8. ^New Live-Action Rurouni Kenshin Films Cast Sōjirō, Aoshi 9. ^Surat, Daryl. "Heart of Steel." Otaku USA. Volume 4, Number 1. August 2010. 34. 12 : Anime and manga characters who can move at superhuman speeds|Fictional assassins|Male characters in anime and manga|Orphan characters in anime and manga|Fictional characters based on real people|Fictional kenjutsuka|Rurouni Kenshin characters|Fictional murderers|Fictional rampage and spree killers|Fictional serial killers|Fictional Japanese people in anime and manga|Fictional characters from Kantō |
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