The Sun (Malaysia)

One Piece anime marks 1,000th episode

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TWO decades after One introduced the world to a swashbuckl­ing pirate in a straw hat, fans of the Japanese cartoon series celebrated the release of the 1,000th episode on Nov 21.

One Piece first appeared in manga form in Japan in 1997, with an anime version following two years later.

Since then the franchise has become a global cultural phenomenon, smashing records and winning fans around the globe.

Nonetheles­s, it wasn’t an immediate hit.

“It’s a miracle,” Ryuji Kochi of Toei Animation, the Japanese company behind the anime series, said of the 1,000-episode landmark.

“From the beginning, it was a tough title. It was not easy to place on the TV,” he told AFP, adding that growing a fanbase for the show was not easy either.

Kochi said it had taken 13 long years for the anime, following the adventures of hat-wearing hero Monkey D. Luffy, to reach cult status.

Today, however, hundreds of millions of fans are still gripped by every twist in the hunt for the eponymous One Piece, the treasure coveted by all pirates.

The popularity of the manga version has also endured as the TV show has taken off.

Its creator Eiichiro Oda holds the Guinness World Record for “most copies published for the same comic book series by a single author” – 490 million, to be precise.

Netflix beckons

The 1,000th episode of the anime series was released in 80 countries.

In Tokyo, a giant banner of the main characters was erected at Shibuya station, one of the Japanese capital’s main transport hubs.

Special screenings took placeacros­s the US, while in France – the world’s biggest manga and anime market after Japan – more than 100 cinemas organised a marathon watching binge.

Fans from Africa to Europe to the Middle East even posted some 20,000 selfies to a fan site in honour of the milestone.

“I’ve been a One Piece fan for 20 years!” tweeted one Japanese enthusiast who was impatient to watch the landmark episode.

“I’ve been watching it since junior high, and I’m still enjoying it even after growing up.”

French fan Alexis Poriel, who runs a manga fan group on online platform Discord, said the broad scope of One Piece was a key reason for its popularity.

“It talks about social issues, there’s action, there’s humour,” the 26-yearold said.

“One Piece manages to really make

a link with societal questions,” he added, pointing out episodes tackling issues from racism to geopolitic­al intrigues.

The series also spans geographic­al and cultural references, from ancient Egypt to medieval Japan, that help to make it feel universal.

As for what’s next – a live-action adaptation by Netflix is in the works, with fans speculatin­g that it could catapult the franchise to global household name status similar to Star Wars or Harry Potter.

Netflix’s announceme­nt of the cast set social media alight earlier this month, with 18-year-old Mexican actor Inaki Godoy preparing to take on the role of Luffy. – ETX Studio

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