Monkey (TV series)
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| 西遊記 Saiyuki |
|
| Also known as | Monkey (UK) |
|---|---|
| Genre | Fantasy Action Adventure Comedy |
| Created by | Wu Cheng'en |
| Written by | Motomu Furuta Hiroichi Fuse Hirokazu Fuse James Miki Moto Nagai Yooichi Onaka Mamoru Sasaki Eizaburo Shiba Yu Tagami Kei Tasaka Mutsuo Yamashita |
| Directed by | Toshi Aoki Jun Fukuda Kazuo Ikehiro Yusuke Watanabe Daisuke Yamazaki |
| Starring | Masaaki Sakai Masako Natsume Shiro Kishibe Toshiyuki Nishida Tonpei Hidari |
| Voices of | UK dub: David Collings Maria Warburg Peter Woodthorpe Gareth Armstrong Miriam Margoyles Andrew Sachs |
| Theme music composer | Mickie Yoshino |
| Opening theme | Monkey Magic by Godiego |
| Ending theme | Gandhara by Godiego (s1) Holy and Bright by Godiego (s2) |
| Country of origin | |
| Language(s) | Japanese |
| No. of seasons | 2 |
| No. of episodes | 52 (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Producer(s) | Teisho Arikawa Tsuneo Hayakawa Yoji Katori Ken Kumagaya Kazuo Morikawa Tadahiro Nagatomi Muneo Yamada |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | NTV |
| Picture format | 4:3 |
| Original run | 1 October, 1978 – 4 May, 1980 |
Monkey is the dubbed English language version of the Japanese television series Saiyūki (西遊記), based on the classic Chinese novel Journey to the West by Wu Cheng'en[1]. It was originally produced by Nippon Television (NTV) and International Television Films in association with NHK.
The series ran for two seasons of 26 episodes each. The first season ran from October 1978 to April 1979. The second season ran from November 1979 to May 1980. Both seasons had footage shot on location in northwest China and Inner Mongolia.
The show is unusual in that it was performed by Japanese actors in China and then dubbed into English. The English language version was produced by the BBC and broadcast in Australia and Britain in November 1979. The script for the dubbed dialogue was written by David Weir. It ran for only 39 episodes, because at the discretion of the BBC select episodes were not dubbed for the original run. These remaining episodes were dubbed by Fabulous Films Ltd in early 2004 by the original actors following a successful release of the English dubbed series on VHS and DVD. The missing 13 episodes were shown on Channel 4 in the United Kingdom on 8 September 2004.
Besides Australia and Britain, Monkey has also aired in New Zealand and is available on DVD. Monkey has not been screened in the United States, although Saiyūki was screened on a local Japanese-language TV station in California during the early 1980s.
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[edit] Plot summary
Monkey, the title character, "born from an egg on a mountain top", was a brash king of a monkey tribe (indeed, the title song goes so far as to claim that he was the "funkiest monkey that ever popped"). He achieved a little "enlightenment" and proclaimed himself "Great Sage, Equal of Heaven". After demanding the "gift" of a magical staff from a powerful Dragon king, Monkey is approached by Heaven to join their host in the lowly position of "Keeper of the Peach Garden of Immortality". Monkey eats them all, becomes immortal and runs amok. Having earned the ire of Heaven and being bested in a challenge by an omniscient, mighty, but benevolent, cloud-dwelling deity Buddha, Monkey is imprisoned under a mountain in order to learn humility.
Eventually Monkey is released by the priest Tripitaka in 630, who has been tasked by the Boddhisatva Guanyin to undertake a pilgrimage to India to fetch holy scriptures. The pair soon recruits two former members of the heavenly host who were cast out as a result of Monkey's transgressions: Sandy, the water monster and ex-cannibal, expelled from heaven after his interference caused a precious jade cup to be broken, and Pigsy, a pig monster consumed with lust and gluttony, who was expelled from heaven after harassing star princess Vega for a kiss. A dragon, Yu Lung, who was set free by Guanyin after being sentenced to death, eats Tripitaka's horse but upon discovering the horse was carrying Tripitaka, assumes the shape of a horse to carry him on his journey; later in the story he occasionally assumes human form to assist his new master. Monkey can also change form, for instance in 'The Great Journey Begins' Monkey transforms into a girl to trick Pigsy. Monkey's other magic included a cloud upon which he could fly, a fighting staff which could be any size and the ability to conjure bare-fisted monkey warriors by blowing on hairs plucked from his chest.
The pilgrims face many perils and antagonists both human and supernatural. Monkey, Sandy, and Pigsy are often called upon to battle demons, monsters and bandits, despite Tripitaka's constant call for peace. Many episodes also feature some moral lesson, usually based upon Buddhist and/or Taoist philosophies.
[edit] Spoken word introduction
Each episode of the English language series begins with the following spoken word introduction, given in a dramatically breathless faux-oriental accent:
"In the worlds before Monkey, primal chaos reigned. Heaven sought order. But the phoenix can fly only when its feathers are grown. The four worlds formed again and yet again, as endless aeons wheeled and passed. Time and the pure essences of Heaven, the moisture of the Earth, the powers of the Sun and the Moon all worked upon a certain rock, old as creation. And it became magically fertile. That first egg was named "Thought". Tathagata Buddha, the Father Buddha, said, "With our thoughts, we make the World". Elemental forces caused the egg to hatch. From it then came a stone monkey. The nature of Monkey was irrepressible!"
[edit] Soundtrack
In 1979 the BBC released a Monkey single on a 7 inch (RESL 66). It featured three tracks, "Gandhara" on Side 1, and "The Birth Of The Odyssey" and "Monkey Magic" on Side 2. A second BBC single (RESL 81) was released in 1980, this time with an edited version of "Monkey Magic" on side 1, and "Gandhara" (ガンダーラ Gandāra) and "Thank You Baby" on Side 2.[2] "Gandhara" has one verse in Japanese and the other in English.
The songs in the series were performed by the five-piece Japanese band Godiego. Formed in 1976, Godiego had also provided the theme to the TV series The Water Margin. An album containing many of the songs from the programme - Magic Monkey - was released in Japan (and has since also been available on CD). The BBC also released the full Godiego soundtrack on LP (REB 384) in 1980, which featured 11 tracks.
Masaaki Sakai, who plays Monkey in the series, is also a popular singer in Japan. Sakai himself sang "SONGOKU" which was played at the end of every episode of season two. Songoku is the name of the character Monkey in the Japanese language version of the show. He also sang "It's Too Late" (今では遅すぎる Ima de wa Oso sugiru) in episode 15 and "To the End of the Road" (この道の果てまでも Kono Michi no Hatemademo), a Japanese version of Godiego's "Thank You Baby" (same tune, different words), in episodes 11 and 15. The three songs were released as two singles in Japan. The B side of the "SONGOKU" single was another Godiego song sung by Sakai called "20 Oku Nen No Kurayami" (Havoc in Heaven).
A cover version of "Monkey Magic" by Orange Range was featured in the Nintendo DS video game, Moero! Nekketsu Rhythm Damashii Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan 2. Another cover was featured in Lucky Star. The Japanese-Canadian pop group Monkey Majik (which took their name from the song) released a new cover version in 2007.
[edit] Cult appeal
Monkey is considered a cult classic in countries where it has been shown, especially in Australia, where its immediate widespread popularity surpassed that of both Japan and the UK. Among the features that have contributed to its cult appeal are the theme song, the dubbed dialogue spoken in a variety of over-the-top "Oriental" accents, (except for Sandy who inexplicably speaks with an English accent), the reasonably good synchronization of dubbing to the actors' original dialogue, the fact that the young priest Tripitaka was played by a woman and the fact that Guan yin, who is usually depicted in statues and paintings as a female, is portrayed by a male.
Australian contemporary youth programs like alternative music show Recovery and radio station Triple J often made references to Monkey. Triple J interviewed the original voice actors on several occasions.
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation frequently repeated the 39 episodes dubbed by the BBC at 6pm on weeknights throughout the 1980s. Recovery aired an episode of Monkey weekly from 1997-2000. When Recovery was put on hiatus it was replaced with three hours of Monkey.
In Love Hina, when the characters put on a Journey to the West play, Seta insists Naru play the priest Tripitaka because he wanted a female to play the role to be like this series.
In one closing credits sequence of Lucky Star, Konata tries to karaoke to the "Monkey Magic", only for her wanting to bail out upon realizing that the song's lyrics are in English.
The character Tim Bisley from the Channel 4 sitcom Spaced claims that when he was a child, he wanted to be Monkey.
[edit] Characters
| Character | Actor | Dub actor | Original Chinese name | Japanese name |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tripitaka | Masako Natsume | Maria Warburg | Xuanzang | Sanzo hoshi (Genjyo Sanzo) |
| Monkey | Masaaki Sakai | David Collings | Sun Wukong | Son Goku |
| Pigsy | s1: Toshiyuki Nishida s2: Tonpei Hidari |
Peter Woodthorpe | Zhu Bajie | Cho Hakkai |
| Sandy | Shiro Kishibe | Gareth Armstrong | Sha Wujing | Sa Gojō |
| "Horse" | Shunji Fujimura | Andrew Sachs | Yu Lung | ? |
Monkey's dubbed English voice (by David Collins) is almost identical in sound to Masaaki Sakai's real Japanese voice.
[edit] Other television adaptations of Journey to the West
[edit] Episode list
[edit] Series 1
- "Monkey Goes Wild about Heaven"
- "Monkey Turns Nursemaid"
- "The Great Journey Begins"
- "Monkey Swallows the Universe"
- "The Power of Youth"
- "Even Monsters Can be People"
- "The Beginning of Wisdom"
- "Pigsy Woos a Widow"
- "What Monkey Calls the Dog-Woman"
- "Pigsy's in the Well"
- "The Difference Between Night & Day"
- "Pearls Before Swine"
- "The Minx and the Slug"
- "Catfish, Saint and the Shape-Changer"
- "Monkey Meets the Demon Digger"
- "The Most Monstrous Monster"
- "Truth and the Grey Gloves Devil"
- "Land for the Locusts"
- "The Vampire Master"
- "Outrageous Coincidences"
- "Pigsy, King and God"
- "Village of the Undead"
- "Two Little Blessings"
- "The Fires of Jealousy"
- "The Country of Nightmares"
- "The End of the Way"
[edit] Series 2
- "Pigsy's Ten Thousand Ladies"
- "The Dogs of Death"
- "You Win Some, You Lose Some" (dubbed 2004)
- "Pigsy Learns A Lesson" (dubbed 2004)
- "The Land With Two Suns" (dubbed 2004)
- "The House of the Evil Spirit" (dubbed 2004)
- "Am I Dreaming?" (dubbed 2004)
- "The Tormented Emperor" (dubbed 2004)
- "Between Heaven and Hell" (dubbed 2004)
- "The Foolish Philosopher"
- "Who Am I?"
- "What is Wisdom?"
- "The Fountain of Youth"
- "Better The Demon You Know" (dubbed 2004)
- "A Shadow So Huge"
- "Keep on Dancing"
- "Give and Take"
- "Such a Nice Monster"
- "The Fake Pilgrims (dubbed 2004)
- "Pretty as a Picture"
- "Mothers"
- "The Tenacious Tomboy" (dubbed 2004)
- "Stoned" (dubbed 2004)
- "Hungry Like The Wolf" (dubbed 2004)
- "Monkey's Yearning" (dubbed 2004)
- "At the Top of the Mountain"
[edit] References
- ^ The book is based on a real person. Hs En Tsang traveled to India in AD 629 to collect Buddhist scriptures. The reason given for the Tripitaka character being played by a woman in the series was that actress Masako Natsume matched descriptions of Tsang's appearance more closely than male actors.
- ^ List of 7" singles released on BBC Records at www.discogs.com [1]
[edit] See also
- Journey to the West (TV series)
- Monkey is not to be confused with Hanuman The Monkey Warrior
- Sun Wukong
[edit] External links
- Monkey - Great Sage equal of Heaven - fansite
- Monkey Heaven - fansite
- Monkey at the Internet Movie Database (IMDb)
- GodChecker page on the god Monkey
- Journey to the West - More background info on the legend
- What was Monkey Magic all about? - BBC News article assessing the show's lasting popularity
- Meet Monkey - BBC Sport Olympics page introducing Monkey as part of their Olympic Coverage

