Crusher Joe

A series of Science Fiction light novels by Haruka Takachiho, with illustrations by Yasuhiko Yoshikazu, initially published in 1977.

Beginning in the year 2160, the stories follow the adventures of members of "Crusher Conference", an organization of people who perform dangerous tasks for a fee.

The series was adapted into a short (1 volume) manga series (illustrated by Fujihiko Hosono) in 1979, an animated film released in 1983, and two OVA short features released in 1989. The manga was published in English by Studio Ironcat in 2000, and the anime was released in English by Anim Eigo in 1997. (There was also a heavily-cut dub-only version of the movie released in 1988, titled Crushers, by Jim Terry Productions .) The light novels remain untranslated.

This series contains examples of:

 * Arm Cannon: Talos has a machine gun hidden under his prosthetic left hand.
 * Crossover: The prequel story Doruroi no Arashi covers the same events as Dirty Pair no Dairansen.
 * Cyborg: Talos
 * Five-Man Band:
 * The Hero: Joe
 * The Lancer / Action Girl: Alfin
 * The Big Guy: Talos
 * Tagalong Kid / Bratty Half-Pint: Ricky
 * Robot Buddy: Dongo
 * Ghost Ship: In the manga, Joe's team is hired to find a retrieve a freighter called St. Germi, which disappeared en route to its destination and since theen seems to be travelling at random, leading to rumors that it's a ghost ship.
 * Human Popsicle: The plot of the movie begins with Joe being hired to transport a cryogenically-preserved person.
 * More Popular Spinoff: Dirty Pair (maybe not more popular in Japan, but definitely more popular elsewhere)
 * Rebellious Princess: Alfin
 * Show Within a Show: In the movie, there's a scene at a drive-in theater where the film being shown features Kei, Yuri, and Mugi (whose character designs are much more like the ones in the original novels than in any later version of Dirty Pair, because the novels' illustrator Yasuhiko Yoshikazu was the character designer for the Crusher Joe movie); counts as a Continuity Nod.
 * Space Pirates: some of the antagonists