Neo-Human Casshern

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

Throwing his irreplacable life away, reborn in an immortal body, to strike and crush the devils of iron. If Casshern doesn't do it, who will?

Opening Narration

Neo-Human Casshern (新造人間キャシャーン, Shinzou Ningen Casshern) is an anime produced in 1973 by Tatsunoko Productions.

Dr. Kotaro Azuma was creating androids when his prototype, BK-1, went out of control, escaped, and created a robot army which he led to conquer the Earth. The doctor's son, Tetsuya, rebuilt himself as "Casshern", an incredibly strong and agile robot who devotes his new existence to hunting down and destroying the Andro Army of BK-1, now styling himself the "Braiking[1] Boss". Casshern was distinguished by not usually using weapons in his fights; he literally tore the Braiking Boss' Mecha-Mooks apart with his bare hands. His companions are Friender, a robotic dog able to transform itself into various vehicles, and Luna Kozuki, a plucky young woman whose scientist father gave her an anti-robot pistol.

Casshern has been ReTooled several times since the original:

  • 1993 had a 4-episode OVA rebooting the franchise simply titled Casshern; Streamline Pictures released an English dub under the title Casshan: Robot Hunter as a Compilation Movie.
  • In 2004, a Live Action Adaptation titled Casshern was released. This version has Casshern and Braiking Boss -- "Burai" here -- as Artificial Humans born from Dr. Azuma's research into artificial stem cells to fight the disease caused by the aftermath of a fifty-year war between a Commie Nazi Asian Empire and "Europa". It drew attention for the stylized visuals and impressive action scenes as soon as footage was released. The themes of the futility and dehumanization brought about by war added spice, but the Darker and Edgier tone, shameless use of Deus Ex Machina to move the plot, and esoteric ending dimmed enthusiasm once the film was released.
  • 2008 brought another reboot called Casshern Sins, which has its own page. This incarnation retools everything about the franchise except the Broad Strokes of the character designs and Braiking Boss conquering humanity, and then veers off to examine the nature of life, mortality, and redemption -- while providing the audience with beautifully animated robotic dismemberment in the process.

Casshern was also one of the characters to appear in the Fighting Game Tatsunoko vs. Capcom.

Tropes used in Neo-Human Casshern include:
  1. based on a Japanese word meaning "rogue" or "brute"; frequently mistranslated as "Black King"