Maru (Heavenly Delusion)

Maru (Japanese: マル) is a fictional character and protagonist from Masakazu Ishiguro's manga series Heavenly Delusion. Maru is an orphan who was given a mission by a woman named Mikura to travel across Japan to find "Heaven" and find a person who possesses an identical face to hand over a cure. He is given the bodyguard Kiruko whom he is attracted to despite her claims that she is actually a boy who had his brain transplanted into his sister's body. Nevertheless, they develop a strong bond in their journey as they battle giant creatures they call either man-eaters or Hirukos with Maru possessing the talent to destroy them by making contact with their cores; Kiruko names it "Maru Touch" (マルタッチ). Maru's supernatural ability are also notable by his surprising fighting skills which are later revealed to be connected with his origins from Heaven; The Takahara Academy who used to experiment on teenagers.

Maru
Heavenly Delusion character
Maru as drawn by Masakazu Ishiguro
First appearanceHeavenly Delusion #1, "Tokio" (2018)
Created byMasakazu Ishiguro
Voiced by

Maru was based on Kona, a character Ishiguro wrote in a previous work, And Yet the Town Moves, but wanted to reuse after seeing an interview Hirohiko Araki regarding his continuous works in the Jojo's Bizarre Adventure. Maru's relationship with Kiruko was inspired by buddy films and stories about siblings though Ishiguro suggested a more romantic idea since the series' beginning. In the anime adaptation, Maru is voiced by Gen Satō in Japanese and Jonathan Leon in English. The character was generally well received due to his adventures with Kiruko and the bond they share. Maru's origins were also the subject of mystery in regards to his similarities with fellow character Tokio and what is their possible connection.

Creation

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Kon's design from And Yet the Town Moves was an influence to Maru's including the same hood they sometimes share.

While manga artist Masakazu Ishiguro started writing Heavenly Delusion in 2018, he first revealed a teaser in late 2017 featuring the designs of Maru and fellow character Tokio.[1] The sibling-like dynamic of the duo of Maru and Miruko was based on Ishiguro's personal life. He was inspired by an event when he noticed a person who was interested in his sister. Another aspect of the protagonists' dynamic was inspired by buddy films. He has always been inspired by stories of brothers and sisters, so he wanted to create his own story about a brother and sister swapping places, where the brother takes care of the sister. He rejected coincidences related to magic and wanted to create a more realistic and accurate world to show what happens during a brain transplant. Another theme involves how relationships would change if somebody's sex changed. He often writes metaphorical situations with Kiruko's menstrual cycle being caused by clashing with Maru's lips when awakening from an hallucination from a Hiruko's attack.[2]

Despite Ishiguro's fascination with siblings, Maru and Kiruko are not blood relatives. Nevertheless, Ishiguro wanted to make Maru affectionally call Kiruko sister. While Maru is often protected by his bodyguard Kiruko, Ishiguro decided to give Maru a very high fighting ability to compensate for such weakness. This helped Ishiguro to keep writing Heavenly Delusion as a buddy film. Maru's design was inspired by Ishiguro's series And Yet the Town Moves most specifically the character Kon. The style is different from before, and Ishiguro thought he would stop reusing characters this time. However, after reading Hirohiko Araki's comments about his character designs in the story arc JoJolion he decided to keep writing Jojo's Bizarre Adventure. This interview motivated Ishiguro to keep using the Kon designs in Maru's in a similar fashion as JoJolion. Another influence was the manga Akira by Katsuhiro Otomo who makes heavy emphasis on a post-apocalyptic world that Ishiguro wants to create in calm scenes involving Maru interacting with Kiruko while having meals.[3] In the beginning, Maru has feelings for Kiruko without knowing that his bodyguard is a boy inside a girl's body. Ishiguro called this premise as "transsexual sci-fi", alluding to the possibility of Maru still loving Kiruko despite knowing the truth.[4]

Writer Makoto Fukami noted the constant banters between Kiruko and Maru important for the plot setting so they avoided trimming them.[5] Director Hirotaka Mori thinks he is very pure character but ignorant of the world when the series begins. Mori finds him attractive for how he does not strangely rubbed and it is bright. The director got the impression that Maru meets Kiruko from a place where he does not know his own past, and gradually gains an ego. On the other hand, Kiruko is in a complicated situation with Maru, and has a past that is too heavy for her to handle alone. As a result, he enjoys the two and thinks it is a mutually complementary relationship.[6] Maru's action sequences were animated by Tetsuya Takeuchi who wishes to match wuxia-like choreography with active camerawork. He was also assisted by Ryo Araki.[7]

Casting

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Gen Satō, Maru's Japanese voice actor, found that while Maru expresses several emotions, not much about him is known so it got difficult for him to voice the character,[8] Maru was the most difficult character he ever played. Because "he does not know himself". Of course, Satō was happy when he was chosen, but thought a lot about how to convey to the audience a character who "doesn't know himself."; This was mostly Maru had little to no background and had that unique skill capable of destroying man-eaters by touching their cores. However, the actor found him to enjoy a very carefree personality and relatable to a full-on adolescent boy, and he has a lot of human emotions. During the first episode, it was difficult to create the character of him, in the sense that his character's position and his personality are different. As a result, Sato was conscious of just talking reflexively. It was the opposite approach to called "character creation," and tried to bring out a certain emptiness in him by acting as if I was reacting to what came to his impression. Ishiguro told him that that the anime's take was identical to how he envisioned the manga and thus was glad he managed to give Maru normal conversations. Both Sato and Kiruko's actor were enthusiastic when recording fight scenes but the director told them to remain casual to reveal to the audience that both Maru and Kiruko are used to deal with delinquents or man-eaters.[9]

Meanwhile, Jonathan Leon said he enjoyed dubbing the character in English finding him "cool" and thanks to the dynamic with Kiruko he has to the point he befriended Kiruko's actress, Anjali Kunapaneni. Despite how dark the plot tends to be, Leon said he came to find Maru appealing for always retaining his smile and often jokes with Kiruko which he relates to. Among several jokes the series gives the leads, Leon enjoyed the most when his character jumps to pick a battery for Kiruko's gun under the condition she will let him touch her cleavage.[10]

Role in Heavenly Delusion

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Maru is a teenager who is on mission in Japan to find "heaven" after being given an item to hand over to a person who has the same face as him. Mikura requests the bodyguard job to his companion Kiruko whom he affectionately calls "sis".[11] Kiruko uses her skills with Mikura's gun to protect Maru who is capable to easily beat up adults in hand-to-hand combat much to Kiruko's surprise. They also often encounter huge creatures known as man-eaters that Maru can exterminate by getting close to them and destroying their cores. This ability is called "Maru Touch" by Kiruko.[12] As Maru stops caring about reaching heaven, he instead confesses Kiruko he likes her which results in her rejection when she confesses she is actually a man, Haruki Takehaya, who has had her brain transplanted into the body of his sister Kiriko.[13] Maru and Kiruko still continue their journey on friendly terms and learn from a man named Juichi that Heaven might be the former academy Takahara.[14] Juichi gives them a van to travel which they named Kirukomaru Mark II.[15] Kiruko also reveals her intentions of meeting her friend Robin Inazaki in the journey which causes them to split once they reach his current hometown.[16] Unable to wait for his partner, Maru enters to Robin's territory by force and is shocked when discovering Kiruko has been violated by the man. Maru proceeds to beat down Robin, leaving him nearly dead but he is stopped by Kiruko. In the aftermath, Maru confesses his love to Kiruko again claiming he does not care at all about her identity or gender since he fell for Kiruko.[17] The duo continue their journey together though Kiruko is still traumatized and claims she does not deserve Maru.

After several encounters with man-eaters, Maru and Kiruko meet a woman named Michika from Takahara who wants to challenge Maru to a fight in exchange of information. The two have two fights with Michika easily defeating Maru and Michika giving up in the second when as it is revealed both possess a talent in battle capable of predicting each other's moves. Before leaving, Michika claims that both Maru and him are Hirukos creatures similar to man-eaters much to Kiruko's confusion.[18] After recovering, Maru meets a doctor from Takahara who also transplanted Kiruko's brain. Shocked by his physical appearance, the doctor reveals that Maru originates from Takahara and that his parents are two former students, Tokio and Kona, and also had another child named Yamato. When he was born, the doctor marked Maru's body a circle which lead him to be named Maru as it is "circle" in Japanese.[19][20] After protecting the city from another man-eater, Maru and Kiruko are given a robot with the location of Takahara and the location of Maru's family. In their journey, Kiruko asks Maru to stop by Osaka to find other people from her orphanage.[21]

Reception

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Anime News Network praised the relationship between Maru and Kiruko for how caring they are with one another.[22] Anime Feminist enjoyed the handling of the animation as well as the dynamic between the two leads with Maru looking suspiciously similar to another person featured in the parallel story. Nevertheless, they mentioned the amount of gender violence when people try to attack Maru and Kiruko.[23] With the eventual revelation that Kiruko is a young man who had his brain transplanted to his sister's body, the website was optimistic about the handling of the main duo; for Maru still coming across as likable when confessing his feelings to Kiruko and not sounding homophobic in response to the twist.[24] Clarin and Meristation compared the anime to the video game The Last of Us for the post-apocalypse setting it provides with the main duo exploring areas like its two protagonists, Ellie and Joel.[25][26] IGN India praised the dynamic of the leads as the best parts of the anime.[27] The Philippine Star praised the series for focusing on gender dysphoria through the relationship between Maru and Kiruko without queerbaiting audiences similar to "switcheroos" like Ranma ½ and Sailor Moon.[28] The scene where Totori tries to seduce Maru also received Ishiguro's attention as he found it more erotic than in the manga.[29]

In the book Critical Posthumanities, Maru is called posthuman characters based on the commentaries from Francesca Fernando; Maru possesses an outstanding physical shape that allows to fight older people all alone and easily recover from wounds that do not work on common people like regrowing a tooth he loses when being attacked. Maru stands out as one of the first humans born with the nature to eliminate Hirukos just like him. The apparent lack morals Kiruko and Maru display in the series were noted for being allowed a woman to let a ManEater confused that might be her late son living as a ManEater. Maru's design includes a black jacket that contains "We are neither machines nor game pieces". This comes across as a visual resistance throughout the series against the non-consensual corruption of the children who suffer traumas while dealing with their supernatural abilities given by the doctors from Takahara Academy. Maru and Kiruko also show morals about the possible evolution of man-eaters in the first episodes of the anime but such scene ends with failure when one of them kills a woman claiming to be its mother.[30]

One of the series' biggest mysteries is Maru's physical similarities with the Takahara student Tokio. CBR theorized Ishiguro was hiding the fact they are son and mother by tricking the viewers that both Maru's journey and the activities in Takahara occur at the same time. After Tokio and Kona become intimate Tokio gives birth to two babies also sharing a similar appearance with the possibility of Maru being one of them. Maru's power to destroy man-eaters was also compared with abilities the Takahara students are born with and the fact that all of them are doomed to become man-eaters. This further reinforces that Maru is related by Takahara's students but unlike them, he possesses a more stable body that will not mutate and instead can kill others of his kind.[31]

Game Rant said that while the comedy between Maru and Kiruko always works, the sixth episode makes their sexual themes uncomfortable to the audience as during an action sequences, Kiruko offers Maru that she will let him touch her cleavage if he hands over a battery needed to battle an enemy. The following scenes where the two start arguing about the favor was subject of criticism by the writer especially in contrast to Tokio and Kona's relationship which is calmly handled when the two become intimate.[32] For the series' finale, Maru's beatdown against Robin Inazaki was praised by the website for giving the audience a sense of satisfaction when the teenager nearly kills the adult as a revenge for the sexual assault on Kiruko. This also led praise to the sequence animated by Tetsuya Takeuchi for making the beatdown being properly earned. Maru's eventual confession to Kiruko was also well-received as he claims that he fell in love with her regardless of gender or identity Kiruko wishes to choose which also parallels the romantic interactions between Mimihime and Shiro.[33]

References

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  1. ^ Ressler, Karen (November 24, 2017). "Mushishi, And Yet the Town Moves, Genshiken Creators Each Launch New Manga". Anime News Network. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
  2. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2022). 天国大魔境公式コミックガイド (in Japanese). Kodansha. pp. 108–119. ISBN 978-4-06-528578-7.
  3. ^ 「天国大魔境」特集 石黒正数インタビュー. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. July 23, 2018. p. 2. Archived from the original on March 20, 2023. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  4. ^ 「このマンガがすごい!2019」オトコ編第1位!『天国大魔境』誕生秘話 (in Japanese). Kodansha. March 7, 2019. Archived from the original on March 20, 2023. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  5. ^ Ota, Saki (September 25, 2023). "Confronting Life and Death in Heavenly Delusion". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on September 25, 2023. Retrieved September 25, 2023.
  6. ^ <天国大魔境>森大貴監督、"アニメの責任"は原作の魅力を生かし ゆがめずに伝えること. The Television [ja] (in Japanese). April 1, 2023. Archived from the original on May 7, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023 – via Yahoo! Japan.
  7. ^ "Tengoku Daimakyou Production Notes: An Exceptional Adaptation Facing Exceptional Challenges". Sakuga Booru. May 5, 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
  8. ^ TVアニメ『天国大魔境』Wビジュアル公開! 声優・佐藤元さん、千本木彩花さん、山村響さん、豊永利行さんら出演決定・コメント到着! 2023年4月よりTOKYO MXにて放送!. Animate Times (in Japanese). February 3, 2023. Archived from the original on April 18, 2023. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
  9. ^ 「天国大魔境」佐藤元×千本木彩花×山村響×福圓美里×武内駿輔、“魔境チーム”と“天国チーム”が初対談. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. April 24, 2023. Retrieved June 29, 2024.
  10. ^ "Jonathan Leon | Maru in Heavenly Delusion | Tokyo Revengers | Goodbye Don Glees | Anime Vodcast". El Koki Otaku. June 7, 2023. Retrieved June 28, 2024 – via YouTube.
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  12. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2019). "5". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 1. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-940-5.
  13. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2019). "7". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 1. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-940-5.
  14. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2019). "13". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 1. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-940-5.
  15. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "29". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 5. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-817-0.
  16. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "31". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 5. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-817-0.
  17. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "34". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 6. Denpa. ISBN 978-1-63442-848-4.
  18. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "34". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 9. Denpa. ISBN 978-4-06-531944-4.
  19. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "53". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 9. Denpa. ISBN 978-4-06-531944-4.
  20. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2023). "54". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 9. Denpa. ISBN 978-4-06-531944-4.
  21. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu (2024). "59". Heavenly Delusion. Vol. 10. Kodansha. ISBN 978-4-06-534205-3.
  22. ^ Jones, Steve (April 23, 2023). "Heavenly Delusion Episodes 1-4". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on May 7, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  23. ^ Prickett, Toni Sun (April 3, 2023). "Tengoku Daimakyou (Heavenly Delusion) – Episode 1". Anime Feminist. Archived from the original on April 11, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  24. ^ "2023 Spring Three-Episode Check-In". Anime Feminist. April 28, 2023. Archived from the original on May 5, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  25. ^ "Serie Distopica Anime Estilo The Last of Us". Clarin (in Spanish). April 15, 2023. Archived from the original on April 15, 2023. Retrieved March 7, 2023.
  26. ^ Barragán, Roberto (April 6, 2023). "Así es Tengoku Daimakyou, el nuevo anime al estilo The Last of Us que triunfa en Disney+". Meristation (in Spanish). Archived from the original on May 12, 2023. Retrieved May 12, 2023.
  27. ^ Sayyed, Rayan (April 1, 2023). "Heavenly Delusion Premiere - Review". IGN India. Archived from the original on April 2, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  28. ^ Uy, Jerald (April 5, 2023). "REVIEW: Atmospheric post-apocalyptic anime 'Tengoku Daimakyou' explores gender dysmorphia". The Philippine Star. Archived from the original on April 5, 2023. Retrieved May 7, 2023.
  29. ^ Ishiguro, Masakazu [@masakazuishi] (May 10, 2023). うーむ。確実に漫画に描いた時よりエロですね。 (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved May 10, 2023 – via Twitter.
  30. ^ Sengupta, Gaurab; Boruah, Rajashree (2024). Critical Posthumanities. Shashwat Publication. pp. 119–120. ISBN 9789360871338.
  31. ^ Mehanna, Alan (August 30, 2023). "Anime Theory: Maru from Heavenly Delusion is Tokio's Son". CBR. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
  32. ^ Lundeen, Matthew Magnus (May 9, 2023). "Everything Goes Wrong In This Week's Heavenly Delusion". Game Rant. Retrieved June 4, 2024.
  33. ^ Lundeen, Matthew Magnus (June 27, 2023). "The Heavenly Delusion Finale Is Just The Beginning". Game Rant. Retrieved June 4, 2024.