A teenage girl periodically travels back in time to feudal Japan to help a young half-demon recover the shards of a jewel of great power.A teenage girl periodically travels back in time to feudal Japan to help a young half-demon recover the shards of a jewel of great power.A teenage girl periodically travels back in time to feudal Japan to help a young half-demon recover the shards of a jewel of great power.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 1 nomination total
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaInuyasha is roughly 150 years old when he first meets Kikyo and 200 years old when he meets Kagome.
- Alternate versionsThe versions aired exclusively on the Cartoon Network in the USA and on YTV in Canada are edited. The unedited versions of the episodes were released on DVD.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AMV Hell 3: The Motion Picture (2005)
- SoundtracksChange the World
Written by Rie Matsumoto
Composed by Miki Watanabe
Arranged by Keiichi Ueno
(avex trax)
Performed by V6
Opening Theme: Episodes 1-34
Closing Theme: Episodes 147-148
Featured review
With Pokemon, Beyblade and Yu-Gi-Oh gracing the small screen, it has become difficult to take Japanese Anime seriously. Thankfully, Cartoon Network has put a block of Japan's finest in their red-eye time slot, spearheaded by Inuyasha.
The general gist of the plot is Kagome, a modern schoolgirl, winds up in feudal times and must help a half-demon(Inyasha) recover the shards of a jewel of ultimate power.
One might say that Inuyasha combines the best of both Shonen and Shojo stylings. The world of feudal Japan is laced with ghosts, demons and other critters who roar, slash, dash, slice, splat and snarl, and at least one of these beasts duke it out with the title character per episode. On the other hand, there is romance, guilt, past betrayals and secrets to be discovered, not to mention sight gags and running jokes.
The visual quality is a step above pocket monsters and moon princesses as well. The show is thankfully devoid of giant sweat-drops, fountain tears and misplaced mouths.
It takes patience to watch the series, with 100+ episodes and long-running character development, it would take a fortune of DVD purchases or steadfast loyalty to the television at 1:00 am (as of this writing)to get the entire story down.
But even so, I highly recommend this show to anybody yearning for more than just flaming mesomorphs and pocket monsters.
The general gist of the plot is Kagome, a modern schoolgirl, winds up in feudal times and must help a half-demon(Inyasha) recover the shards of a jewel of ultimate power.
One might say that Inuyasha combines the best of both Shonen and Shojo stylings. The world of feudal Japan is laced with ghosts, demons and other critters who roar, slash, dash, slice, splat and snarl, and at least one of these beasts duke it out with the title character per episode. On the other hand, there is romance, guilt, past betrayals and secrets to be discovered, not to mention sight gags and running jokes.
The visual quality is a step above pocket monsters and moon princesses as well. The show is thankfully devoid of giant sweat-drops, fountain tears and misplaced mouths.
It takes patience to watch the series, with 100+ episodes and long-running character development, it would take a fortune of DVD purchases or steadfast loyalty to the television at 1:00 am (as of this writing)to get the entire story down.
But even so, I highly recommend this show to anybody yearning for more than just flaming mesomorphs and pocket monsters.
- masterbrain_27
- Dec 23, 2004
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Details
- Runtime22 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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