King of Thorn

King of Thorn
Cover of volume 2 of the Japanese edition
いばらの王
(Ibara no Ou)
Genre
Manga
Written byYūji Iwahara
Published byEnterbrain
English publisher
MagazineComic Beam
DemographicSeinen
Original runOctober 2002October 2005
Volumes6
Anime film
Directed byKazuyoshi Katayama
Produced by
  • Jun'ichi Kimura
  • Yoshimasa Tsuchiya
Written by
  • Kazuyoshi Katayama
  • Hiroshi Yamaguchi
Music byToshihiko Sahashi
StudioSunrise
Licensed by
ReleasedMay 1, 2010
Runtime109 minutes

King of Thorn (いばらの王, Ibara no Ou) is a Japanese fantastique manga series written and illustrated by Yuji Iwahara. It was published by Enterbrain in the seinen magazine Monthly Comic Beam between October 2002 and October 2005 and collected in six bound volumes. It is licensed in North America by Tokyopop, with the final volume published in November 2008. The series is about a group of people who are put in suspended animation to escape a mysterious plague that turns people to stone, and upon waking there appears to be only seven survivors in a world run wild—including a Japanese teenage girl named Kasumi Ishiki and a British man named Marco Owen. The survivors soon discover that the entire ruin is filled with strange, dinosaur-like creatures and other monstrous aberrations of nature. Thinking that a great amount of time passed since their arrival on the island, soon the survivors discover not only that their sleep was indeed too short to label such dramatic changes as natural occurrence, but also that the situation in and of itself is far greater than they could imagine.

A feature anime film adaptation produced by Sunrise and directed by Kazuyoshi Katayama was released on May 1, 2010.[4][5]

  1. ^ "King of Thorn". Manga Entertainment. Archived from the original on July 21, 2018. Retrieved July 21, 2018.
  2. ^ Tiu, Diane (April 25, 2011). "King of Thorn". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
  3. ^ Loo, Egan (June 12, 2009). "King of Thorn Manga Gets Film Adaptation in 2010 (Updated)". Anime News Network. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
  4. ^ "King of Thorn Manga Gets Film Adaptation in 2010 (Updated)". Anime News Network. June 12, 2009. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  5. ^ "いばらの王 King of Thorn (2010)" (in Japanese). Allcinema.net. Retrieved October 17, 2010.

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