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Samurai Cat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miowara Tomokato and his nephew Shiro, as shown on the cover of The Adventures of Samurai Cat.

Samurai Cat (a.k.a. Miaowara Tomokato) is the main character in a series of books by Mark Rogers. To accompany the anachronistic satire, almost every page in each book has a picture painted by Rogers, depicting the events described on that page. Each chapter is a bizarre parody of some historical or pop culture event, but the event is always treated as an entirely serious one. For example, no one finds it at all unusual that Tomokato is an upright, talking, sword-wielding cat.

The basic premise of the story is that Japan's greatest warrior Miaowara Tomokato is out for revenge, after his master Oda Nobunaga is killed. The group that leads the attack on Nobunaga's castle is made up of characters from throughout time, space and the big screen, so Tomokato must travel all over the Earth and beyond to seek his vengeance (from Japan to Camelot to Valhalla to Mars, to name just a few) in the most violent ways possible, involving the deaths of hundreds of beings.

In the first book, The Adventures of Samurai Cat, Rogers skewers J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, H. P. Lovecraft's "The Shadow Over Innsmouth", Robert E. Howard's Conan the Barbarian, and Norse mythology.

With the second book, entitled More Adventures of Samurai Cat, Rogers goes after the movies (while still referencing pulp literature), satirizing Indiana Jones, and fusing it with King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table in the search for the Holy Spad (a biplane armed with two 15 mm machineguns and God's own special effects (Celestial Lights and Magic), complete with 3D glasses for safe viewing). From there, Tomokato and his firearms-obsessed nephew Shiro travel to Edgar Rice Burroughs' Martian Barsoom. Rogers saves his most biting humor for the last chapter, which takes on Star Wars.

By the third book, Samurai Cat in the Real World, Rogers take on historical figures like the Third Reich, Chicago gangsters, and finally Joseph Stalin and the Communist Party.

Subsequent books include The Sword of the Samurai Cat, Samurai Cat Goes to the Movies and Samurai Cat Goes to Hell. In the last of these, Tomokato dies and finds himself in a parody of Dante's Inferno, perhaps to close off demand for any more books.

From June to September 1991, Epic Comics released a three-issue miniseries comic book version of Samurai Cat with the covers rendered by Rogers, but with additional artwork done by others.[1][2][3]

TV series and film

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A television series of the same name was released in October 2013, titled Neko Samurai [jp] (Samurai Cat), but is unrelated to the book series. The television series takes place during the final days of the Edo period, and its premise concerns former sword instructor of the Kaga Clan Kyutaro Madarame (played by Kazuki Kitamura), a once feared and respected swordsman who has fallen on hard times and now lives in an Edo tenement as a ronin. Desperate for work, he reluctantly accepts a job: to kill a supposed white demon cat named Tamanojo, who is said to possess a magical charm that makes its owner completely infatuated. However, his encounter with this small creature not only leaves him unable to kill the cat, but also causes him to bring it back home with him. Tamanojo's stay in Madarame's residence brings unexpected changes to Madarame's life, transforming his bleak existence in vivid and unusual ways and forging unexpected relationships with the people around him. This series had a second season in 2015 and a prequel movie in 2016, entitled Samurai Cat: Tamanojo Goes to Edo.

Citations

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See also

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References

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  • Rogers, Mark (1984). The Adventures of Samurai Cat. Tor Books. ISBN 0-8125-7681-0.
  • Rogers, Mark (1986). More Adventures of Samurai Cat. Tor Books. ISBN 0-312-85017-4.
  • Rogers, Mark (1989). Samurai Cat in the Real World. Tor Books. ISBN 0-312-93198-0.
  • Rogers, Mark (1991). The Sword of Samurai Cat. Tor Books. ISBN 0-312-85156-1.
  • Rogers, Mark (1994). Samurai Cat Goes to the Movies. Tor Books. ISBN 0-312-85744-6.
  • Rogers, Mark (1998). Samurai Cat Goes to Hell. Tor Books. ISBN 0-312-86642-9.
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