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(Top)
 


1 Creation and origin  





2 In other media  





3 See also  





4 References  














The Fiend with Twenty Faces








 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


The Fiend with Twenty Faces
Kogoro Akechi/The Boy Detectives Club character
First appearanceThe Fiend with Twenty Faces
Created byEdogawa Rampo
In-universe information
AliasHeikichi Endo (遠藤平吉) (real name)

"The Fiend with Twenty Faces" (Japanese: 怪人二十面相, Hepburn: Kaijin Nijū Mensō) is a fictional character who serves as a recurring antagonist for Kogoro AkechiinEdogawa Rampo's mystery fiction. A gentleman thief and master of disguise, he is considered Akechi's archenemy or most famous adversary.

Creation and origin[edit]

Edogawa Rampo, already known as a successful detective and horror writer, gained an assignment writing for Shōnen Club, a magazine aimed at young children. Government regulations and societal norms meant that many of Rampo's normal plot elements were off the table, such as putting the protagonist children in direct danger. Rampo decided to create a villain related to his existing world and created a new rival for his detective character Kogoro Akechi. Rampo based his new character on Arsène Lupin, a gentleman thief. He originally intended to name the character Kaitō Nijū Mensō ("The Phantom Thief with Twenty Faces"), as Lupin was referred to as a kaitō, but this was ruled out by his editors. "Kaijin" ("Strange Person", "Fiend") was approved, however, giving him his published name.

He makes his first appearance in The Fiend with Twenty Faces published in 1936, the first installment of Rampo's "The Boy Detectives Club" series. The titular antagonist threatens Tokyo, but with the country's greatest detective Kogorō Akechi away on overseas business, it is up to his 10-year old assistant Kobayashi Yoshio and the Boy Detectives Club (Shōnen Tantei-dan) to save the day.[1] In these stories, Akechi is generally busy in the first half, Twenty Faces will either steal or threaten to steal some valuable item, the kids will come close to foiling him, and Akechi will dramatically return to foil the plan and ensure the kids were never overly threatened.

In other media[edit]

The Fiend with Twenty Faces has appeared in other media and served as inspiration for other works, including the two novels Kaijin Nijū Mensō Den (怪人二十面相・伝) by Sō Kitamura and its film adaptation, the manga series Man of Many FacesbyClamp and Nijū Mensō no Musume by Shinji Ohara,[2] and anime Trickster in which he was voiced by Japanese singer-songwriter Gackt.[3] In March 2021 it was announced that a new adaptation, produced in a dramatic reading format with a modern noir twist, would be performed at the Shinagawa Prince Theater and star Yabana Rei of the J-pop boyband 7 Men Samurai in the role of protagonist Akechi.[4]

An alternate version of him serves as the main protagonistofPersona 5 who uses his talents as a Gentleman/Phantom Thief to correct injustice. The game solidifies the protagonist as being the Fiend by incorporating a unique take on Kogoro Akechi. This version of both characters portrays them as two sides of the same coin; both fighting for justice, but forever at odds with each other over the methods.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Kurodahan Press to Publish Edogawa Rampo's Fiend with Twenty Faces". Crunchyroll. 2011-04-27. Retrieved 2016-02-07.
  • ^ "Nijū-Mensō no Musume Crime Manga Gets TV Anime". Anime News Network. 2008-01-02. Retrieved 2015-06-09.
  • ^ "GACKTさんが語るTVアニメ『トリックスター』と怪人二十面相" [GACKT-san talks about TV anime Trickster and the Fiend with Twenty Faces]. animate Times (in Japanese). animateLAB Corporation. 2016-11-23. Retrieved January 27, 2017.
  • ^ "矢花 黎 舞台初主演、豊田陸人出演 モボ朗読劇『二十面相』~遠藤平吉って誰?~上演決定". Avexnet.jp. Retrieved 29 March 2021.

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    Categories: 
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    Literary characters introduced in 1936
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