Banana Fish


Banana Fish is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Akimi Yoshida. It was serialized in the manga magazine Bessatsu Shōjo Comic from 1985 to 1994, and collected into nineteen tankōbon volumes by Shogakukan. Banana Fish follows the relationship between Ash Lynx, a teenage gang leader in New York City, and Eiji Okumura, a Japanese photographer's assistant. The series is noted as a crossover success between shōjo and shōnen audiences, and for its influence on the boys' love genre.
The series was adapted into a 24-episode anime television series by MAPPA in 2018, which aired on Noitamina; the series is syndicated globally by Amazon on Prime Video, which simulcast the series during its original broadcast run. An English-language translation of the manga was published in North America by Viz Media, which serialized Banana Fish in the manga magazines Pulp and Animerica Extra.

Plot

The main story of Banana Fish consists of six parts, published across 19 volumes:
During the Vietnam War in 1973, American soldier Griffin Callenreese fires on his own squadron in a dazed frenzy. He is subdued when Max Glenreed, a friend and fellow soldier, shoots him in the legs. As Griffin collapses, he speaks the words "banana fish".

Part 2: The Mystery of Banana Fish

Twelve years later, Griffin—now severely mentally handicapped—is cared for by his younger brother Ash, the leader of a gang of street kids in New York City. One night, Ash encounters a mortally wounded man who gives him a vial of an unknown substance and an address in California; the man utters the words "banana fish" before dying.
Ash begins to investigate the meaning of "banana fish", though he is impeded by Dino Golzine, a Corsican mob boss who groomed Ash as a sex slave during his childhood and heir to his criminal empire. In the course of his investigation, Ash gathers several allies: Shunichi Ibe, a photojournalist, and Eiji Okumura, his assistant, who traveled from Japan to report on street gangs; Shorter Wong, a gang leader who controls Chinatown; and Max, whom Ash encounters in prison while detained on a false murder charge. When Griffin is shot and killed in a fight with Golzine's men, the group sets out to solve the mystery of "banana fish" together.
Ash and his allies travel to the address in California, finding a mansion occupied by a man revealed to be Lee Yut-Lung, the youngest son of China's largest crime family. They later encounter the home's true occupant, a doctor who informs them that Banana Fish is an untraceable drug that brainwashes its users. Golzine intends to sell the drug to the United States government, which seeks to use it to. The group is subsequently captured by Golzine's men, who inject Shorter with Banana Fish and instruct him to kill Eiji. When Shorter begs Ash to kill him in a moment of lucidity, Ash fatally shoots him.

Part 3: Ash's counterattack

The group, with assistance from Ash and Shorter's gangs, escape Golzine's compound. Ash uses stock manipulation to destroy the value of Golzine's legitimate businesses and withdraws $50 million from their accounts, making Golzine appear to have embezzled the money. Golzine is forced to leave the United States to answer to his superiors in France.
In the power vacuum created by Golzine's absence, Ash secures promises of neutrality from Cain Blood, the boss of Harlem's street gangs, and a reluctant Sing Soo-Ling, who has taken over the Chinatown gang. Ash begins to methodically take out the Corsican-affiliated street gangs, emerging victorious but gravely wounded in a final battle. He is placed in a psychiatric facility for treatment, which is revealed to be funded by the Unione Corse, who fake Ash's death so they may use him as a test subject to observe the effects of Banana Fish on a live brain. Ash is able to escape from the facility, just as Golzine returns from Europe to reassert control of the Corsican mob.

Part 4: The return of Golzine

Yut-Lung, having used Banana Fish to put his older brother in a vegetative state, enters into an alliance with Golzine. Yut-Lung eliminates Golzine's co-conspirators in the Banana Fish project, while Golzine eliminates the other members of the Lee family syndicate, making the two men the de facto leaders of the Corsican and Chinese mobs in New York.
Golzine and Yut-Lung contract Blanca, a retired assassin who trained Ash, and threaten to kill Eiji unless Ash returns to Golzine and ends his investigation of Banana Fish. Ash agrees to their terms, accepting that he cannot defeat Blanca, and is reunited with Golzine as his advisor and legally adopted son. At a party thrown by Golzine, Ash is rescued by Eiji, with the support of Sing, Cain, and Ash's gangs.

Part 5: The final battle

Ash retreats to the American Museum of Natural History, though Eiji and multiple members of Ash's gang are captured in the ensuing chase. Ash captures Yut-Lung and releases him in return for the freedom of the hostages. Later, Sing challenges Ash to duel to settle their grudge.
Ash and his allies later repel an assault by Eduardo Foxx, a mercenary hired by Golzine, though multiple members of their gang are captured. The group tracks the prisoners to the psychiatric facility where Ash was previously imprisoned. In a climactic battle, Foxx and Golzine are killed, and all evidence of the Banana Fish project is destroyed.

Part 6: Epilogue

Max publishes an investigation of Golzine's child sex ring in Newsweek, prompting a scandal in Washington that implicates multiple politicians.
Sing reconciles with Ash and convinces Yut-Lung to end his pursuit of Eiji and Ash. Yut-Lung and Sing agree to work together to reassert control of Chinatown.

Ash, recognizing the danger he exposes Eiji to, ceases contact with him. Eiji and Ibe return to Japan, though just before his departure, Eiji entrusts a letter for Ash to Sing. In the letter, Eiji says that while he understands why they can no longer see each other, "my soul is always with you." While distracted by the letter, Ash is stabbed by Sing's lieutenant and half-brother, Lao Yen-Thai, who was unaware that Ash and Sing were no longer going to duel. Ash shoots Lao, killing him. He walks to the New York Public Library where he dies, smiling and clutching Eiji's letter.

Characters

; Ash Lynx
; Eiji Okumura
; Max Lobo
; "Papa" Dino Golzine
; Shorter Wong
; Frederick Arthur
; Shunichi Ibe
; Griffin Callenreese
; Alexis Dawson
; Jessica Randy
; Abraham Dawson
; Mannerheim
; Blanca
; Eduardo L. Fox
; Lee Yut-Lung
; Sing Soo-Ling
; Lao Yen-Thai
; Alex
; Skip
; Bones
; Kong
; Cain Blood
; Antonio Jenkins
; Charlie Dickenson

Media

Manga

Banana Fish was first serialized in Shogakukan's monthly manga magazine Bessatsu Shōjo Comic from the May 1985 issue to the April 1994 issue. The series was collected in Japan as nineteen tankōbon volumes and eleven bunkoban volumes. Shogakukan also published an official art book titled Angel Eyes, as well as Rebirth: The Banana Fish Official Guidebook.
North American publisher Viz Media licensed two editions of an English-language translation. The first, published from 1999 to 2002 and spanning the first seven volumes, features flipped artwork and censors some expletives. The second, published from 2004 to 2007 and spanning the full 19 volumes, is printed in the original right-to-left format and includes a re-translated script. The series was additionally printed in both of Viz's now-defunct manga magazines, Pulp and Animerica Extra. In 2018, shortly after the release of the anime adaption of Banana Fish, Viz announced plans to reprint the series.

Side stories

A total of five side stories were published. In Japan, these stories were collected in a single bunkoban titled Another Story, while the 19th volume of the Viz Media English-language translation includes Angel Eyes and Garden of Light.

''Fly Boy in the Sky''

Originally published in 1984—a year before Banana Fish was first published—Fly Boy in the Sky tells the story of how Ibe and Eiji met. During a high jump competition, Eiji attempts and fails a complicated jump. Ibe, watching a televised broadcast, is impressed by the performance but notices that Eiji appears to be depressed. Ibe seeks out Eiji to interview him, and to photograph his jumps for an exhibit.
During the interview, Eiji opens up about how he has fallen into a professional slump. When Ibe asks Eiji about why he looks sad when he competes, he responds that it is because he feels nothing when he jumps. Upon viewing the photos Ibe has taken of Eiji's jump, both men observe that what Eiji is really feeling is a sense of weightlessness; Ibe remarks that the bliss on Eiji's face looks like a "home run ball up in the sky".

''Ura Banana''

A comedic fourth wall-breaking story, where Ash and Eiji discuss fan mail the series has received with creator Akimi Yoshida.

''Private Opinion''

A prequel that tells the story of how Blanca and Ash met. Golzine, seeking a private tutor to break Ash's rebellious streak, blackmails Blanca into taking Ash under his tutelage. Initially, Blanca is convinced that Ash is too violent and unruly to be trained. When he encounters Ash after he has been beaten and sexually assaulted by one of Golzine's men, Blanca decides that he will protect Ash by teaching him how to fight. Blanca concludes that Ash's ruthless streak stems from having been deprived of love and that only through finding love will his true potential be unlocked.

''Angel Eyes''

A prequel that tells the story of how Ash and Shorter Wong met. Ash is admitted to juvenile prison when Golzine refuses to post his bail, where he is made cellmates with Shorter. Shortly after Ash's arrival, rumors begin to circulate that Arthur has placed an assassin in the prison. Shorter suspects the assassin to be Ash, after observing him single-handedly fighting off Ricardo and Frankie, two prisoners seemingly targeting Ash for prison rape. Ash tells Shorter that he knew Frankie was an assassin sent by Arthur to kill him; knowing that being under the protection of another inmate would complicate any attempt on his life, Ash flirts with Ricardo to force Frankie to make a move. When Shorter tells Ash that his manipulation makes him no better than the people he hates, Ash lashes out, though the incident prompts him to open up to Shorter. When Shorter is released from prison several months later, Ash happily bids him goodbye as a friend; Shorter notes that it was the first time that he ever saw Ash laugh and that Ash's face when he smiled was "angelic".

''Garden of Light''

A postscript set seven years after the events of Banana Fish, Garden of Light follows Akira Ibe, the niece of Shunichi Ibe, as she visits New York City. She stays with Eiji, now an accomplished photographer living in Greenwich Village, as he prepares for a major gallery show. Eiji has remained close friends with Sing, now a student at CUNY who continues to run the Chinese mafia with Yut-Lung. While viewing Eiji's photo albums, Akira notes that there are multiple missing pictures marked with the letter "A". Akira learns that these are photos of Ash, and is told the story of Ash's death and his relationship with Eiji. Eiji takes his photographs of Ash out of storage and places a portrait of Ash in his gallery show.

Anime

Banana Fish was adapted into a 24-episode anime series produced by MAPPA and directed by Hiroko Utsumi, which aired on Fuji TV's Noitamina programming block and Amazon Prime Video from July 5 to December 20, 2018. The series was produced as a part of a commemoration project to mark the 40th anniversary of Yoshida's debut as a manga artist. The adaptation revises the setting of the series from the 1980s to the 2010s, adding modern references such as smartphones and substituting the Vietnam War with the Iraq War.

Other adaptations

A radio adaptation of Banana Fish was produced by NHK in 1996, featuring Tohru Furusawa as the voice of Ash and Kazuhiko Inoue as the voice of Eiji. The adaptation was released on CD in three parts.
A theatrical adaptation of Banana Fish, directed by Akira Furukawa and scripted by Kanno Shintaro, was produced in 2012 by the theatre company Exile.
Two novelizations of Banana Fish have been published. The first, a four-volume series written by Akira Endō, was published by KSS Comic Novels in 1998. Titled, the series tells the story of the manga from Max's perspective. The second, a three-volume series written by Miku Ogasawara based on the Banana Fish anime, was published by Shogakukan Bunko in 2018.

Reception and legacy

Banana Fish has received critical and commercial acclaim, and has sold over 12 million copies in Japan. In a "Fifty Best Manga" poll conducted by the magazine Comic Link in 1998, Banana Fish was ranked first.
While published and marketed as a shōjo manga, Banana Fish's dense plot, heavy dialogue, and extensive action sequences led it to attract a sizeable male and adult female fanbase. When syndicated in the North American magazine Pulp, it was marketed as a seinen series. Frederik L. Schodt identifies Banana Fish as "one of the few girls' manga a red-blooded Japanese male adult could admit to reading without blushing. Yoshida, while adhering to the conventions of girls' comics in her emphasis on gay male love, made this possible by eschewing flowers and bug eyes in favor of tight bold strokes, action scenes, and speed lines."
The New York Public Library Main Branch, a prominently featured location in the series, has become a tourist attraction for fans of Banana Fish; the New York Public Library reported a significant increase in gift shop revenue in the 2019 fiscal year, which they attributed to popularity generated by Banana Fish. Japanese tourism company Kinki Nippon Tourist Kanto offers a New York City tour specifically designed for fans of the series, which features stops at locations featured in Banana Fish and a guided audio tour narrated by Ash and Eiji's voice actors Yuma Uchida and Kenji Nojima performing in-character. On June 24, 2019, the Banana Fish tour was selected by the Japan Travel Industry Association to receive the Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport, and Tourism Award at the annual Tour Grand Prix. The award honors tourism plans in both overseas and domestic travel that benefit Japan's travel industry as a whole.

Depiction of homosexuality

Though the central relationship between Ash and Eiji is never depicted as overtly romantic or sexual, Banana Fish is regarded as an influential work in the boys' love genre, and has been praised by Schodt for its positive depiction of same-sex relationships. The series is frequently categorized as a BL series, and in 2019 was awarded Best Anime at Chil Chil's BL Awards. Carl Gustav Horn, an editor on the English language translation of Banana Fish, described Ash and Eiji's romantic friendship:
Male-male sex in the series is limited exclusively to acts of sexual violence and rape, though critics have commended the series' depiction of rape as universally negative and traumatic, contrasting the common theme of rape fantasy in yaoi.