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Chiruran: Shinsengumi Requiem Manga Gets Live-Action Series
posted on by Egan Loo
Eiji Hashimoto and Shinya Umemura's Chiruran: Shinsengumi Requiem (Chiruran: Shinsengumi Chinkon-ka) manga is inspiring its first live-action television adaptation next spring. The adaptation will air on the TBS channel as a special, and also stream on the U-NEXT service as a series. Yuki Yamada (Godzilla Minus One, live-action Tokyo Revengers, Blue Giant) will star as the historical figure Hijikata Toshizō (historical Japanese names listed here in traditional family-name-first order).

Filming began this past April throughout Japan, particularly in Kyoto, Shiga, Shizuoka, and Chiba Prefectures. Akira Morii (Yū Yū Hakusho, Alice in Borderland) of THE SEVEN company is producing the project. Kazutaka Watanabe (live-action Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe, Only Yesterday) is directing off scripts by Masaaki Sakai (live-action Rasen no Meikyū, Informa).
Kensuke Sonomura (The Boy and The Beast, GANTZ:O) is directing the action sequences, and THE SEVEN's Tomofumi Akahane is producing the visual effects. Yūya Maeda (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable, Yo-kai Watch: Sora Tobu Kujira to Double Sekai no Daibōken da Nyan!) is credited for character designs. THE SEVEN's Kiri Ishida is supervising post-production. Yoshiaki Dewa (Kino's Journey - The Beautiful World, Hell's Paradise) is composing the music.
Mangamo is releasing the manga in English digitally under the title The Shinsengumi, and it describes the manga:
The Shinsengumi were a special police force in Japan in the 19th century. Tasked originally with protecting the Shogunate, they eventually dedicated themselves to restoring order in Kyoto. Hijikata Toshizo is responsible for the death of the Shinsengumi, but he was once one of them. This is his story.
Umemura provided the story, and Hashimoto illustrated the manga. The duo launched the series in the inaugural issue of Tokuma Shoten's Monthly Comic Zenon magazine in 2010. The manga began its final arc with the 32nd volume on January 20, 2022, and ended in April 2023.
The manga inspired a stage play adaptation that ran in April 2017.
Umemura and Hashimoto launched a comedy spinoff manga titled Chiruran Nibun no Ichi in Monthly Comic Zenon in May 2016. The spinoff manga received an anime series of shorts that premiered in January 2017. Crunchyroll streamed the series under the title Chiruran 1/2 as it aired.
Source: Comic Natalie