Samurai Jack

Samurai Jack is an American animated television series created by Genndy Tartakovsky for Cartoon Network. The series follows time-displaced samurai warrior "Jack" (voiced by Phil LaMarr) in his singular quest to find a method of traveling back in time and defeating the tyrannical demon wizard Aku (voiced by Mako Iwamatsu in seasons 1-4; Greg Baldwin in season 5).

Samurai Jack premiered on August 10, 2001, on Cartoon Network and has since garnered high critical acclaim. It won four Primetime Emmy Awards, six Annie Awards, an OIAF Award, and received eight additional nominations. Cultural influences on the series range from the 1970s TV series Kung Fu to the works of director Akira Kurosawa.

The series initially ran for four seasons, totaling 52 episodes, and the initial final episode aired on September 25, 2004. However, on December 2, 2015, Adult Swim announced that a fifth and final season of Samurai Jack was in development at Cartoon Network Studios. The fifth season premiered on Toonami from March 11, 2017 to May 20, 2017.

Samurai Jack appeared sporadically on Cartoon Network's Toonami programming block, first appearing on December 28, 2002 and last appearing as part of the final broadcast of the block on September 20, 2008. The series has also aired sporadically on Adult Swim's Toonami block since 2014, including the premiere of the series' fifth and final season in 2017. The series is rated TV-Y7-FV in both the Cartoon Network and Adult Swim runs, with season 5 on Adult Swim being rated TV-PG-V and TV-14-V.

Plot
Samurai Jack tells the story of a young prince (Jack) from Feudal Japan whose father's empire is destroyed by the shape shifting demon Aku. As a child, the prince escapes destruction and travels the world training his mind and his body for years until he reaches adulthood, becoming a legendary samurai. After taking his father's magic katana, he challenges Aku to a duel and defeats the demon. However, before the prince can deal the killing blow, Aku creates a time portal and sends his opponent into the distant future, anticipating that he would be able to amass sufficient power to deal with the samurai later. The protagonist arrives in a dystopian, futuristic Earth ruled by Aku and filled with his robot minions and a large number of alien immigrant races of various species and appearances. The first people he encounters in the future call him "Jack" as a form of slang, which he adopts as his name (his true given name is never mentioned in the series)

Standard episodes follow Jack's search for a way to travel back to his own time, where he hopes to stop Aku before these events come to pass. The cartoon depicts Jack's quest to find a time portal, while constantly facing obstacles set by Aku in a classic battle of Good versus Evil. Typically each time Jack believes he has reached the end of his quest, something causes him to dramatically miss his chance. In one attempt Jack locates a stable portal to the past, but the guardian of the portal defeats him after a long but noticeably mismatched battle. The guardian is about to crush Jack when the portal starts to flicker and glow, seemingly giving the guardian a message; the guardian then has a giant pterodactyl take the unconscious Jack away. After Jack leaves, the guardian states that it is not yet time for him to return to the past, and an image of what is implied to be an older Jack is then seen in the portal; indicating that Jack is predestined to succeed, but it will take years for him to do so.

The final season takes place 50 years after Jack has been cast into the future, though he has not aged as a side effect of his time travel. Jack is in despair from the many years of fighting Aku and from Aku's destruction of all the remaining time portals; he is haunted by warped visions of himself, his family and an enigmatic warrior on horseback. Jack lost his father's magic sword; Aku is unaware of this fact, and has started to give up hope of ever defeating Jack, especially since Jack has stopped aging. Ashi and her sisters are raised by an Aku-worshiping cult to be assassins whose purpose is to kill Jack. They attack Jack and gravely injure him, but at their next encounter he kills them all except Ashi. Jack persuades Ashi that Aku is evil, and she joins Jack and helps him reclaim his sword. The two become romantically involved as they journey to defeat Aku. Aku is informed that Jack lost his sword and confronts him, not knowing Jack has recovered it in the interim. Aku senses that Ashi has part of him inside her, and possesses her body to attack Jack. Jack refuses to kill Ashi, and lays down his sword in defeat. Aku takes Jack prisoner and prepares to kill him, but the people Jack helped all over the planet rally to his defense. When Jack tells Ashi that he loves her, she regains control of her mind. Ashi finds that she has the same powers as Aku and uses them to return the sword to Jack, and open a time portal to send Jack and herself to the past, where Jack destroys Aku once and for all. With peace restored and the future of Aku's rule undone, Jack prepares to marry Ashi, but she fades away as she says "without Aku, I would have never existed." The series closes with Jack secluded in a sun-lit grove of flowering trees, watching a ladybug fly free.

Setting
Samurai Jack takes place in a world where the evil Aku has taken over the entire galaxy. Science and technology have developed far beyond what is available in the present day, and in some ways resembles magic. However, despite scientific advances, the future is decidedly dystopian—for example, in one episode the mafia profits greatly from the sale of simple water. Aliens, bounty hunters, and robots are plentiful, and always ready for a fight.

While the setting is distinctly futuristic and technological, instances of mythology and supernatural events do occur. Mythologies, like Valhalla, and even supernatural forces, such as demonic enemies, make regular appearances, yet do not seem to stand out amongst the technologically advanced inhabitants. Aku himself is supernatural, as is Jack's sword.

Stories take place in a variety of locations. Ranging from beautiful wilderness to futuristic or even dystopian cities, there is often a stark contrast made between the industrial world and the natural world.

Characters
Samurai Jack — The son of the Japanese Emperor who ruled the area where Aku originally appeared on Earth, and is banished to the future by Aku during their first battle, where he is left in every episode to search for a way home. He was born on the day that his father defeated Aku and he seems to be the only mortal (aside from his father) to be a match to Aku.

As a boy, after his father was captured by Aku, Jack traveled around the world to prepare both physically and mentally for his confrontation with Aku. He studied under various scholars, such as Egyptian thinkers, and mastered each art of combat from the cultures he met, training with African Zulu warriors, Viking sailors, Robin Hood, Mongolian warriors, Shaolin monks, Greek Olympic contestants, Spartans, Russian Cossacks, and others.

Later, after being sent into the future, he is taught the ability to jump hundreds of feet into the air by a species of blue gorilla and a jungle man, thus allowing him to reach vast areas he previously could not reach while also giving the impression that he can fly. Jack's magic katana was forged by the gods Odin, Ra, and Rama through three mortal avatars. The sword was forged from the righteous energy within Jack's father; it is able to cut through all but the most magically-protected targets and strongest materials. On the other hand, it is unable to harm beings that are pure of heart, as seen in Episode XXX where Aku steals the sword and attempts to kill Jack with it, but fails even to cut him.

Jack strongly exhibits the characteristics of a stoic hero. He is unfailingly polite and humble despite the completely alien nature of the futuristic world and never scoffs at or disparages the customs of the people he encounters (as unpleasant as they seem to him at times). Despite his almost hopeless situation, he does not bewail his destiny, instead exhibiting a strong amor fati. Jack consistently shows an uncommon moral strength of character by helping the poor and defenseless along the way, in one instance even helping talking dogs that worked for Aku, in another, releasing the souls of a family in a haunted mansion. Occasionally, he faces great physical pain, or has to forget his own goals in order to help someone in need.

His real name has never been revealed, in the second episode however, he began using the name Jack when three teenage aliens, after witnessing Jack survive a huge fall by jumping onto cars, referred to him as Jack while praising him when he landed — in this case, more of a generic term, i.e. "dude" or "guy." Later, when asked to identify himself, he replied "They call me Jack."

Aku — Samurai Jack's arch-nemesis. His name means "evil" in Japanese. He is similar to Akuma, the evil demon with burning eyes from Japanese mythology. He is an extremely powerful demon wizard whose primary ability is shape-shifting, though he does possess other powers. He requires no food, water, or air and is capable of interstellar travel. He also has the ability to spy on Jack and others from a large sphere he can summon at will in his tower. A significant aspect of the series is that Aku is immortal, and Jack's samurai sword is the only weapon capable of harming and finally defeating him; even the slightest physical contact with the sword's blade causes Aku severe pain, and wounds inflicted by it burn his body and cut away his power. Because of this threat, Aku does not like to fight Jack himself, and only does so when Jack is incapacitated or without the sword. Aku much prefers to let his minions and bounty hunters do it for him. Aku is also vulnerable to varying degrees of other forms of magical or divine attacks such as the powers and artifacts of gods.

Aku constantly antagonizes Jack, often attacking him while he is weak, and other times defending himself from Jack's own gambits. The two seem doomed never to defeat each other, for though Jack has bested Aku on numerous occasions, Aku merely transforms into a small creature and escapes, usually calling out a taunt over his shoulder as he flees, a fact that he himself is aware of and even makes a reference to in one episode.

The episode "The Birth of Evil" reveals Aku's origin. Long ago in the vastness of space, a great formless evil appeared. Before the darkness could do harm to the universe, it was set upon by the kings of three religions: the one-eyed king of Asgard Odin, the Norse Gods Ra, the sun god and king of the Gods of Egypt and the seventh avatar of Vishnu Rama, the supreme being in Hindu mythology. So fierce was their attack on the shadow, that it was completely destroyed, save for a small fragment that was flung aside in the heat of battle. For ages, the fragment drifted through the cosmos and eventually fell to Earth, and caused the impact event that wiped out the dinosaurs when it landed. The land around its impact site eventually formed into the islands of Japan, where the evil fragment slowly grew like a forest and spread like poison over the course of eons, creating an ever-expanding mass of black spikes and toxic tar that devoured and poisoned any who entered. Eventually, the forest grew so large that the Emperor of the land decided to kill the evil at its source. Armed with a magic oil given to him by Buddhist monks, the Lord and his cavalry rode into the heart of the forest, the Lord himself the only one to survive. Once at the black lake at the forest's center, the Samurai Lord doused an arrow into the oil he was given, lit it with a green flame, and shot it into the lake. Instead of destroying the evil, however, the magic arrow gave it both a will and consciousness, and the demon wizard Aku was born. Aku went on a rampage of destruction, burning and killing. He proved to be unstoppable, so with the help of the three gods, Jack's father forged a sword capable of harming him. With it, he was able to defeat Aku and turned the demon back into a black tree. This imprisonment was only temporary, as years later, a solar eclipse releases Aku upon the world once more.

While he is usually presented as a serious and threatening foe, Aku is also a source of comedy due to his outrageous design and sometimes wise-guy behavior, supported by Mako's over-the-top voice acting. Aku's shifts in personality between serious and chaotic suggest that his mind changes form just as his body does. In addition, Aku has a tendency to refer to himself in the third person.

Ashi — Ashi is a character that appears in the 5th season of Samurai Jack. At first She appears as an antagonist to Jack but as the season goes on she becomes an ally. She was born and raised as a member of the Daughters of Aku, seven sisters who served as assassins attempting to kill Jack. She would later become the only surviving member and unwillingly accompany Jack. It was only later that she came to have doubts about Aku's true nature after Jack saves her life and she sees for herself the destruction Aku has unleashed on the world.

Ashi and Jack eventually fall in love with each other towards the end of the 5th season. Eventually, after meeting Aku in person, it is revealed that Aku was her biological father, after which he corrupts her unwillingly into his service. As a human-demon hybrid, she has the ability to use some demonic powers, similar to Akus. These powers included the ability to help transport Jack back to the past to defeat Aku.

Gallery
Cartoon Network's Toonami=

Episodes
The Cartoon Network era episode plots range from dark and epic to lighthearted and comic, but often contain little dialogue. Stories instead rely on the series' highly detailed, outline-free, masking-based animation, as well as its cinematic style and pacing. Many battle scenes in the series are reminiscent of samurai films, and since Jack's robot enemies bleed out oil or electricity and his monster and alien foes bleed out slime or goo, the action can be exhibited while avoiding censorship for blood and violence.

The 2017 Adult Swim season is darker and geared toward the more adult audience of the network. However, series creator Genndy Tartakovsky explained in the behind the scenes video shown at Anime Expo, "I didn't want to go full on heads getting chopped off and blood spurting everywhere, but at the same time I also wanted it to be newer and exciting and take advantage of some of those things."

All five seasons of Samurai Jack have been released to DVD in North America by Warner Home Video. The first three episodes were also released on DVD, as a stand-alone movie titled Samurai Jack: The Premiere Movie, on March 19, 2002.

Broadcast History
Samurai Jack premiered in the United States on Cartoon Network from August 10, 2001 to October 29, 2004, with reruns continuing to air through 2008.

The series has also aired sporadically on Adult Swim since February 1, 2014, including the premiere of the series' fifth and final season from March 11, 2017 to May 20, 2017. The 52 original episodes began airing on Adult Swim each Saturday at 8:30 PM, starting on January 14, 2017, leading up to the premiere of the new season.

Reruns of the entire series, starting from episode 1, returned to Adult Swim's Toonami from September 29, 2018 to December 29, 2018, airing at 3:30 AM. It then moved to weekdays at 8:00 PM on Adult Swim outside of Toonami from January 1, 2019 to June 2, 2019. The series then moved to the 5:30 AM Weekday time slot while continuing to air at 8:00 PM on Sundays. After September 15, 2019, the series lost its Sunday time slot and from September 27, 2019 to December 27, 2019 the series only aired on Fridays at 5:30 AM. The series then moved to Saturdays at 5:30 AM from January 18, 2020 to February 22, 2020 before moving to 3:30 AM on Saturdays from February 29, 2020 to May 9, 2020.

The series returned to Toonami at 3:00 AM from July 11, 2020 to October 3, 2020. Additionally the series aired Monday through Thursday at 1:00 AM from July 13th-28th.


 * United States (Cartoon Network) — August 10, 2001 - 2008
 * United States (Boomerang) — 2009 - 2014
 * United States (Adult Swim) — February 1, 2014 - January 24, 2015 ; January 14, 2017 - June 24, 2017; October 28, 2017 ; September 29, 2018 - December 27, 2019; January 18, 2020 - May 9, 2020; July 11, 2020 - October 3, 2020
 * India (Cartoon Network) — February 2, 2002 - 2005
 * Canada (YTV) — September 2, 2002 - 2006
 * United Kingdom (Cartoon Network/CNX) — 2002 - 2006
 * United Kingdom (Toonami) - September 8, 2003 - 2005
 * Latin America (Cartoon Network) — 2002 - 2006
 * Japan (Cartoon Network) — 2002 - 2006
 * Australia (Cartoon Network) — 2004 - 2006

Toonami Broadcast History
Samurai Jack first appeared on Cartoon Network's Toonami: Super Saturday block in a marathon on December 28, 2002. The series began airing on Cartoon Network's weekday afternoon Toonami programming block on Monday, September 29, 2003, replacing Dragon Ball Z in the 5:30 PM time slot. The series was removed from the lineup following the Thursday, October 16, 2003 broadcast and was subsequently replaced in the lineup by Justice League. On September 25, 2004, the series returned to the Toonami block in another marathon with Star Wars: Clone Wars. This marathon featured the Emmy winning 2-part episode "The Birth of Evil" as well as the world premiere of the final four episodes of the series.

Samurai Jack returned to Toonami, over three years later, on March 29, 2008 at 10:30 PM, replacing Dragon Ball Z in the lineup. The series remained in the lineup until Toonami's demise on September 20, 2008, and was the last series to air on the Cartoon Network block. The series also appeared on Toonami's online streaming site, Toonami Jetstream.

On February 1, 2014, reruns of the series began airing on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block, replacing FLCL in the 4:00 AM time slot. On May 3, 2014, the series moved into the 4:30 AM time slot and on July 26th, it moved to the 5:30 AM time slot. On January 24, 2015, Toonami lost the 5:30-6:00 AM time slot forcing Samurai Jack to move into the 5:00 AM time slot. However, Toonami subsequently also lost the 5:00-5:30 AM time slot and the series was removed from the lineup, with only the final two episodes left unaired during this run. These two episodes were subsequently made available to stream on adultswim.com.

From March 11, 2017 to May 20, 2017, the new 5th season premiered on Toonami at 11:00 PM. After a marathon of the entire fifth season aired on May 27th, reruns of the fifth season continued to air on the block through June 24, 2017. A second marathon of the entire fifth season aired on October 28, 2017 from 11:00 PM to 4:00 AM, even though the series was not airing on Toonami at the time.

Reruns of the entire series, starting from episode 1, returned to Toonami from September 29, 2018 to December 29, 2018, airing at 3:30 AM. Reruns of season 5 returned to Toonami, unannounced, on July 11, 2020 at 3:00 AM, expanding the block by half an hour. Season 5 completed its run on October 3, 2020 and reruns of Demon Slayer replaced it in the lineup the following week.


 * Toonami: Super Saturday — December 28, 2002
 * Toonami (United States) — September 29, 2003 - October 16, 2003  ; September 25, 2004 ; March 29, 2008 - September 20, 2008 ; February 1, 2014 - January 24, 2015 ; March 11, 2017  - June 24, 2017; October 28, 2017 ; September 29, 2018 - December 29, 2018; July 11, 2020 - October 3, 2020
 * Toonami (United Kingdom) — September 8, 2003 - 2005
 * Toonami (Japan) — February 2004 - July 2004; December 2004 - 2005

Toonami Marathons
The following is a list of Toonami marathons in which at least one episode of Samurai Jack appeared.
 * Samurai Jack Marathon (December 28, 2002)
 * Samurai Jack\Clone Wars Marathon (September 25, 2004)
 * Samurai Jack Season 5 Marathon (May 27, 2017)
 * Samurai Jack Marathon (October 28, 2017)

Cartoon Network Flash Games
Samurai Jack Flash games created for cartoonnetwork.com from 2001-2004 that also appeared on toonami.com:
 * Cavern Raid
 * Code of the Samurai
 * Desert Quest
 * Path of Destiny
 * Rave Slaves
 * Way of the Warrior

Comic Series
The Samurai Jack comic is a monthly American comic book ongoing series chronicling the travels of Samurai Jack. The comic book series follows up Season 4 of Samurai Jack of a time-displaced samurai warrior "Jack" in his singular quest to find a method of travelling back in time and defeating the tyrannical demonic wizard Aku. The comic is written by Jim Zub (Skullkickers, Street Fighter) with art by Andy Suriano (Character Designer on the original Samurai Jack TV series).

In February 2013, IDW Publishing announced a partnership with Cartoon Network to produce comics based on its properties. Samurai Jack was one of the titles announced to be published. It was further announced at WonderCon 2013 that the first issue of Samurai Jack would debut in October 2013. The series began with a five-issue storyline called "Rope of Eons". The first comic in the series was released October 23, 2013.