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The Emperor and the Hanged Man (2) is the one-hundred-forty-first chapter of the JoJo's Bizarre Adventure manga. It is also the twenty-eighth chapter of Part III: Stardust Crusaders.

Summary

Jean Pierre Polnareff decides to separate from the group in order to find his sister's killer. Mohammed Avdol tries to stop him, sure that separating Polnareff from them is part of a trap. Polnareff accuses him of being a coward for running away from Dio and a fight between them almost starts before Joseph Joestar stops Avdol's punch and tell him that Polnareff has done his own decision. Meanwhile, a cowboy named Hol Horse and his lover Nena are seen riding a elephant. Nena begs for him to marry her, but Hol Horse tells her she shouldn't think about this while being only 16 and having a good family. He denies her request by saying he's a traveler destined to die on the streets, and he won't marry her do prevent the young woman from suffering, as he loves her too. He asks her to get off the elephant because he's going to see a friend., who is revealed to be J. Gail, the two right-handed man who uses his stand Hanged Man in mirrors. Hol Horse tells him how he's just using Nena because she's a woman who would do anything for her love. Before they are able to discuss what to do to Polnareff a snake attacks J. Gail. Combining their stands Emperor and Hanged Man, the duo completely mutilate the snake. The two stand users are seen by Polnareff, slowly approaching him.

Appearances

Characters

Stands


Overview
Chapter List

For the TV Anime adaption, see JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Stardust Crusaders.

Stardust Crusaders (スターダストクルセイダース Sutādasuto Kuruseidāsu) is the third part of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure, serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump from March 1989 to April 1992. The arc is preceded by Battle Tendency and spans 152 chapters.

Summary

Weekly Jump May 1 1989

From 1988 to 1989,[1] the story follows Jotaro Kujo and his friends as they journey from Tokyo to Cairo, Egypt, to save the life of his mother, Holy Kujo, by defeating his family's resurrected archenemy, DIO.

Jotaro travels with his grandfather, Joseph Joestar, as well as Muhammad Avdol, Noriaki Kakyoin, Jean Pierre Polnareff, and Iggy. The group fights several of DIO's minions and Stand users along the way.

Major Battles

Publication

Volumes are published in English by VIZ Media, and in Italian by Star ComicsW.

English Language Edition

Stardust Crusaders was the first part to be officially released in English. The series is edited by Jason Thompson, author of Manga: The Complete GuideW.

Some names were altered for the English release, presumably for copyright reasons. Additionally, the character Devo was changed entirely.

[citation needed]

Minor edits were made to artwork where certain scenes of animal violence were redrawn by Hirohiko Araki for the English release. Japanese volume 15 (English volume 3) featured a single panel of a dog being decapitated which was redrawn from an alternate angle, and Japanese volume 18 (English volume 6) has several redrawn panels where a mutilated dog was changed into a large rat.

Due to a controversy regarding one scene involving DIO apparently reading the Qur'anW in the OVA, Viz Media and Shueisha paused publication for a year, even though the manga did not feature that specific scene. However, Shueisha had Araki (or his assistants) redraw scenes that depicted characters fighting on top of or destroying buildings resembling mosquesW. Viz resumed publication on April 7, 2009, with Volume 11.

Adaptations

Animation

Video Games

Other

Gallery

Trivia

  • This story was initially titled "Dai San Bu Kūjō Jōtarō: Mirai e no Isan" / "第三部 空条承太郎 ―未来への遺産" / (lit.) "Part 3 Kūjō Jōtarō: Heritage for the Future".
  • Stardust Crusaders contains the most popularly known characters and episodes of the series; introducing JoJo's distinctive Stand phenomenon, and the emblematic protagonist Jotaro Kujo.
  • Many characters were not named until the release of additional materials like the artbooks.
  • Araki describes the basis for Part 3 as like a board game, traveling between a series of stops; and further inspiration from the film Around the World in 80 Days.[2]
  • While he began plotting for this part, Araki first pitched it as a modern retelling of Dracula. There was only one person in the room who thought it was a good idea; the rest were utterly confused. His editors told him to have at least one Japanese character/story arc prior to this part, as they felt the story had too many foreign characters and settings for the comic's target audience.[3]
  • Part 3 is the last part to feature any vampires or the Ripple ability.

References

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