Shingen Yashida
This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in-universe style. (August 2018) |
Shingen Yashida ヤシダシンゲン | |
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Publication information | |
Publisher | Marvel Comics |
First appearance | Wolverine #1 (Sept. 1982) |
Created by | Chris Claremont Frank Miller |
In-story information | |
Alter ego | Shingen Yashida |
Team affiliations | Yashida Clan |
Notable aliases | Lord Shingen |
Abilities | Highly intelligent Peak human physical condition Master swordsman and Martial artist |
Shingen Yashida is a supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics as an adversary of Wolverine.
The character was played by Hiroyuki Sanada in the 2013 film The Wolverine.
Publication history[]
Shingen first appeared in Wolverine #1 (Sept. 1982), was created by Chris Claremont and Frank Miller.
Fictional character biography[]
Mariko Yashida was the daughter of Japanese crimelord Lord Shingen, leader of Clan Yashida. She first met the feral mutant Wolverine when the mutant heroes the X-Men sought the help of her cousin, the Japanese mutant hero Sunfire. Although initially frightened by the ferocious-looking Wolverine, Mariko found herself attracted to him. Similarly, Wolverine was charmed by her beauty and refined manner. The two spent a great deal of time together in Japan, ultimately falling in love when she visited him in New York. To settle a personal debt incurred during his rise to power, Shingen forced his daughter Mariko Yashida to marry criminal boss Noboru Hideki.[1] Wolverine found out Noboru beat Mariko nearly to death and confronted Noboru, but relented from killing him upon Mariko's insistence. Shingen had Wolverine poisoned, temporarily weakening him so that Shingen could beat and humiliate the superhuman mutant in a duel with bokken in front of Mariko. Shingen used his expert knowledge of human anatomy to secretly attack Wolverine's nerve endings in such a way so as to make the duel life-threatening. But as Mariko did not know this when Wolverine attempted to use his claws to save himself, it appeared to Mariko that Wolverine was cheating. Mariko did not know that Wolverine's body had been saturated with enough lethal poison to kill several dozen ordinary men, or that Shingen was the one who was actually cheating in the duel. This had the effect of disgracing Wolverine in front of her, which was the design of Shingen.[2] Logan was then dumped onto the Tokyo streets and found by Yukio, Shingen's best assassin, who participated in a deception with the Hand ninja clan to manipulate Wolverine into assassinating a rival crime lord, using Mariko as unwitting bait for additional motivation. After his role was completed, Shingen ordered Logan killed, but Yukio ignored the order, which led to the Hand being sent to enforce his will. In the events resulting from that action, including the death of a personal friend by Yukio, Wolverine realized that Yukio was the one who poisoned him at Shingen's residence and was being played for a fool at apparently Shingen's orders.[3] After a philosophic epiphany about humanity, Logan then completely destroyed the Yashida criminal empire and confronted Shingen a second time. Shingen did not survive the confrontation. Mariko revealed she'd planned to kill her dishonorable father personally, then commit seppuku in recompense had not Logan prevented her. Afterwards, Mariko and Wolverine decided to marry, with the X-Men receiving an invitation from the Emperor of Japan for the event.[4]
It's later revealed that his illegitimate son Kenuichio Harada wanted to inherit Shingen's position.[5][6]
Shingen was briefly resurrected by Phaedra of the Hand as part of a campaign of revenge against Wolverine.[7]
Powers and abilities[]
Lord Shingen had no superhuman abilities but was in peak physical condition despite his age, and was one of the finest swordsmen and martial artists in all of Japan. Highly intelligent, he had extensive knowledge of human anatomy, pressure points, and great knowledge of poisons and assassination techniques. Shingen was highly skilled in the management of criminal organizations and very well connected in the international criminal underworld, particularly in areas of drug traffic.
Other versions[]
In the comic series Exiles, a younger version of Shingen Yashida exists in the home reality of Mariko Yashida (aka Sunfire).[8]
In other media[]
- Lord Shingen appears in the anime television series Marvel Anime: Wolverine, voiced by Hidekatsu Shibata in the Japanese version and by Fred Tatasciore in the English dub. This version is leader of the Kuzuryū syndicate. He arranges for Mariko Yashida to be married to Hideki Kurohage of Madripoor, with the series focusing on Wolverine working to prevent the marriage. In a last-ditch attempt to stop him, Shingen dons special armor to battle Wolverine, but is killed by him and Yukio.
- Shingen Yashida appears in the live-action film The Wolverine (2013), portrayed by Hiroyuki Sanada.[9] Similarly to the comics, this version is the father of Mariko Yashida, the son of billionaire Ichirō Yashida, and the foster brother of Yukio, the last of whom he treats with contempt for being a Mutant. After the Yashidas' technology empire is left to Mariko despite Shingen's attempts to cover up his father's near-bankruptcy, Shingen grows hateful of Ichirō and conspires with Japan's minister of Justice, Noburo Mori, and the Yakuza to kill Mariko for taking what he saw as his and gain his father's admiration. However, Shingen is poisoned by Viper. Donning the Yashida Clan's traditional samurai armor, Shingen attacks Yukio, but is killed by Logan.
References[]
- ^ Wolverine #1. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine #2. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine #3. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine #4. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The New Mutants #6. Marvel Comics.
- ^ The Uncanny X-Men #172. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Wolverine vol. 3 #61. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Exiles #7. Marvel Comics.
- ^ Hoare, James. "THE WOLVERINE'S HIROYUKI SANADA ON SHINGEN AND SAMURAI". Movies. SciFiNow UK. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
External links[]
- Shingen Yashida at Marvel Appendix
- Silver Samurai II at Marvel Wiki
- Silver Samurai II at Comic Vine
- Characters created by Chris Claremont
- Characters created by Frank Miller (comics)
- Comics characters introduced in 1982
- Fictional Japanese people
- Fictional yakuza
- Marvel Comics martial artists
- Marvel Comics supervillains
- Superhero film characters
- Fictional swordfighters
- Wolverine (comics) characters
- X-Men supporting characters