Ask John: Is the Fujiko Mine Series Part of Lupin III Continuity?

Lupin III 2012
Question:
As a fan of the 1970’s Lupin III (second series), I’m troubled by what I read of this new “Woman Called Fujiko Mine” series. Is it supposed to be part of the same continuity/dimension? If so, how can Lupin be a killer when the older series makes it quite clear in episodes like “Crude Reproduction, Perfect Frame” that Lupin is just a gentleman thief, not a murderer? In fact, Lupin was going to end his own life when he thought he had taken other lives. I know the solution is just not to watch the new series, but it still troubles me that it’s out there (though I have no intention of keeping others from watching it).


Answer:
Particularly as a result of Lupin III being depicted by a variety of writers and directors, his ethics have varied slightly in different franchise installments. Even in the 1996 feature film Dead or Alive that was directed by Lupin III creator Monkey Punch personally, Lupin does resort to killing his nemesis. The degree to which the 2012 Lupin III: Mine Fujiko to Iu Onna television series maintains continuity with the earlier television series is debatable. The original manga and earlier TV anime have never revealed a thorough, established origin story for Fujiko. Due to variances and revisions throughout the earlier anime, strictly aligning continuity is nearly impossible. The “Woman Called Fujiko Mine” series does make efforts to acknowledge and adhere to the continuity and events established by earlier Lupin III iterations. The 2012 television series also consciously adheres more faithfully to the tone of Monkey Punch’s original manga than the 1977 second TV series did. Lupin has indeed always been a gentleman thief, but even especially debonair agents like James Bond are not above killing. The Lupin III depicted in the 2012 television series has the charismatic confidence and charm expected of the character, but the entire 2012 television series is a literally and figuratively darker and more adult-oriented interpretation of the characters that skews closer to the Dead or Alive movie and Walther P-38 TV special than the more lighthearted second & third TV series and most of the earlier TV movies and features like Kutabare! Nostradamus and Fuuma Conspiracy.

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