Difference between revisions of "The Eleventh Striker"
(→Trivia) |
|||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
| airdate = April 14, 2012 | | airdate = April 14, 2012 | ||
| english-airdate = | | english-airdate = | ||
− | | cast = [[Conan Edogawa]] <br> [[Ran Mouri]] <br> [[Kogoro Mouri]] <br> [[Shinichi Kudo]] <br> [[Sonoko Suzuki]] <br> [[Hiroshi Agasa]] <br> [[Ai Haibara]] <br> [[Detective Boys]] <br> [[Juzo Megure]] <br> [[Ninzaburo Shiratori]] <br> [[Miwako Sato]] <br> [[Wataru Takagi]] <br> [[Kazunobu Chiba]] <br> [[Misao Yamamura]] <br> [[Hideo Akagi]] <br> [[Naoki Uemura]] <br> [[Ryusuke Higo]] <br> [[Takahiro Sanada]] <br> [[Kaoru Koda]] <br> [[Azusa Enomoto]] <br> [[Yoko Okino]] <br> [[Officer Tome]] <br> [[ | + | | cast = [[Conan Edogawa]] <br> [[Ran Mouri]] <br> [[Kogoro Mouri]] <br> [[Shinichi Kudo]] <br> [[Sonoko Suzuki]] <br> [[Hiroshi Agasa]] <br> [[Ai Haibara]] <br> [[Detective Boys]] <br> [[Juzo Megure]] <br> [[Ninzaburo Shiratori]] <br> [[Miwako Sato]] <br> [[Wataru Takagi]] <br> [[Kazunobu Chiba]] <br> [[Misao Yamamura]] <br> [[Hideo Akagi]] <br> [[Naoki Uemura]] <br> [[Ryusuke Higo]] <br> [[Takahiro Sanada]] <br> [[Kaoru Koda]] <br> [[Azusa Enomoto]] <br> [[Yoko Okino]] <br> [[Officer Tome]] <br> [[Miss Tome]] <br> [[Naomichi Mugikura]] <br> [[Hooligan's Labyrinth|Rikuo Endo]] |
| suspects = Shinzou Yamamori, Kaoru Koda, Kazumasa Nakaoka, Ryousuke Sakaki, and Keiichirou Motoura | | suspects = Shinzou Yamamori, Kaoru Koda, Kazumasa Nakaoka, Ryousuke Sakaki, and Keiichirou Motoura | ||
| solved-by = [[Conan Edogawa]] | | solved-by = [[Conan Edogawa]] | ||
Line 71: | Line 71: | ||
{{Char|Yoko Okino|display=Yoko Okino (poster)}} | {{Char|Yoko Okino|display=Yoko Okino (poster)}} | ||
{{Char|Officer Tome|display=Officer Tome (cameo)}} | {{Char|Officer Tome|display=Officer Tome (cameo)}} | ||
− | {{Char|Female Forensic Member|display= | + | {{Char|Miss Tome|Female Forensic Member|display=Miss Tome (cameo)}} |
{{Char|Naomichi Mugikura}} | {{Char|Naomichi Mugikura}} | ||
{{Char|Hooligan's Labyrinth|Rikuo Endo|display=Rikuo Endo (flashback)}} | {{Char|Hooligan's Labyrinth|Rikuo Endo|display=Rikuo Endo (flashback)}} | ||
Line 220: | Line 220: | ||
=== Resolution === | === Resolution === | ||
==== The culprit ==== | ==== The culprit ==== | ||
− | <spoiler> | + | <spoiler>True criminal is '''Kazumasa Nakaoka'''. His motive is revenge for the death of Tomofumi Motoura, son of soccer coach, Keiichirou Motoura. Back when he was still able to play soccer, he met Tomofumi and the two became friends when Tomofumi begged to learn soccer from Kazumasa. Despite having a weak body, Tomofumi insisted on learnig to play the game which deeply moved Kazumasa. However, after Kazumasa's bike accident, which left him injured and unable to play, the two lost contact. A few years later when Tomofumi was in the 4th grade, the two met again with Tomofumi playing on his school's soccer team. Despite making it onto the soccer team however, Tomofumi never participated in any of the games because of his weak body. When he was given the chance to play during a game, Nakaoka made him a promise that the two would celebrate if Tomofumi made a goal, which he managed to do. On the day that Nakaoka went to celebrate with Tomofumi, he was told by his mother that Tomofumi had died in an accident coming home from practice one afternoon. This left him deeply distraught and upon learning from Tomofumi's father that the ambulance that was carrying Tomofumi to the hospital was stopped by a mob of people during a soccer match, Kazumasa grew bitter and resentful. Especially so after learning that a drunk Kogoro was the head of that very mob, at which point he decides to spend the next few years plotting revenge. Conan deduces that Nakaoka has installed bombs on ten stadiums, save the National Stadium where he achieves his high in his soccer career, luring Kogoro to Touto Stadium and planning commit suicide with Kogoro. Nakaoka points out that Conan's deduction contains a big flaw.</spoiler> |
− | True criminal is '''Kazumasa Nakaoka'''. His motive is revenge for the death of Tomofumi Motoura, son of soccer coach, Keiichirou Motoura. Back when he was still able to play soccer, he met Tomofumi and the two became friends when Tomofumi begged to learn soccer from Kazumasa. Despite having a weak body, Tomofumi insisted on learnig to play the game which deeply moved Kazumasa. However, after Kazumasa's bike accident, which left him injured and unable to play, the two lost contact. A few years later when Tomofumi was in the 4th grade, the two met again with Tomofumi playing on his school's soccer team. Despite making it onto the soccer team however, Tomofumi never participated in any of the games because of his weak body. When he was given the chance to play during a game, Nakaoka made him a promise that the two would celebrate if Tomofumi made a goal, which he managed to do. On the day that Nakaoka went to celebrate with Tomofumi, he was told by his mother that Tomofumi had died in an accident coming home from practice one afternoon. This left him deeply distraught and upon learning from Tomofumi's father that the ambulance that was carrying Tomofumi to the hospital was stopped by a mob of people during a soccer match, Kazumasa grew bitter and resentful. Especially so after learning that a drunk Kogoro was the head of that very mob, at which point he decides to spend the next few years plotting revenge. Conan deduces that Nakaoka has installed bombs on ten stadiums, save the National Stadium where he achieves his high in his soccer career, luring Kogoro to Touto Stadium and planning commit suicide with Kogoro. Nakaoka points out that Conan's deduction contains a big flaw. | ||
− | </spoiler> | ||
==== The case ==== | ==== The case ==== | ||
− | <spoiler> | + | <spoiler>Nakaoka explains that the bomb is also installed in National Stadium, but will explode at 5.50, 35 minutes later than other stadiums, and the key to defuse the bomb at National Stadium actually stays at Touto Stadium where he is standing. In one of his riddles, he reveals he's searching for an 11th striker that can end his revenge; otherwise, the bombs set in each of the stadiums will detonate, taking with them, the thousands of people attending the matches. He originally plans for it to be Kogoro; however Conan shows up instead after deciphering the code. With the help of Ayumi, Mitsuhiko, Genta and Haibara, Conan manages to deactivate the bomb despite being at a disadvantage. Nakaoka realizes that Conan was eleventh striker he was searching for.</spoiler> |
− | Nakaoka explains that the bomb is also installed in National Stadium, but will explode at 5.50, 35 minutes later than other stadiums, and the key to defuse the bomb at National Stadium actually stays at Touto Stadium where he is standing. In one of his riddles, he reveals he's searching for an 11th striker that can end his revenge; otherwise, the bombs set in each of the stadiums will detonate, taking with them, the thousands of people attending the matches. He originally plans for it to be Kogoro; however Conan shows up instead after deciphering the code. With the help of Ayumi, Mitsuhiko, Genta and Haibara, Conan manages to deactivate the bomb despite being at a disadvantage. Nakaoka realizes that Conan was eleventh striker he was searching for. | ||
− | </spoiler> | ||
== In other languages == | == In other languages == |
Revision as of 09:08, 6 November 2018
‹ Quarter of Silence | List of Movies | Private Eye in the Distant Sea › |
The Eleventh Striker is the 16th movie in the Detective Conan franchise. It was released in Japan on April 14, 2012.
Contents
Characters introduced
Cast
Gadgets
Case
Situation
Kogoro's detective agency receives a mysterious phone call. Someone on the other end warns about a bomb and leaves behind a code, "The Boy in Blue and The Blue Zebra, the rain from above ..." After that, a car exploded in front of Mouri Detective Agency.
Bombing | |||||||
|
If Conan can decipher the riddle, he can stop the bomb. An adventure begins for Conan and the Detective Boys, taking place at a soccer match between Hideo Akagi of the Tokyo Spirits and Ryusuke Higo of Big Osaka.
Planted Bombs | |||||||
|
Conan solves the first riddle and finds the bomb planting on the electronic scoreboard of Touto Stadium. He manages to inform the police to evacuate the fans on the Spirits side before the bomb explodes, thus leaving no casualties. However, only two weeks later, another threatening letter was sent to Mouri Kogoro's residence, announcing the bomber has installed bombs in all the stadiums and will explode at the end of the matches, unless certain conditions are satisfied. This time, no evacuation or bomb defuse attempts are allowed.
Planted Bombs | |||||||
|
The police and Conan solve the second code and inform the ten strikers of the teams to perform the secret action the culprit has demanded. Thanks to that, they successfully defuse the bombs in nine stadiums, and apparently the activation signal in the National Stadium is malfunctioned. Meanwhile, the police, led by Shiratori, investigates a potential suspect, Keiichirou Motoura. He has a clear motive for bombing: his son, Tomofumi, dies on the way to the hospital, where the ambulance carrying him was blocked by Mouri Kogoro for two minutes, and Motoura carries the crime out of revenge for his son. Motoura, while being angry at Mouri, denies that he install the bombs.
People
Real-life people
Resolution
The culprit
The case
In other languages
Language | Title | Translation |
---|---|---|
German | Der 11. Stürmer | The Eleventh Striker |
Italian | L'undicesimo attaccante | The Eleventh Striker |
Vietnammese | Tiền đạo thứ 11 | The Eleventh Striker |
Chinese | 第十一名前锋 | The Eleventh Striker |
French | Le Onzième Attaquant | The Eleventh Attacker |
Gallery
Trivia
- The movie was produced because of the friendship between Conan producer Michihiko Suwa and Yasuaki Iwasada, the public relations manager of the J League, who is a fan of Detective Conan himself. Iwasada was the one to convince Suwa and TMS to make a movie about football.
- According to Suwa, the stadium in the movie was modeled after Toyota Stadium, of the Aichi Prefecture, because Suwa lives in Aichi and it's "the coolest looking stadium there was in Japan".
- Several real life J. League soccer players provided voice work for animated versions of themselves in the film, including: Kazuyoshi Miura (Yokohama F.C.), Yasuhito Endo (Gamba Osaka), Yasuyuki Konno (Gamba Osaka), Kengo Nakamura (Kawasaki Frontale), and Seigo Narazaki (Nagoya Grampus).
- The names of Tokyo Spirits players are based on real-life players:
- Masami Kihara comes from Masakazu Kihara and Masami Ihara.
- Hidetoshi Nagata comes from Hidetoshi Nakata.
- Kazushi Shimura comes from Kazushi Kimura.
- Tsuyoshi Itazawa comes from Tsuyoshi Kitazawa.
- Shigetatsu Masunaga comes from Shigetatsu Matsunaga.
- Masakiyo Maedono comes from Masakiyo Maezono.
- The movie brought 3.29 billion yen to box office.
- Kazumasa Nakaoka's motorbike is a Suzuki SV 650 S.
- The Car Explode Near Mouri Detective Agency is a 2001 Dark Blue Toyota Prius I [NHW11].
- In real life, J1 league has only 18 teams. In the movie, two fictional teams are added: Tokyo Spirits and Big Osaka. The movie takes place in the 2011 J-League season, with Tokyo Spirits is fighting for the champion, while Big Osaka is struggling at relegation place.
- In the credits, there is a mistake in Miyuki Tabeta's name since it is written Miyuki Tabuta.
See also
Detective Conan Movies | ||
---|---|---|
Movies | Movie 01: The Time-Bombed Skyscraper • Movie 02: The Fourteenth Target • Movie 03: The Last Wizard of the Century • Movie 04: Captured in Her Eyes • Movie 05: Countdown to Heaven • Movie 06: The Phantom of Baker Street • Movie 07: Crossroad in the Ancient Capital • Movie 08: Magician of the Silver Sky • Movie 09: Strategy Above the Depths • Movie 10: The Private Eyes' Requiem • Movie 11: Jolly Roger in the Deep Azure • Movie 12: Full Score of Fear • Movie 13: The Raven Chaser • Movie 14: The Lost Ship in the Sky • Movie 15: Quarter of Silence • Movie 16: The Eleventh Striker • Movie 17: Private Eye in the Distant Sea • Lupin III vs. Detective Conan: The Movie (crossover) • Movie 18: Dimensional Sniper • Movie 19: Sunflowers of Inferno • Movie 20: The Darkest Nightmare • Movie 21: The Crimson Love Letter • Movie 22: Zero the Enforcer • Movie 23: The Fist of Blue Sapphire • The Scarlet Alibi (compilation) • Movie 24: The Scarlet Bullet • Movie 25: The Bride of Halloween • The Story of Ai Haibara ~Black Iron Mystery Train~ (compilation) • Movie 26: Black Iron Submarine • Detective Conan vs. Kid the Phantom Thief (compilation) • Movie 27: The Million-dollar Pentagram • Movie 28 | |
Related cases | 16 Suspects!? (movie 4) • Conan, Heiji, and the Vanished Boy (movie 7) • Time Travel of the Silver Sky (movie 8) • Follow the Vanished Diamond! Conan & Heiji vs. Kid! (movie 10) • A Challenge from Agasa! Agasa vs. Conan and the Detective Boys (movie 11) • Magic File 2: Shinichi Kudo, The Case of the Mysterious Wall and the Black Lab (movie 12) • Lupin III vs. Detective Conan (crossover) • Magic File 3: Shinichi and Ran, Memories of Mahjong Tiles and Tanabata (movie 13) • Magic File 4: The Osaka Okonomiyaki Odyssey (movie 14) • Magic File 5: Niigata~Tokyo Souvenir Capriccio (movie 15) • Bonus File 1: Flower of Fantasista (movie 16) • The Missing Sweets in the Old Shop (movie 17) • The Coded Invitation (movie 18) • Promise with a J-Leaguer (movie 16) • Munch's Missing Scream (movie 19) • The Shadow Approaching Amuro (movie 20) • The Mystery of the Vanished Black Belt (movie 21) • The Melting Cake! (movie 22) • The J League Bodyguard (movie 16) • Intrigue at the Food Court (movie 23) • The Beika City Shopping Center Garbage Bin Mystery (movie 24) • The Flying Jack-o'-lantern (movie 25) • The Cameras Targeting Haibara (movie 26) • Behind the Scenes of the J League Finals (movie 16) • Mystery of the Lost Treasure (movie 27) |