Difference between revisions of "Ethan Hondou"
(→See also) |
|||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
+ | * [[Characters]] | ||
* [[Hondou Family]] | * [[Hondou Family]] | ||
− | |||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 21:59, 27 August 2011
Ethan Hondou | |
Age: | ? (deceased) |
---|---|
Gender: | male |
Relatives: | Eisuke Hondou (son) Hidemi Hondou (daughter) |
First appearance: | Manga: Chapter 584 Anime: Episode 485 |
Appearances: | |
Keyhole number: | Volume 56 |
Japanese voice: | Rikiya Koyama |
Ethan Hondou (イーサン 本堂 Iisan Hondou ) is a character in the manga and anime franchise Detective Conan.
Background
Ethan Hondou is also known by Conan as the deceased father of Eisuke Hondou and Hidemi Hondou (Mizunashi Rena or Kir). He was a CIA agent who went into deep cover as a Black Organization member.
He and his son Eisuke at one point lived in Osaka.
After Ethan went overseas for work, he would occasionally type out messages to his boss' mobile email address while talking to his son on the phone. Eisuke describes the sound as the melody for the "Seven Children" song. This fact, relayed via Ran, allows Conan to deduce that Eisuke's father was in fact a member of the Black Organization as well as a CIA agent.
Death
Recognizing that his newly recruited daughter was about to be found out as a spy by the Black Organization, Ethan committed suicide to protect Hidemi by making it look like she was the one who killed him. After he was killed, a colleague from the CIA came in the warehouse he was killed in and started calling him "Hondou." The colleague was killed by the Black Organization, and they burned down the warehouse. This was all witnessed by a homeless man living on the second floor of the warehouse who luckily escaped the burning warehouse. Sometime later, Shuuichi Akai found the homeless man and found out all these evidence that would be later used to help the FBI.
Personality
Name origin
Ethan comes from Ethan Hunt from the 1996 Mission Impossible film, while Hondou comes from Bondo, the Japanese pronunciation of (James) Bond.