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・ Takeshi Utsumi
・ Takeshi Watabe
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・ Takeshi Watanabe (bureaucrat)
・ Takeshi Watanabe (footballer)
・ Takeshi Yagi
・ Takeshi Yamada
・ Takeshi Yamaguchi
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・ Takeshi Yamasaki
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Takeshi's Castle
・ Takeshi, Nagano
・ Takeshiba Station
・ Takeshiki Guard District
・ Takeshima (disambiguation)
・ Takeshima (Kagoshima)
・ Takeshis'
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・ Takeshita Station
・ Takeshita Street
・ Takeshobo
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Takeshi's Castle : ウィキペディア英語版
Takeshi's Castle

was a Japanese game show that aired between 1986 and 1990, on the Tokyo Broadcasting System. It featured the Japanese actor Takeshi Kitano (also known as Beat Takeshi) as a count who owns a castle and sets up difficult challenges for players (or a volunteer army) to get to him. The show has become a cult television hit around the world. A special live "revival" was broadcast on April 2, 2005, for TBS's 50th anniversary celebrations.
==Original ''Takeshi's Castle''==

The original show involved between 100 and 142 contestants whom General Tani (Hayato Tani) "forced" into a series of physical challenges, eliminating many of the contestants. Each show finished with a "Final Showdown" in which Count Takeshi (Kitano) was faced by the remaining contestants. In early episodes they would storm the castle set itself in a short-range water gun assault. Later episodes introduced carts with paper rings, and eventually lasers and light-sensitive targets. If the contestant's gun penetrated the paper ring or hit the sensor on Takeshi's cart, against such weapons as a large water gun and a laser-armed plane, Takeshi's cart was deactivated, the castle was "taken" and the game "won". The player who stopped Takeshi won one million yen (which, at the time, was roughly equivalent to $8,000 US or £5,000 sterling). However, there were only nine winners during the show's run.
The series featured extensive landscaping of a fixed campus at TBS-owned Midoriyama (Green Mountain) Studios that included large man-made lakes and extensive permanent obstacles in Yokohama, Japan. The final regular episode aired on April 14, 1989 followed by 4 one-off specials up until October 19, 1990. A special revival took place just outside the TBS Building for the network's Spring All-Star Thanksgiving Festival on April 2, 2005 and featured Skipping Stones and Bridge Ball.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Takeshi's Castle」の詳細全文を読む



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