Sasuke (1997)
5/5
Année : 1997
Nombre de saisons : 39
Durée moyenne d'un épisode : 180 minutes
Genre(s) : Action, Game Show, Sport
Sasuke is a Japanese sports entertainment television special in which 100 competitors attempt to complete a four stage obstacle course. An edited version, renamed Ninja Warrior, is screened in at least 18 other countries. Shot on location at Midoriyama, Aoba-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan, it airs on the Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) between Japanese television drama seasons.
Saisons
Saison 1
Saison 2
Saison 3
Saison 4
Saison 5
Saison 6
Saison 7
Saison 8
Saison 9
Saison 10
Saison 11
Saison 12
Saison 13
Saison 14
Saison 15
Saison 16
Saison 17
Saison 18
Saison 19
Saison 20
Saison 21
Saison 22
Saison 23
Saison 24
Saison 25
Saison 26
Saison 27
Saison 28
Saison 29
Saison 30
Saison 31
Saison 32
Saison 33
Saison 34
Saison 35
Saison 36
Saison 37
Saison 38
5/5
Saison 39
Épisodes
Choisissez votre saison au dessus et découvrez les épisodes qui vous attendent !
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 1
26 septembre 1997
First and only competition to be held indoors at Tokyo Bay NK Hall.
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 2
27 septembre 1998
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 3
13 avril 1999
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 4
16 octobre 1999
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 5
18 avril 2000
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 6
9 septembre 2000
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 7
17 avril 2001
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 8
29 septembre 2001
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 9
16 avril 2002
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 10
25 septembre 2002
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 11
21 avril 2003
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 12
1 octobre 2003
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 13
6 avril 2004
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 14
4 janvier 2005
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 15
20 juillet 2005
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 16
30 décembre 2005
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 17
11 octobre 2006
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 18
21 avril 2007
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 19
19 septembre 2007
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 20
26 avril 2008
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 21
17 septembre 2008
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 22
30 avril 2009
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 23
27 septembre 2009
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 24
1 janvier 2010
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 25
28 avril 2010
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 26
2 janvier 2011
Sasuke is a Japanese sports entertainment television special in which 100 competitors attempt to complete a four stage obstacle course. An edited version, renamed Ninja Warrior, is screened in at least 18 other countries. Shot on location at Midoriyama, Aoba-ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan, it airs on the Tokyo Broadcasting System (TBS) between Japanese television drama seasons. Each 3-hour special covers an entire competition. There have been 26 specials, approximately one new special per season (twice per year). The show is produced by Monster9 and is one of the spin-offs of Muscle Ranking (筋肉番付, Kinniku Banzuke?), another sports entertainment competition, which currently airs on G4 under the name Unbeatable Banzuke. Until the 10th competition, Sasuke was broadcast as a special part of Muscle Ranking, but it became an independent program when Muscle Ranking was discontinued. The first competition was held indoors, marking the only time Sasuke did not take place outside. Competitions generally start in the daytime and continue until completed regardless of weather or darkness.
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 27
31 juillet 2011
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 28 (RISING 1)
27 décembre 2012
SASUKE RISING (or SASUKE 28) was the first SASUKE tournament in over a year due to Monster9's bankruptcy and the first since Urushihara Yuuji's second kanzenseiha. It taped in October 2012 and aired on December 27, 2012. Inui Masato returned as director for his first tournament since SASUKE 14. From Inui's tenure, the black mats from SASUKE 13 to 17 were used and many old obstacles, such as the Godantobi, returned. However, many new obstacles also premiered, most notably the Backstream, SASUKE's first swimming obstacle. SASUKE RISING was notable as the final competition of the SASUKE All-Stars. Five of the six All-Stars (excluding Shiratori Bunpei who was injured) competed together for the final time, but all five failed the First Stage. In their place, a new group, Shin Sedai, was formed with Urushihara Yuuji, Matachi Ryo, Kanno Hitoshi, and Asa Kazuma. The four New Stars were the last four men standing in this tournament. Auditions were held in Osaka and Tokyo in September for this tournament. The auditions consisted of a 30 second presentation and a 100 push up contest. While potential competitors were required to attend these auditions, their results were not binding to their invitations, as many veterans of SASUKE returned regardless of their performance. The First Stage was heavily modified from SASUKE 27 and several classic obstacles were modified. The Godantobi returned for its first tournament since SASUKE 11. The Spin Bridge was moved to the third obstacle and the Jump Hang and Soritatsu Kabe were brought back in modified versions as the Jump Hang Kai and the Ni Ren Soritatsu Kabe, resulting in a much shorter and quicker First Stage. In fact, the First Stage had the shortest time limit since SASUKE 17. Results were much worse than in SASUKE 27 as only five people cleared with the Rolling Escargot and Spin Bridge doing most of the damage. It look 37 competitors until someone cleared the Spin Bridge and only one person out of the first 50 competi
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 29 (RISING 2)
27 juin 2013
SASUKE 29, also known as SASUKE RISING 2013 Summer, took place in the beginning of June and aired on June 27. This competition serves as the Japanese qualifier for the 2013 SASUKE ASEAN Open Cup. This will be the second tournament aired in summer. The first one was SASUKE 15. Several competitors, who have not competed in SASUKE for many years, finally returned to SASUKE for this tournament, including fan favorite Nagasaki Shunsuke, who competed for the first time since SASUKE 19; 3-time Second Stage survivor Kobayashi Masaaki, who competed for the first time since SASUKE 16; and finally, Tatayama Masaaki, who set a new hiatus record at 25 tournaments, who competed for the first time since SASUKE 3. The field was almost all Japanese competitors with the only foreigner being Taiwan's Li En Zhi. 21 people completed the First Stage, the 5th best result in SASUKE history (SASUKE 1 had 23, SASUKE 2 had 34, SASUKE 4 had 37, SASUKE 27 had 27). In the Second Stage, the obstacles were the same as SASUKE 28, however the time limit was reduced from 135 to 90 seconds. The Backstream was modified to be harder and proved to be a challenge as more than a half of the remaining competitors failed or timed out there. SASUKE 27 finalists Urushihara Yuuji and Matachi Ryo both had over 40 seconds remaining when they attempted the obstacle but both could not clear it. Ultimately, 4 out of the 21 people to attempt the stage, cleared it. In the Third Stage, Morimoto Yūsuke became the first man to clear the Crazy Cliffhanger. He went on to beat the Curtain Cling and Vertical Limit and made it all the way to the end of the Pipe Slider. However, he missed the mat and fell backwards into the water. The remaining three competitors: Takahashi Kenji, Asa Kazuma, and Kanno Hitoshi all failed the Crazy Cliffhanger.
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 30
3 juillet 2014
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 31
1 juillet 2015
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 32
3 juillet 2016
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 2017
26 mars 2017
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 34
8 octobre 2017
Épisode 1 - SASUKE 2018
26 mars 2018
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 36
31 décembre 2018
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 37
31 décembre 2019
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 38
29 décembre 2020 - 5/5
Épisode 1 - Sasuke 39
28 décembre 2021
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