Golden Wind - Episode 39
Mista encounters Rolling Stones, an automatic rock-like Stand that predicts Bucciarati's impending death. Mista is ready to risk anything in order to save his leader from both Rolling Stones and his Fate.
Summary
Although he is shocked to see a statue of a dying Bucciarati, Mista quickly incapacitates Scolippi, makes the elevator go up, and begins to interrogate him. Scolippi reveals that he's a sculptor unaware about Stands except for his own ability, Rolling Stones, which acted on its own and followed Bucciarati. Mista then notices that the stone has disappeared and Scolippi explains that Bucciarati's fate has been sealed, just like how stones are fated to take the form of a given statue. Skeptical, Mista tries to intimidate Scolippi into bringing back the stone by forcing a Russian roulette on the sculptor as Scolippi explains that Rolling Stones predicts future deaths and confronts its target to let them die peacefully when they touch it, claiming this ability to be the true cause behind his girlfriend's death. Mista shoots Scolippi in the mouth, but his gun misfires, as Scolippi isn't supposed to die. After pistol-whipping Scolippi, Mista calls Fugo to warn him and Bucciarati, only to learn that Bucciarati had already decided to go in to help and is currently in the range of Rolling Stones.
Shooting three of the Sex Pistols to seek Bucciarati, Mista makes the elevator go down and begs a barely conscious Scolippi for a way to stop Rolling Stone. Scolippi then mentions the possibility of destroying the stone although he isn't sure it can work. Bucciarati is already at the seventh floor and Rolling Stones is already near its target. Shooting up the elevator shaft, Mista manages to delay the stone by shooting it so that he can join Bucciarati and explain the situation. However, in doing so he's aggravated the wounds present in Bucciarati's statue. Mista holds the stone down but it then sinks into the stairs and reappears from a wall to ambush Bucciarati. Using Sticky Fingers, Bucciarati zips to the outside of the building, closely followed by Rolling Stones. The stone almost touches Bucciarati but Mista is able to grab it and throws himself off the building while still holding the stone. Mista then lands on a car's roof and Rolling Stones breaks on the concrete. Trusting Scolippi's word, Mista performed this daring action knowing he wasn't fated to die this day. Incidentally, Mista lands on Fugo's car, as he had come back to give Mista the tape recorder he had forgotten.
With the stone destroyed, Mista is satisfied to leave the whole affair as is, and Bucciarati decides to investigate the case of Luca's death. However, Scolippi appears, seeing that Mista has in the end not prevented Bucciarati's death as the rubble, unbeknownst to the gangsters, takes the form of Abbacchio and Narancia as well, signalling their deaths. As a silver lining, Scolippi notes that Mista was ready to die for his leader and, admiring this determination, hopes that the youths' arduous road will fulfill some purpose.
Back to the present, Giorno is staring at the Arrow in his hand, causing Mista to chew him out for his tardiness. Suddenly, Trish suddenly trips on a round rock reminding Mista of Rolling Stones. Trish disappears briefly but it simply turns out that Coco Jumbo has caught up to the team, having accidentally sucked Trish into his room. Moreover, Jean Pierre Polnareff's soul has clung to the room inside of Coco Jumbo, allowing him to linger a bit more in the world of the living. As Mista reminds the group that Bucciarati is still in the Colosseum, Polnareff begins to recall that Bucciarati's soul has since departed but Giorno silences him with a look. Mista is then distracted as he remembers Trish critizing him for his body odor earlier and begins to agree with her, but she reassures him and says that she doesn't mind anymore. As the group heads to the Colosseum, Giorno tells Polnareff that he wont destroy the Arrow, claiming that those who carry on the will of the departed must keep moving forward. Polnareff respects Giorno's decision, and advises that he keep the arrow inside Coco Jumbo.
Golden Wind ends with Mista opening the windows of a chamber in which several mafiosi are present to kiss the hand of Giorno, showing their respect torwards the new head of Passione.
Appearances
Credits
Shinji Nagata
Hironori Tanaka
Kenichi Umemoto
Kazuki Kimura
Koki Fujimoto
Eita Toyoshima
Gin Kugumiya
Takeshi Itou
Toru Iwazawa
Yuta Shinohara
Rina Morita
Kai Shibata
Hideyuki Sugiura
Masashi Yamada
Eri Kojima
Echigo Nomii
Kiko Morifuji
Reki Taki
Hirohisa Onikubo
長田 伸二
田中 宏紀
梅本 賢一
木村 和貴
藤本 航己
豊島 英太
久々宮 ぎん
伊藤 岳史
岩澤 亨
篠原 佑太
森田 莉奈
柴田 海
杉浦 英之
山田 まさし
小島 えり
エチゴノミイ
森藤 希子
滝 れーき
鬼窪 浩久
Yui Kinoshita
Masaki Kosaka
Daiki Fujii
Kentaro Ishikawa
Eita Toyoshima
Rie Takahashi
Sayaka Anesaki
Masako Ishino
Mahora Muraki
Miyuki Kawano
Eiichi Morita
Tomoyoshi Murayama
Kohei Ashiya
Yoshihiro Itoo
Kotaro Okazaki
Kazunori Shibata
Rin Ogawa
Nobuhiro Nagata
Haruka Tanaka
Masamichi Ishiyama
Naoki Chigira
Rina Morita
Takahito Katayama
Kiko Morifuji
Kenji Yokoyama
Cobos Rai
木下 由衣
高坂 雅基
藤井 大輝
石川 健太郎
豊島 英太
高橋 梨恵
姉崎 早也花
石野 まさ子
村木 麻保良
河野 美由紀
森田 映一
村山 友良
芦谷 耕平
伊東 佳宏
岡崎 耕太郎
柴田 和紀
小川 隣
長田 信博
田中 春香
石山 正修
千装 直樹
森田 莉奈
片山 貴仁
森藤 希子
横山 謙次
Cobos Rai
Shun Takahashi
高橋 俊
White Line
White Line
David Production
Daiki Ito
Haruka Watanabe
Kazuya Aoki
Mito Ichikawa
Kyouka Hachiman
Kyouka Nanji
Genki Igake
Yuta Shinohara
Rie Takahashi
Mai Oshima
伊東 大輝
渡邉 はるか
青木 一哉
市河 碧都
八幡 匡耶
南治 京花
井掛 玄稀
篠原 佑太
高橋 梨恵
大島 舞
Bandai Namco Pictures Osaka (BNP 大阪)
Yuki Sakai
Yurina Sawaki
酒井 悠樹
佐脇 優里菜
Studio Bus
Triple A
Asahi Production
Trycell
Revaival
Seven Seas
Grain
Studio Bus
Triple A
旭プロダクション
TRYCELL
Revaival
セブンシーズ
グレーン
姉崎 早也花
銀
火日 仲克
Natsuki Horimoto
Kanae Aoki
Norika Seki
堀本 夏生
青木 香菜絵
関 乃梨佳
牧寺 智昭
實歳 準也
滝 れーき
Music
Golden Wind Episode 39: Sleeping Slaves | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Manga/Anime Differences
- Mista is no longer shown reloading his gun via his hat before shooting Scolippi.
- The photo of Scolippi is no longer shown falling to the ground in the elevator.
- Scolippi is no longer shown throwing up after Mista knees him.
- Mista has Scolippi in an arm lock during the interrogation, rather than just holding him at gunpoint.
- Mista uses his gun to hit the elevator button rather than his hand.
- When Scolippi talks about Michelangelo, scenes of Michelangelo at work are shown.
- When Scolippi explains the connection between the flower shop owner's illness and his daughter's death, the pose Scolippi takes is changed slightly, with his arms stretched out more and the wounds on his hands clearly shown. This is a possible reference to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, as Scolippi's design also features a crown of thorns and the wounds to his hands resemble the stigmata.
- Bucciarati is now briefly shown during Mista and Fugo's call.
- The elevator indicating Mista is on the fourth floor when Sex Pistols tell him Bucciarati is approaching Rolling Stones has been omitted.
- Mista is now holding his gun while Rolling Stones falls through his fingers into the floor.
- Bucciarati now asks Mista what's going on after Mista loses track of Rolling Stones.
- After Bucciarati disappears into his zipper, Mista is now shown running towards him and cries out his name.
- As Bucciarati holds on to his zipper, his hands are no longer shown trembling.
- As Fugo, Mista, and Bucciarati leave the scene, Fugo has a line added mentioning they could use Moody Blues to replay the events rather than having Mista explain.
- Before walking back to the Colosseum, a scene is added of Giorno looking back.
- In the final scene, a brief shot of various objects placed next to the turtle is added. These objects (yellow and white flowers similar to the ones Giorno grew respectively from Abbacchio and Narancia's bodies, a zipper, and a wine bottle of the same brand as the one the group drank in Venice) represent the three main characters who passed during Golden Wind's events.
In other languages
Language | Title | Translation |
---|---|---|
Japanese | 眠れる奴隷 | Sleeping Slaves |
English | The Sleeping Slave The Sleep Slave (Netflix) | |
Spanish | Esclavos durmientes | Sleeping Slaves |
Portuguese | Escravos Dormentes | Sleeping Slaves |
French | Les esclaves endormis | Sleeping Slaves |
German | Der schlafende Sklave | The Sleeping Slave |
Hebrew | עבד השינה | The Slave of Sleep |
Arabic | العبد النّائم | The Sleeping Slave |
Italian | Gli schiavi assopiti | Sleeping Slaves |
Russian | Спящий раб | Sleeping Slave |
Polish | Scolippi |
Commentary
Scolippi is the pillar of this prologue-epilogue. Director Kimura requested him to be portrayed mysteriously, a fragile college student who at times speaks with powerful conviction. "I think the metal elements on his clothes are chisel tips, a must-have for any sculptor. And as you can see from the holes in his hands and his crucified pose when Mista pins him down, he's based off of Jesus Christ."
2. The Daughter's Rolling Stones
The Rolling Stones that appear in the scene with Scolippi and the daughter of the flower shop were designed exclusively for the anime. Kimura says, "I asked the episodic director Yasutoshi Iwasaki to draft a stone in the form of the daughter with bleeding feet, and asked the background artist Reki Taki to render it."According to Director Takahashi, the shot of Giorno stopping to feel the golden wind after storing the arrow inside the turtle links back to the golden wind at the beginning of the season. The older, more mature Giorno of the finale contrasts with the youth eating ice cream that viewers met in the first episode.
4. The Post-Credits
The story ends with a man kneeling before Giorno, now head of the syndicate. Takahashi compares it to the florist kneeling before Bucciarati: "It was the perfect foreshadowing. And now, Bucciarati's will resides within Giorno." The penultimate shot brought about disagreement amongst the three directors. They ended up following the manga, but showing the streets free of drugs and having Fugo and Trish appear were ideas that came to the table.For Chief Animation Director Ishimoto, closing with Polnareff's narration was emotional. "His words have weight because of what he experienced in Stardust Crusaders. It was moving to see Polnareff in a position to guide the young. I was the animation director for the epilogue, so I'm glad I was able to close the curtains on Golden Wind"
Gallery
Trivia
- Giorno's outfit in the final scene is taken directly from the cover of Volume 61.