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3[[folder:Franchise-wide]]
4* ApprovalOfGod: As noted on the main page, Watsuki approved of ''Samurai X'' as the series' Western title, being a huge ComicBook/XMen fan and having based many of his characters on them.
5* FandomLifeCycle: The series sits somewhere between Stage 6 and Stage X. Its fandom peaked in the 1990s and early 2000s and has slowly dwindled until interest picked up again in the mid-2010s and 2020s due to the release of the live-action movies and the 2023 anime adaptation. Unfortunately, the scandal involving the mangaka means that the series faces negative stigma that can keep fans from engaging with the series.
6* {{Fanon}}: For fans who read fan fiction, it's an accepted phenomenon that Kaoru's favorite scent is Jasmine (and to a lesser extent, Kenshin is often associated with sandalwood, or something), even though the only character in the ENTIRE series to have a scent associated with them was Tomoe and her plum blossoms.
7* LyingCreator: Watsuki has admitted (in the sidebars titled "Watsuki is a Liar"), among other things, that "rurouni" is a word he made up.
8** On a different note, the word itself can also be read as a play to the more common term [[Main/{{Ronin}} "Ronin"]], so, considering what Kenshin had been doing up to the series' story, he's not entirely wrong.
9* PortmanteauSeriesNickname: "[=RuroKen=]".
10* RoleEndingMisdemeanor:
11** Or at least a variant of it, involving associated musicians. Music/LArcEnCiel's "Fourth Avenue Cafe" was used as the fourth ending song for four episodes, but when the band's former drummer got busted for drugs, the resulting controversy caused the producers to pull the song and switch back to the third ending for another seven episodes.
12** In October 2017, Watsuki himself was charged with possession of child pornography with the news of this released a month later. This led to the publisher Shueisha putting the then-ongoing Hokkaido arc on a hiatus for 6 months before letting him continue it after he paid the fine and apologized for his actions.
13** During the live-action films' production, Yusuke Iseya (Aoshi) was arrested for drug possession. As a result, a major portion of his fight with Mumyoi was cut (the original planning was supposed to be longer with Aoshi tag-teaming with Misao to finish Mumyoi with ''Kaiten Kenbu Rokuren'' as part of [[CharacterDevelopment their budding]] [[RelationshipUpgrade relationship like]] in the manga, but that part was done with Misao alone in the final version).
14** For the films' English dub, Yahiko's dub actress, Creator/AlisonViktorin, was effectively removed from participating in ''The Final'' and all dubbing in general after considerable negative feedback due to tweeting support of the 2021 capitol attacks. Yahiko was instead dubbed in ''The Final'' by Creator/CaseyMongillo.
15* RoleReprise:
16** Creator/DavidWald, who previously voiced Shishio Makoto in the New Tokyo arc [=OVAs=], reprises his role as Shishio in the Live-Action adaptations of the Kyoto arc (''Kyoto Inferno'' and ''The Legend Ends'').
17** Creator/MicahSolusod, Creator/AlexisTipton, Creator/EricVale, Creator/RobertMcCollum, Creator/TrinaNishimura, Creator/BrittneyKarbowski, and Creator/JustinBriner reprised their roles in the English dub of ''The Final''.
18* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
19** The author originally intended for Usui to be a Franchise/{{Terminator}}-style manhunter, pursuing Kenshin relentlessly through darkened city streets. Instead, he was largely an AntiClimaxBoss.
20** Henya was originally going to be introduced as a villainous character during the Kanryu arc; also, he was originally going to be in an aerial battle with Kenshin, but Watsuki changed this because he felt Kenshin would have been too strong an opponent.
21** According to Watsuki, Raijuta was originally ''supposed to be'' as imposing as he looked, but VillainDecay quickly set in.
22** Senkaku (Shishio's henchman and villain of the Shingetsu village mini-arc) originally was going to be a member of the Juppongatana, and a speechless, beast-like brute.
23** The manga was originally going to be much shorter than it turned out to be, revolving around the Jinchuu arc.
24** It was originally going to be revealed that Hannya had been stepped on in the womb like the ''Film/TheElephantMan'', explaining his featureless death-mask of a face. Watsuki realized the UnfortunateImplications of that idea, and altered the backstory to Hannya having intentionally mutilated his face so that he could easily disguise himself as just about anything.
25** There was a pilot chapter in which Megumi (a rather weak-willed woman barely holding the family together), Kaoru (a tomboy {{Tsundere}} serving as the acting dojo-master), and Yahiko (a brat of a kid who feels like he has to be the man of the family since his father died) are siblings.
26** There's also a proto-story of Kenshin meeting DamselInDistress Chizuru, who gifts him a ribbon to tie his hair back up when he loses his original ponytail tie in a fight. Chizuru lives on in cameo form at the end of the controversial ''Reflections'' OVA, [[spoiler:as the girlfriend of Kenshin and Kaoru's son Kenji]].
27** Watsuki mentioned in his notes his concept for a fourth arc of the story which would revolve around Kenji competing against Yahiko and Tsubame's son to inherit the reverse blade. Interestingly, Kenji Himura would most likely been the antagonist of the arc, from what Watsuki had stated about his concept. That, plus the fact that the story would have been set at the beginning of Japan's move towards nationalism and militarization makes one wonder what the story would have looked like...
28** Originally, Fuji's "pilot" Saizuchi was going to actually take on Okina in battle. However, Watsuki thought that a battle of old codgers wouldn't have been interesting.
29** Kanryu Takeda was going to be homosexual like his historical counterpart, but Watsuki decided that would "unnecessarily complicate things". This is more hinted at in the film version.
30** Watsuki stated that he heavily debated with himself whether or not to [[spoiler:actually kill Kaoru]] in the Jinchuu arc. He acknowledges that it would have made for a simpler, more straightforward story, and would have hammered home the theme of vengeance not being acceptable, but he also felt that [[spoiler:a shonen series should have a happy ending, and he felt there was no real way to give Kenshin a truly happy ending after everything he's been through if Kaoru was dead.]] So he went with the path that he did for the final product.
31* WordOfGod: Watsuki himself has said that the series ended the way it did specifically because it was a shonen series.
32[[/folder]]
33
34[[folder:Manga and Anime-specific]]
35* CelebrityVoiceActor: In the 1996 anime, Kenshin Himura is voiced by [[Creator/TakarazukaRevue Takarazuka]] actress Mayo Suzukaze, Kaoru Kamiya by film actress Miki Fujitani, Shura by actress Kazue Itoh, Makoto Shishio by actor and singer Masanori Ikeda, and Yumi Komagata by actress Kanako Irie.
36* ChannelHop: In Latin America, the series was originally broadcast on Cartoon Network from 2001 to 2007. This broadcast was criticized by fans due to heavy censorship made to the episodes despite being aired at midnight. In 2008, one year after the show was removed from Cartoon Network, newcomer channel Animax bough the rights and they started to broadcast the series completly uncut at a much more accessible timeslot. This is when fans discovered that the dub was always uncut and that all the previous censorship was made by Cartoon Network.
37* CowboyBebopAtHisComputer: A frequent victim of this, even in media that focus on anime and manga. Kenshin ''is not and was never a samurai'', as that was a distinct social class one had to be born into. One of the English dubs even gets it wrong with the ''title itself''. A similar problem exists for attribution of the theme "Sobakasu", as "Judy and Mary" was the name of the ''band'', [[IAmNotShazam not anybody in it]]. (The singer is Yuki Isoya, who goes by "YUKI" in all-caps).
38* CreatorBacklash:
39** Watsuki has expressed regret at creating Raijuta. He's often cited as saying that Raijuta is his least favorite character.
40** Creator/RichardCansino, the English voice of Kenshin for both the Sony and Media Blasters dubs of the TV series, says that he didn't enjoy his time working on the latter version due to Kenshin's dialect being hard to match with the lip flaps as compared to the Sony dub where more liberties were taken.
41* CreatorCameo: English ADR scriptwriter Eric P. Sherman was the first voice for the doomed older brother of Eiji Mishima, Eiichiro.
42* CrossDressingVoices: Quite a lot of it.
43** Japanese:
44*** Kenshin was voiced by Creator/MegumiOgata in the drama CD while Mayo Suzukaze, a Takarazuka actress, went to voice him in the 1996 anime.
45*** Yahiko was voiced by Creator/MinaTominaga in the Japanese original.
46*** Soujiro Seta was played by Creator/NorikoHidaka. Justified as both he and Yahiko are children.
47** English:
48*** Yahiko is voiced by Creator/WendeeLee in the TV series.
49*** Soujiro is voiced by Creator/TaraSands, Lynn Fischer, ''and'' Creator/MelissaFahn.
50* TheDanza: In the remake, Makoto Shishio will be voiced by Creator/MakotoFurukawa.
51* DirectedByCastMember:
52** Creator/YujiMitsuya was the voice director for the 1996 anime and was the narrator for the movie.
53** English dub wise, Creator/SteveStaley who voiced Sagara Souzou in Bang Zoom dub of the 1996 series is the voice director for the English dub of the 2023 series.
54* DuelingDubs:
55** The 1996 TV series has two complete[[labelnote:*]] (except for the direct-to-video Episode 95)[[/labelnote]] English dubs – Sony Pictures Television International's "Samurai X" dub which was distributed in Asia and Europe, and Media Blasters' "Rurouni Kenshin" dub which saw official release in North America. Oddly, both dubs were recorded in Los Angeles and cast Creator/RichardCansino as Kenshin. The difference between them is that, while both dubs are uncut for time, the "Samurai X" dub is a more-toned-down looser adaptation geared to a much younger audience. For streaming, Crackle used the Sony dub[[labelnote:*]] (understandable since Crackle was also owned by Sony)[[/labelnote]] while Netflix got the Media Blasters dub. Fans generally prefer the Media Blasters dub, especially in North America, where the Sony dub did not see release until 2010. Later, Hulu streamed the Sony dub[[labelnote:*]] (while curiously using the Japanese names for Kenshin, Kaoru, and Yahiko in the captions, instead of their respective Sony dub names, Kenshi, Kori, and Yoshi)[[/labelnote]], while Crunchyroll streamed the Media Blasters dub.
56** In Spain, the 1996 TV series was first dubbed in 1999 and broadcast on Canal Plus the same year. In 2005, Canal Buzz got the rights of the series and re-dubbed it due to the original dub being inaccurate to the original Japanese version (since it was translated from the English scripts made for the Animax dub). While the new dub was much more faithful to the original Japanese version, the new voice actors and their performances were heavily critized by Spaniard fans and the dub was never broadcast outside Canal Buzz (it didn't help that around this time, the series was available on DVD with the original dub). Due to all this factors, the re-dub fell into obscurity and it's considered lost media, with the only proof of it's existence being a commercial recorded from Canal Buzz that was uploaded to Youtube in 2013 and some forum post from 2005 criticizing Canal Buzz for the re-dub.
57* ExecutiveMeddling: [[WordOfGod In his original conception, Kenshin was supposed to be at least 30]], but Nobuhiro Watsuki was told that "30 is too old for a primary protagonist in ''Magazine/ShonenJump''." So, Watsuki dropped Kenshin's age to 28. (Thus keeping the concept of a more seasoned protagonist than the typical of the {{Shounen}} demographic, but also making Kenshin young enough to be "acceptable".) Lampshaded in series, when Kaoru tells Kenshin he "can't possibly be 28". Kenshin asks "Would 30 make you happier?" Kaoru replies that it would not.
58* InvisibleAdvertising: The English dub of the 2023 anime was released with no promotion whatsoever.
59* KeepCirculatingTheTapes: Creator/SentaiFilmworks released the ''New Kyoto Arc'' on DVD and Blu-ray in North America in 2013, but it later went out of print after they lost the rights.
60* NoDubForYou: The Latin American Creator/{{Netflix}} feed does not include the controversial Spanish dub produced in Colombia.
61* NoExportForYou: The Hokkaido arc ceased publication in the US Shonen Jump magazine after Watsuki got charged with possessing child porn, and an official release by VIZ is highly unlikely, with a reddit user [[https://www.reddit.com/r/rurounikenshin/comments/bdxypu/will_the_rurouni_kenshin_hokkaido_arc_manga/el2m1h7?utm_medium=android_app&utm_source=share confirming that they will not translate the chapters]].
62* OneHitWonder: The third opening song of the anime, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9n6GkQRTgyI Kimi ni Fureru Dake de]]" is the only known hit of Curio.
63* TheOtherDarrin:
64** The Drama CD cast was replaced in its entirety for the anime. In volume 10, Watsuki mentioned that he was disappointed about this decision because he liked the performance of many of the voice actors (such as Creator/MegumiOgata and Creator/TomokazuSeki) as his characters, although he felt the anime cast "worked out" as well. One reason he cited about the change was that, since the anime production committee was bigger than a Drama CD production team (as it involves more companies and sponsors), the "industry power-structure" affected the series. That said, a fair amount of the actors from the CD dramas got to appear in the show as different characters:
65*** Creator/TomoSakurai (Kaoru) was cast as Misao Makimachi
66*** Creator/TomokazuSeki (Sanosuke) was cast in the first OVA as Kogoro Katsura.
67*** The late Creator/UnshoIshizuka (Jin-e) was cast as Fuji.
68*** The late Shigezo Sasaoka (Gohei) was cast as Senryoyama.
69*** Creator/HiroYuki (Young Sano) was cast as young Ryunosuke and later Reisui.
70*** Creator/TakehitoKoyasu (Ujiki) was cast as Jinpuu.
71** In English, the 1996 TV series and movie/OVA's dubs were dubbed in completely different areas (LA vs. Austin, Texas), so naturally they use completely different casts. Back in 2000, no North American company could afford ''all'' of Kenshin[[labelnote:*]] (except maybe Creator/{{Viz|Media}}, but they were too busy working on ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'' at the time)[[/labelnote]], so Sony split the license into two: Creator/MediaBlasters got the TV series and restored the Japanese title, while Creator/{{ADV|Films}} got the OVA's and kept the "Samurai X" title[[labelnote:*]] (amusingly, when ADV did a rerelease years later, they included reversible DVD covers – one side with their "Samurai X" logo and the other with Viz's "Kenshin" logo – so fans could choose which side they wanted to display)[[/labelnote]].
72** The TV series was dubbed twice for different markets. While several voice actors show up in both dubs, Creator/RichardCansino (Kenshin) and Creator/MariDevon (Megumi) are the only ones who play the same roles in both.
73** The Media Blasters dub, while mostly consistent, did have a few changes. Most prominent of all would be Sojiro, who was voiced by '''three''' different actresses during his screentime. At first, Tara Sands provided his voice but after she returned to New York (for the time). Lynn Fischer replaced her as Sojiro for a couple of episodes before ''she'' was replaced by Creator/MelissaFahn for the battle with Kenshin and the DarkAndTroubledPast flashback. Bizarrely, Tara still voiced Masukami for her appearances during the Aoiya battle even after giving up Sojiro. For the aftermath of the Shishio battle and her cameo in the Christian arc, Masukami was voiced by Creator/MichelleRuff (Tae and Tsubame). Plus, in one of the last episodes of Season Three, Dina Sherman filled in for her.
74*** For the Raijuta arc, Yutaro was voiced by Creator/MichaelLindsay. When he returned later in the Black Knights arc, Creator/DaveWittenberg took over his voice.
75*** Han'nya was mainly voiced by Tom Wyner but in Aoshi's flashback in episode 42, he was voiced by Paul St. Peter. Later still when his ghost appeared before Misao during the Aoiya battle, his voice was done by Dan Lorge (already the voice of Henya and Shirojo).
76*** For the same flashback mentioned above, Shikijo's one line was performed by Lorge instead of his original actor Dean Wein.
77*** Aritomo Yamagata was voiced by Simon Prescott in Season One but after Prescott was no longer available to continue the dub he was replaced by Creator/CrispinFreeman for his Season Three appearances. In the Japanese version, similarly, stage actor Seiji Mizutani provided the voice of Yamagata in Season One and for the front half of Season Three. In the latter half of Season Three, plus the movie and the OVA, Mizutani was replaced by Hari Kaneko.
78*** Toshiyoshi Kawaji, Okubo's protege, was voiced by Joe Ochman in Season Two but in Season Three Doug Stone took over the part (who ironically played Okubo back when Joe was voicing Kawaji).
79*** Omine, one of the four minor Oniwabanshu members, was voiced by Creator/BridgetHoffman for most of her appearances, but in two different episodes Dina Sherman (voice of Ayame) and Melodee Spevack (Kamatari) filled in. Her last appearance in the third season had her being voiced by Mona Marshall (Suzume's actress).
80*** Kamatari was filled in for Episode 54 by Lara Cody instead of his main actress, Melodee Spevack.
81*** Minor characters weren't exempt from changes either. Sakata, Yutaro's servant, was voiced by Robert Axelrod for Episodes 19 and 21 while Lex Lang (Sanosuke) filled in for episode 20. Eiji's older brother Eichiro was voiced by the dub producer Eric P. Sherman for his introduction (and death) in episode 35 while in episode 37 Creator/SteveStaley (voice of Captain Sagara) took over.
82*** In the Christian arc, Kaiou's followers, Jacob and Miguel, were voiced by Creator/MichaelMcConnohie and Creator/DerekStephenPrince in episode 69. When they reappeared in episode 73, however, they were replaced by Doug Stone and Tom Wyner respectively.
83*** In the first episode of the Feng Shui arc, Jinpu's voice was supplied by Creator/MichaelMcConnohie but for the remainder of the story, Creator/JamiesonPrice took over (he'd previously voiced Usui and Kaiou).
84** The OVA and film cast from ADV also went through a couple of changes between projects. Kaoru was voiced by Kara Bliss in the movie but Katherine Catmull replaced her for the second OVA. Hiko was also shared by a couple actors in the OVA; Joe York for ''Trust and Betrayal'' and J. Hudson Brownlee in ''Reflection''.
85*** When the ''New Kyoto Arc'' was dubbed years later by Sentai Filmworks, only Kenshin and Sanosuke's actors, J. Shannon Weaver and Gray G. Haddock respectively, returned to their parts[[labelnote:*]] Except for Lowell Bartholomee and Charlie Campbell who voiced and directed on the previous projects and Meg Bauman who had previously voiced Tsubame and had returned as Misao[[/labelnote]]. All the rest of the returning characters from the previous works dubbed by the now-defunct ADV Films were recast:
86*** Kaoru: Kara Bliss and Katherine Catmull --> Amanda Hanawa
87*** Saito: Ken Webster --> Creator/JohnSwasey
88*** Yahiko: Derek Wade --> Creator/BlakeShepard
89*** Hiko: Joe York[[note]]Passed away in August 2007[[/note]] and J. Hudson Brownlee --> Creator/AndrewLove
90** Creator/HirotakaSuzuoki, the original Japanese voice of Saitō, had passed away years prior to the making of New Kyoto Arc, so Creator/KenNarita replaced him for that and the PSP games.
91** On the same note, Okina's TV actor, Koichi Kitamura, passed in 2007, so Tamio Oki replaced him for New Kyoto Arc.
92** For the 2023 anime, everyone was inevitably recast, both living and dead. Many examples include:
93*** Creator/SomaSaito voices Kenshin instead of Mayo Suzukaze.
94*** Creator/RieTakahashi voices Kaoru instead of Miki Fujitani.
95*** Creator/MakotoKoichi voices Yahiko instead of Creator/MinaTominaga.
96*** Creator/TakuYashiro voices Sanosuke instead of Creator/YujiUeda.
97*** Creator/SaoriOnishi voices Megumi instead of Creator/MikaDoi.
98*** Creator/SatoshiHino voices Saito instead of the late Creator/HirotakaSuzuoki and Creator/KenNarita.
99*** Creator/YuumaUchida voices Aoshi instead of Creator/YoshitoYasuhara.
100*** Creator/SoichiroHoshi voices Okita instead of Creator/YokoOgai.
101*** Creator/YuichiNakamura voices Seijuro instead of Creator/ShuichiIkeda.
102*** Creator/DaikiYamashita voices Sojiro instead of Creator/NorikoHidaka.
103*** Creator/MakotoFurukawa voices Shishio instead of Masanori Ikeda.
104*** Creator/AyaYamane voices Misao instead of Creator/TomoSakurai.
105** The same goes for the Latin American Spanish dub of the 2023 series, which was done in Mexico, and for good and understandable reasons: Firstly, the dub of the original series was done in Colombia, which was notorious for being a quite controversial dub with an uneven quality, even for older fans; secondly, Crunchyroll doesn't do Latin American dubs in Colombia, and finally, most of the dub cast of the original series had either retired or died.
106** In English dub of the 2023 series, none of the original cast came back despite it being dubbed at the same recording studio [[note]] though Creator/SteveStaley, who voiced Sagara Souzou in the Bang Zoom dub of the 1996 series is directing it [[/note]], examples include:
107*** Creator/HowardWang voices Kenshin instead of Creator/RichardCansino.
108*** Creator/RisaMei voices Kaoru instead of Creator/DorothyEliasFahn.
109*** Creator/EricaMendez voices Yahiko instead of Creator/WendeeLee.
110*** Darius Johnson voices Sanosuke instead of Creator/LexLang.
111*** Jennifer Sun Bell voices Megumi instead of Creator/MariDevon
112*** Creator/BenBalmaceda voices Aoshi intead of Terence Stone.
113*** Creator/BillButts voices Saito instead of Creator/KirkThornton.
114*** Creator/YongYea voices Jin'e instead of Dave Mallow.
115*** An unknown voice actress replaces the late Creator/PhileceSampler as Misao.
116* TheOtherMarty: Creator/MonaMarshall was to originally voice the adult Kenshin Himura in Media Blasters' dub of the 1996 series.[[note]]Following along the pattern of the original Japanese version, where he was voiced by a woman.[[/note]] However, the dubbing team felt that her voice wasn't working out for the character, and the role was recast with Creator/RichardCansino.[[note]]Who had also voiced Kenshin in Sony's alternate ''Samurai X'' dub.[[/note]]
117* PlayingAgainstType: For the 1996 series:
118** Shishio Makoto is voiced by Masanori Ikeda, an ex-IdolSinger from TheEighties. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Eitvlx9Ibw This is his most popular hit, "Night of Summer Side"]], the first opening to fellow Magazine/ShonenJump alumnus ''Manga/KimagureOrangeRoad''. Compare Ikeda's singing [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cw85i8Iahew to Shishio's voice]] now. Huh.
119** Honjou Katamari is voiced by Creator/JunkoTakeuchi. She's later known for voicing [[Manga/{{Naruto}} Naruto Uzumaki]] and [[Manga/HunterXHunter the first Gon Freecs]].
120** Seta Soujirou is voiced by Creator/NorikoHidaka, who's more famous for her StarMakingRole as Minami Asakura in ''Manga/Touch1981'' as well as [[{{Tsundere}} Akane Tendou]] from ''Manga/RanmaOneHalf'', Noriko Takaya from ''Anime/{{Gunbuster}}'' and Erica Fontaine in ''VideoGame/SakuraWars'' among others. Though this wouldn't be [[Anime/NadiaTheSecretOfBlueWater her first time]] playing [[Manga/AkazukinChacha a male character]] nor [[Manga/HunterXHunter would it be the last]].
121* RealLifeRelative: The Brazilian Portuguese dub of the 2023 remake casts Caio Guarnieri as Kenshin, who is no other than the son of Kenshin's original voice actor (José "Tatá" Guarnieri) who voiced him in both the 1996 anime and in the live-action movies.
122* ScrewedByTheNetwork: The 1996 anime suffered this on Creator/CartoonNetwork after they realized it probably should have gone to Creator/AdultSwim. The show got moved from its Creator/{{Toonami}} weekday slot to a slot on the Creator/SaturdayVideoEntertainmentSystem block without much warning, and the run was ended at episode 62 (''right before'' the anime-only third season) out of the 95 episodes total aired (despite CN acquiring the rights to the whole show).
123* SeriesHiatus: [[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2017-11-21/rurouni-kenshin-creator-nobuhiro-watsuki-charged-with-child-pornography-possession/.124308 Watsuki's being charged with possession of child pornography]] in November of 2017 resulted in the [[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2017-11-21/rurouni-kenshin-hokkaido-arc-manga-goes-on-hiatus-due-to-creator-child-porn-charge/.124313 suspension of production]] of the Hokkaido Arc [[https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2018-04-23/rurouni-kenshin-hokkaido-arc-manga-resumes-in-june/.130726 till June 2018]] as soon as the allegations went public.
124* StudioHop: At first, the 1996 anime was produced by Creator/StudioGallop before switching to Creator/StudioDEEN. For the 2023 anime series, the animation was produced by Creator/LidenFilms.
125* UncreditedRole: The English actors for the 2023 anime aren't credited at all, and were totally unknown until Creator/HowardWang, Creator/RisaMei, Bill Butts, and Creator/YongYea announced themselves as part of the cast as Kenshin, Kaoru, Saito, and Jine respectively. They also stated that they gave their salaries to charity as condemnation for the mangaka's crimes.
126* UnspecifiedRoleCredit: The English actors for the 1996 anime are credited, but the roles they play aren't given with them.
127* WhatCouldHaveBeen: Promotional images of the Jinchuu arc and Tomoe's brief appearance in the ending animation of "1/3 Junjou no Kanjou" suggests that an adaption of the Jinchuu arc was always in the cards, but sadly never materialized. A [[https://w.atwiki.jp/anime-ruroken/pages/16.html storyboard]] showing Kenshin fighting Okita and Saito and having flashbacks of [[spoiler:Tomoe's death]] is the only evidence of its production.
128* YouSoundFamiliar: Creator/WataruTakagi voiced Onizaki Gengo and Shindo Tatewaki in the 1996 anime, and would later voice Hiruma Gohei in the 2023 anime.
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Live-Action Films-specific]]
132* ActorAllusion:
133** Coupled with the largely ''Ryomaden''-affiliated cast of the series (as noted below), perhaps it is most remarkable that Fukuyama Masaharu was cast as Hiko Seijuro, Kenshin's mentor, considering that they played a quite similar relationship (as Sakamoto Ryoma [Fukuyama] and Okada Izo [Sato]) in ''Ryomaden''.
134** Cho is being played by Ryosuke Miura, known to Rider fans as [[Series/KamenRiderOOO Ankh]]. [[ActorAllusion His blondness is fabulously spot on.]]
135* DawsonCasting: Munetaka Aoki was 12 whole years older than his character Sanosuke during the first film shot. Saitou also follows suit, as Yosuke Eguchi was 45 playing the 34-year-old Shinsengumi captain-turned-police-officer. This continued on to the sequels: Aoshi is 25, yet his actor Yusuke Iseya is 38 during filming. The girls almost subvert this: 17-year-old Kaoru is played by 19-year-old Emi Takei in the first film, and Tao Tsuchiya was 18 when she took the role as Misao in ''Kyoto Inferno'' and ''The Legend Ends''.
136** In ''Film/RurouniKenshinTheBeginning'', the then-32-year-old Takeru Satoh plays the 15-year-old Kenshin/Battosai.
137* TheOtherDarrin: Due to the live-action films being distributed by Creator/{{Funimation}}, the original cast members from the anime were replaced, although Creator/DavidWald, who previously voiced Shishio in the New Tokyo arc OVA, also voiced Shishio here. The new casting includes Creator/MicahSolusod as Kenshin, Creator/AlexisTipton as Kaoru, Creator/EricVale as Sanosuke, Creator/AlisonViktorin as Yahiko, Creator/TrinaNishimura as Megumi, Alex Organ as Aoshi, Creator/RobertMcCollum as Saitō, Creator/BrittneyKarbowski as Misao, Creator/JustinBriner as Sojiro and Creator/ChristopherSabat as Hikō.
138** PlayedWith in the English dub ''The Final''. While Creator/BangZoomEntertainment handled the dub like with the original anime, the cast was comprised of the live-action films' voice cast, with the exceptions of Yahiko being voiced by Creator/CaseyMongillo instead of Creator/AlisonViktorin[[note]]The latter retired over some politically controversial comments on Twitter[[/note]] and Aoshi being voiced by Alan Lee instead of Alex Organ[[note]]Organ retired from voice over to focus on theater work[[/note]].
139** The Latin American Spanish dub, unlike the animated adaptations, which were dubbed in Colombia (TV series) and Mexico (animated movie), the live-action films were dubbed in Argentina instead. It should be noted that, despite this, most of the terminology used in the Colombian dub is retained in the Argentinian one, including the translation of "hitokiri" as "destajador", despite Argentina, just like Mexico, use "desta'''z'''ador" instead. On the other hand, the name of the special techniques are translated literally, rather than being kept in Japanese like in the Colombian and Mexican dubs.
140* ProductionPosse: Many of the principal actors for the live-action film are NHK Taiga Drama alumni, in particular the Keishi Otomo-directed and ran 2010 ''Ryomaden'' (it helps that ''Kenshin'' is set in the same time period as ''Ryomaden''). Notable highlights are Takeru Sato (Kenshin), Munetaka Aoki (Sanosuke), Yu Aoi (Megumi), and Teruyuki Kagawa (Kanryuu).
141** Yosuke Eguchi (Saito) and Tatsuya Fujiwara (Shishio), in turn, also served time in the 2004 NHK Taiga drama ''Shinsengumi!''. [[IronyAsSheIsCast Hilariously]], in that series, Eguchi was playing Sakamoto Ryoma (the rebel) while Fujiwara was playing Okita Soji (the Shinsengumi captain).
142** On the other hand, Emi Takei (Kaoru) and Ryonosuke Kamiki (Sojiro) came fresh out of the 2012 drama ''Taira no Kiyomori''.
143** Enticingly, the Kyoto arc sequels cut the middleman and cast Masaharu Fukuyama (the titular Sakamoto Ryoma in ''Ryomaden'') himself as Hiko Seijuro (doubles as ActorAllusion), in addition to Tao Tsuchiya (Misao), Yusuke Iseya (Aoshi), and Min Tanaka (Okina).
144** A number of supporting actors cast in ''The Legend Ends'', ''The Final'' and ''The Beginning'' are themselves Taiga veterans from older shows, such as Yukiyoshi Ozawa (Ito Hirobumi), Issey Takahashi (Katsura Kogoro), Shingo Tsurumi (Chief Uramura), Kazuki Kitamura (Tatsumi), Takahiro Fujimoto (Kondo Isami) and Mansaku Ikeuchi (Katagai).
145* ReleaseDateChange: The ''Saishusho'' duology of films (''Rurouni Kenshin Saishusho the Beginning'' and ''Rurouni Kenshin Saishusho the Final'') were scheduled for August 7th, 2020 and July 3rd, 2020, respectively. They were pushed back to April 23th and June 4th, 2021 in the wake of [[UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic a certain viral pandemic]].
146* RoleReprise: Both European Spanish, German and Brazilian Portuguese dubs have the anime [=VAs=] reprising their roles in the live-action movies. Notoriously, the Brazilian releases of the first movie [[DuelingDubs has two other alternate dubs]] with different casts.
147* UnderageCasting: Kenshin is 28 years old at the start of the manga, substantially older than Kaoru and the other main characters, but his actor Takeru Satoh was only 22 at the time of the first film's release. (Then again, in the manga Kenshin looks the same age as everybody.)
148* {{Woolseyism}}: When Kenshin first confronts Shishio, he simply uses the latter's surname without adding the honorific suffix "-kun", which is meant to be used when speaking to someone of a lower social rank. Shishio calls him out on this, demanding that he use the honorific so as to not insult him. Due to the English language not having an equivalent phrase by which to address those of a lower status, the subtitles have Kenshin referring to Shishio by his surname, to which the latter responds: "At least say 'Mr.', even if you had the job first."
149* WordOfSaintPaul: In a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5B9zpVPSvA cast interview]] , Mackenyu explains that Enishi deliberately wore white in the final fight against Kenshin as a callback to Tomoe wearing white when she was killed by Kenshin, stating that Enishi had lived his life for that final fight, so he wanted to destroy everything including that memory, and conclude his life's purpose.
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