Samurai Jack
Samurai Jack is an American animated science fantasy action-adventure television series created by Genndy Tartakovsky for Cartoon Network.[1] The show centers on Jack, a skilled samurai warrior from feudal Japan who is transported to a dystopian future by the malevolent shape-shifting demon Aku, and chronicles his perpetual quest to find a way back in time to vanquish Aku and avert the apocalypse.[2] Originally broadcast on Cartoon Network from August 10, 2001, to September 25, 2004, the series ran for four seasons totaling 52 episodes.[1] A fifth and final season of 10 episodes aired on Adult Swim starting March 11, 2017, providing closure to Jack's odyssey.[3] Produced by Cartoon Network Studios, the series features voice acting by Phil LaMarr as Jack and Mako (seasons 1–4) and Greg Baldwin (season 5) as Aku. Samurai Jack is celebrated for its innovative animation style, characterized by minimalist character designs without outlines, vibrant and abstract backgrounds, and fluid, balletic action choreography that emphasizes visual storytelling over dialogue.[4] The series blends influences from Japanese ukiyo-e prints, classic samurai cinema, and cyberpunk aesthetics, earning widespread critical acclaim for its artistry and narrative depth.[5] It garnered multiple Primetime Emmy Awards, including four in 2017 for Outstanding Individual Achievement in Animation, as well as Annie Awards for its production excellence.[6]Premise and Setting
Plot Summary
In the series, a young samurai prince, later known as Jack, is trained by his father to wield a magical katana capable of destroying the shape-shifting demon Aku, who has ravaged ancient Japan.[7] After failing to defeat Aku in his own time, Jack is hurled thousands of years into a dystopian future where Aku rules tyrannically, transforming the world into a wasteland of oppression and technology fused with evil.[8] Jack's central quest is to find a means to return to the past and eradicate Aku before the demon can conquer his homeland, preventing the future's devastation.[7] Throughout the original four seasons, Jack wanders this hostile landscape in episodic adventures, battling Aku's robotic minions and monstrous enforcers while aiding the downtrodden inhabitants he encounters.[8] His journeys often involve pursuing elusive time-travel opportunities, such as fragments of an ancient crystal or interventions from divine beings, testing his skills and resolve against diverse threats.[7] These standalone tales emphasize Jack's role as a wandering hero, freeing slaves, protecting the innocent, and dismantling Aku's forces without advancing his temporal goal significantly.[8] The narrative explores themes of honor, as Jack upholds the samurai code inherited from his lineage; perseverance, evident in his unyielding commitment despite endless setbacks; and isolation, portrayed through his solitary existence in an alien era.[9] It also delves into the cyclical struggle between good and evil, with Jack's fight against Aku symbolizing an eternal battle that shapes destinies across time.[9] In the fifth and final season, set 50 years later, an aged and battle-weary Jack faces intensified mental and physical trials after losing his sword, confronting the Daughters of Aku—seven assassins raised in a cult devoted to his destruction.[8] Through alliances and redemption arcs, Jack regains his weapon and returns to the past for a climactic confrontation with Aku, ultimately defeating the demon with unexpected aid and restoring balance to history.[7] This resolution closes the overarching arc, erasing the dystopian future and affirming the triumph of perseverance over cyclical tyranny.[9]World and Time Period
The world of Samurai Jack is defined by its temporal displacement, spanning ancient feudal Japan, a dystopian cyberpunk future dominated by the demon Aku, and intermittent mythological realms accessed through time portals, ancient artifacts, or Aku's dark magic.[8] The protagonist, a samurai warrior from Japan's past, is hurled into this future by Aku's time portal during a climactic battle, creating a narrative framework where the past's purity clashes with the future's decay.[1] This time travel mechanism not only drives the central conflict but also allows exploration of alternate timelines and ethereal dimensions, such as spirit worlds or divine interventions, emphasizing the fragility of time and history.[1] The setting's aesthetics feature a minimalist, stylized animation that prioritizes bold lines, vast expansive landscapes, and dynamic compositions to convey epic scale without reliance on dialogue. Vast ruined cities, mechanical horrors, and organic demon forms populate the environments, blending seamless transitions between serene natural vistas and chaotic urban wastelands. Creator Genndy Tartakovsky drew influences from Japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints for their graphic simplicity and compositional elegance, Western comic book paneling for action framing, and sci-fi tropes for futuristic elements like towering robots and neon-lit dystopias.[10] This visual language creates a timeless quality, with flat colors and angular designs that evoke both historical scrolls and modern graphic novels.[4][11] Aku's tyrannical rule transforms the future Earth into a desolate wasteland of robotic armies patrolling enslaved human populations, bizarre hybrid creatures roaming polluted wilds, and fortified citadels symbolizing oppression. This cyberpunk hellscape stands in stark contrast to the samurai's feudal warrior ethos of honor and simplicity, highlighting themes of corruption versus purity through environmental decay and technological overreach.[8] Aku's influence extends to cultural suppression, where remnants of ancient traditions persist underground amid the mechanized horror.[1] Mythological elements infuse the universe with gods, spirits, and primordial forces, grounding the sci-fi dystopia in ancient lore. Aku originates from a formless black mass of pure hate—a cosmic evil that emerged in the universe's dawn—sealed by the deities Odin, Ra, and Vishnu in a pit of tar beneath the Earth until a solar eclipse allows its escape and incarnation as the shapeshifting demon.[12] Spirits and divine artifacts, such as sacred jewels or enchanted swords forged in heavenly fires, occasionally aid or challenge the samurai, weaving a tapestry of supernatural beings that underscore the eternal struggle between good and evil.[12]Characters
Main Characters
Jack is the titular protagonist, a stoic ronin samurai from feudal Japan who was trained from a young age in various ancient martial arts and combat disciplines by multiple masters to prepare him for battle against evil.[8] He wields a magical katana forged by gods, capable of slicing through virtually anything and impervious to Aku's dark magic, which serves as his primary weapon in his quest.[1] Voiced by Phil LaMarr throughout the series, Jack's portrayal emphasizes a calm, resolute demeanor with limited verbal expression, relying heavily on body language and actions to convey emotion and determination. In the original seasons, he embodies the archetype of a lone wanderer, steadfast in his mission to defeat Aku and restore balance.[13] However, in Season 5, after fifty years in the dystopian future, Jack evolves into a more burdened hero, grappling with profound doubt, loss of purpose, and the psychological toll of endless conflict, marking a deeper exploration of his internal struggles.[13] Aku, Jack's arch-nemesis, is a shape-shifting demon lord with god-like powers who conquered Earth in ancient times, transforming it into a nightmarish future under his tyrannical rule.[8] Known for his bombastic personality, dark humor, and ability to manipulate reality—such as creating minions, altering landscapes, and regenerating from injuries—Aku represents ultimate evil, yet his overconfidence often leads to comedic and dramatic flaws.[14] Originally voiced by Mako Iwamatsu in Seasons 1 through 4, the role transitioned to Greg Baldwin for the revival in Season 5 following Mako's death in 2006, with Baldwin emulating Mako's distinctive, theatrical delivery to maintain continuity. In the series finale, Aku's vulnerability is revealed through his psychological weariness after decades of futile pursuits, exposing a more introspective and weakened state beneath his menacing facade.[14] Ashi, introduced in Season 5, is one of seven septuplet daughters raised by the High Priestess in an all-female cult devoted to Aku, trained rigorously from birth as an assassin to eliminate Jack.[8] Voiced by Tara Strong, Ashi initially embodies blind fanaticism and lethal skill, but her encounters with Jack lead to a profound redemption arc, where she questions her indoctrination, defects to ally with him, and ultimately sacrifices herself in the fight against Aku.[15] Her development highlights themes of free will and transformation, evolving from antagonist to romantic interest and key partner in Jack's journey, providing emotional depth to the narrative.[8] The series' voice acting underscores its minimalist style, with characters like Jack featuring sparse dialogue to prioritize visual storytelling and non-verbal expressiveness, allowing performers to convey complex emotions through subtle inflections and timing.[13] Casting choices, such as LaMarr's thoughtful approach to Jack's accent—informed by observations of Japanese speakers for authenticity—reflect an emphasis on respectful representation in animation.[13] Similarly, Baldwin's inheritance of Aku's role focused on honoring the original's ethnic and stylistic nuances, ensuring the demon's larger-than-life presence remained intact.[14]Recurring and Supporting Characters
The Scotsman is a recurring ally to Jack, depicted as a loud, aggressive warrior from Scotland who wields an enchanted claymore sword and provides comic relief through his boisterous personality and banter.[16] Voiced by John DiMaggio, he first encounters Jack on a rope bridge in a future dominated by Aku and becomes a steadfast friend, later enhanced with a cybernetic body after Aku's attacks leave him immobilized.[17] His role emphasizes themes of loyalty and humor amid Jack's solitary quest, appearing in multiple episodes to assist in battles against Aku's forces.[18] Demongo, known as the Soul Collector, serves as one of Aku's most powerful lieutenants and a bounty hunter who captures the essences of defeated warriors to summon them as spectral minions.[19] Voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson, Demongo confronts Jack in a direct assault, using his collection of souls to overwhelm the samurai with an army of ghostly fighters drawn from Aku's historical enemies.[20] This episode highlights Demongo's role as a persistent threat, showcasing Aku's strategy of deploying elite minions to counter Jack's prowess.[21] Among Aku's various lieutenants and drones, the Beetle Drones function as his primary robotic infantry, designed as beetle-like machines with scythe arms and relentless aggression to swarm and hunt Jack across episodes.[22] Created by Aku's scientists, these drones represent the demon's mechanical enforcement in the dystopian future, often appearing in hordes during Jack's early encounters to establish the scale of Aku's dominion.[22] Mythical beings such as Odin, Ra, and Rama appear as divine mentors who forged Jack's magical katana from the purity of his father's spirit to combat Aku's primordial evil.[12] Representing Norse, Egyptian, and Hindu pantheons respectively, these gods intervene sporadically, providing guidance or aid in pivotal moments, such as aiding Jack against ancient threats tied to their mythologies.[12] Their involvement underscores the epic, mythological scope of Jack's journey beyond mortal conflicts.[23] The Minions of Set emerge as early recurring foes, three immortal, dog-like demons with jackal features, released by Aku from an ancient Egyptian prison to pursue and destroy Jack.[24] These chaotic entities, servants of the Egyptian god of disorder, possess superhuman strength and regeneration, forcing Jack to rely on cunning and divine intervention in pyramid battles.[25] Their appearance integrates mythological horror into Aku's arsenal of hunters.[24] Notable voice talent for supporting roles includes guest stars like Jeff Glen Bennett, who provided voices for various characters such as the Emperor, Gargoyle, and other incidental figures across episodes.[17] These performances contribute to the series' rich auditory landscape, blending humor, menace, and gravitas in secondary arcs.[17]Production
Development and Original Series
Genndy Tartakovsky, the creator of Samurai Jack, drew from his prior success with Dexter's Laboratory at Cartoon Network, where he served as creator, director, and producer from 1996 to 2003.[26] Seeking to develop a more mature and action-focused series, Tartakovsky pitched Samurai Jack to Cartoon Network executives as a stylized adaptation of the 1970s live-action series Kung Fu, emphasizing visual narrative over dialogue-heavy storytelling.[11] The concept was greenlit after a test animation produced in South Korea impressed network leaders Mike Lazzo and Linda Simensky.[26] Tartakovsky's inspirations for the series blended Eastern and Western cinematic traditions, including Akira Kurosawa's samurai films for their epic scope and moral themes, Hayao Miyazaki's anime for fluid character animation and fantastical elements, and live-action works like Lawrence of Arabia and spaghetti Westerns for dramatic pacing and lone-hero archetypes.[26][11] Additional influences encompassed Frank Miller's graphic novel Ronin and the manga Lone Wolf and Cub, which informed the protagonist's stoic journey and futuristic dystopian setting.[11] This emphasis on visual storytelling allowed episodes to convey complex emotions and action through minimal narration, distinguishing the series from typical children's animation.[26] Production employed limited animation techniques to prioritize stylized, rhythmic action sequences over fluid realism, featuring clipped movements, long holds, and looping motions reminiscent of mid-20th-century UPA cartoons.[26] Character designs used flat, paper-cut silhouettes without black outlines, paired with abstract, richly painted backgrounds that served as integral "characters" in the narrative.[11][26] The international team included Rough Draft Studios in South Korea, which handled layout, final background painting, and key animation under director Jim Jeong, enabling efficient production despite occasional communication challenges.[26] Episodes ran approximately 22-24 minutes, allowing space for extended silent sequences and cinematic devices like split-screens and widescreen framing to heighten dramatic tension.[1][26] The original series premiered on Cartoon Network on August 10, 2001, with a compilation movie of the first three episodes.[1] It produced 52 episodes across four seasons of 13 episodes each, concluding with a marathon of the final four installments on September 25, 2004.[27][28] Production halted without a series finale due to Tartakovsky's commitment to the Star Wars: Clone Wars micro-series, which George Lucas assigned to him, shifting his focus away from Samurai Jack.[29]Series Conclusion and Hiatus
The original Samurai Jack series, which aired from 2001 to 2004, built toward a climactic time-travel confrontation between the protagonist Jack and the demon Aku, but it concluded abruptly after four seasons without resolution. Season 4 ended on a cliffhanger, with Jack poised to retrieve mystical gems that could enable his return to the past, only to be interrupted by Aku's forces, leaving his quest unresolved. The series concluded abruptly due to Tartakovsky's burnout after intensive production, his commitment to Star Wars: The Clone Wars, and Cartoon Network's uncertainty amid programming shifts. No proper series finale was produced at the time, leaving fans without closure for over a decade.[30][29] During the 13-year hiatus from 2004 to 2017, Samurai Jack developed a strong cult following through reruns on Cartoon Network and Adult Swim, as well as home video releases on DVD that introduced the series to new audiences. Tartakovsky pursued other ventures, including co-creating the animated series Sym-Bionic Titan (2010–2011) for Cartoon Network and directing the Hotel Transylvania feature films (2012 and 2015), which showcased his evolving animation style emphasizing dynamic action and minimal dialogue. Fan interest persisted, evidenced by online petitions in the mid-2010s urging a continuation to resolve Jack's story, reflecting the series' enduring appeal among animation enthusiasts.[31][30][32] Retrospectively, the series gained widespread acclaim for its innovative visual storytelling and minimalist narrative, influencing animation aesthetics during the hiatus by inspiring creators to experiment with bold, painterly styles and episodic adventures in works like later Adult Swim productions. Tartakovsky noted surprise at this growing appreciation, particularly among artists who discovered the show through reruns and DVDs, solidifying its status as a benchmark for mature, artistic animation.[30][33]Cancelled Film Project
In 2001, New Line Cinema announced plans to adapt the Cartoon Network series Samurai Jack into a live-action feature film, with series creator Genndy Tartakovsky writing the script and director Brett Ratner attached to helm the project.[34][35] The film was planned as a live-action feature film focusing on Jack's quest to return to his own time and confront the demon Aku.[34] By 2007, following the initial project's stall, animation producer Fred Seibert's newly formed Frederator Films revived development on an animated Samurai Jack movie intended to serve as the definitive conclusion to the series.[36] The production was budgeted at $20 million and planned to incorporate traditional 2D animation with stereoscopic 3D effects, with Tartakovsky directing and scripting to resolve the unresolved cliffhanger from the original series' end.[37] In 2009, J.J. Abrams' Bad Robot Productions joined as a co-producer, further advancing the project through Sony Pictures, which had expressed interest in distribution.[37] The film faced multiple setbacks across four studios, including New Line, Frederator, Sony, and Bad Robot, ultimately leading to its cancellation in the early 2010s.[38] Key reasons included creative differences, as studio executives pushed for additions like increased dialogue, comedic sidekicks, and a lighter tone to broaden commercial appeal, which conflicted with Tartakovsky's vision of maintaining the series' minimalist, atmospheric style.[38] Additionally, Tartakovsky's commitments to other projects, such as Star Wars: The Clone Wars and the Hotel Transylvania franchise, diluted momentum and urgency.[38] Although never realized, the prolonged development heightened fan anticipation for a theatrical resolution and fueled persistent rumors into the 2010s, with unused concepts from the script later influencing the narrative of the series' 2017 revival season.[38]Revival and Final Season
In December 2015, Adult Swim announced a revival of Samurai Jack, greenlighting a fifth season consisting of 10 episodes to continue the story after the original series' conclusion in 2004.[39] Creator Genndy Tartakovsky returned as showrunner, executive producer, and director, emphasizing a darker tone with increased violence and mature themes to suit the Adult Swim audience, while resolving the long-standing narrative arc.[40][29] Production took place primarily at Cartoon Network Studios in Los Angeles, building on the 13-year hiatus that had left fans awaiting closure to Jack's quest against Aku.[41] The revival introduced several production shifts to align with its mature direction and modern workflow. It moved to Adult Swim's late-night Toonami block, airing at 11:30 p.m. ET/PT, allowing for content unsuitable for the original Cartoon Network daytime slot.[42] Animation retained Tartakovsky's signature limited style—characterized by stylized poses, dynamic cuts, and minimal in-betweens—but incorporated enhanced digital effects for backgrounds and compositing, with many elements painted digitally rather than traditionally as in prior seasons.[43] These changes enabled more fluid action sequences and atmospheric depth, supporting the season's intensified emotional and violent stakes without altering the core minimalist aesthetic.[44] The season premiered on March 11, 2017, with the first four episodes airing as a block, followed by weekly installments until the finale on May 20, 2017.[45] This 10-week run provided a focused conclusion, resolving the 13-year cliffhanger by depicting Jack's ultimate victory over Aku through a time-travel confrontation, though the ending carried a bittersweet tone, reflecting themes of loss, redemption, and the cost of endless struggle.[46][47] As of 2025, no additional seasons of Samurai Jack have been announced, with Tartakovsky confirming in interviews that the fifth season served as the definitive endpoint to Jack's story.[29] However, he has occasionally teased openness to future ideas, such as spin-offs or explorations of the universe, amid his work on other projects like Primal and Heist Safari, though none have materialized for the series.[48][49]Episodes and Broadcast
Season Structure
The original four seasons of Samurai Jack each comprised 13 episodes, totaling 52 episodes that aired weekly on Cartoon Network from August 10, 2001, to September 25, 2004. These seasons followed an episodic structure, with self-contained adventures that loosely advanced the series' myth arc of Jack's ongoing quest against Aku while maintaining consistent animation styles characterized by minimalist linework and dynamic action sequences. Runtimes typically varied slightly around 22 minutes per episode, allowing for focused storytelling without rigid serialization.[27][1] The fifth and final season shifted to a fully serialized format, consisting of 10 episodes that formed a continuous, darker narrative arc concluding the series' storyline. Aired on Adult Swim's Toonami block from March 11 to May 20, 2017, this season emphasized mature themes and escalating tension across its runtime, preserving the core animation aesthetic but with enhanced emotional depth.[50][51] The series premiered in the United States on Cartoon Network, with subsequent international broadcasts on networks such as Jetix in Europe during the early 2000s. As of November 2025, all seasons are available for streaming on Max (formerly HBO Max).[52]Season 1 (2001)
Season 1 introduces the core premise of Jack's quest against Aku, airing 13 episodes on Cartoon Network starting August 10, 2001.[53]| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Beginning | August 10, 2001 | Aku, the shape-shifting master of evil, devastates a young boy's land, forcing him to travel around the world to train as a warrior before forging a magical sword to defeat the demon, only to be hurled into a dystopian future.[54] |
| 2 | The Samurai Called Jack | August 10, 2001 | In the future ruled by Aku, the exiled samurai adopts the name Jack and vows to find a way back in time to undo the evil one's conquest.[54] |
| 3 | The First Fight | August 10, 2001 | Jack defends a group of enslaved archaeologist dogs from Aku's mechanical destroyer beetles by ingeniously using his surroundings to set traps and fight back.[54] |
| 4 | Jack, the Woolies, and the Chritchellites | August 13, 2001 | Jack encounters the oppressed Woolies, furry creatures enslaved by the deceptive Chritchellites, and helps liberate them from their tyrannical rule.[54] |
| 5 | Jack in Space | August 27, 2001 | Jack aids a community of scientists in constructing a rocket ship to bypass Aku's orbital blockade and seek a portal back to the past.[54] |
| 6 | Jack and the Warrior Woman | November 19, 2001 | Jack joins forces with a fierce warrior woman in a desert quest for a jewel that could enable time travel, facing treacherous sands and Aku's minions along the way.[54] |
| 7 | Jack and the Three Blind Archers | August 20, 2001 | Seeking a fabled well that grants wishes on a remote island, Jack teams up with three blind archers whose extraordinary senses prove vital in combat against demonic foes.[54] |
| 8 | Jack vs. Mad Jack | October 15, 2001 | Aku creates an evil doppelganger of Jack using a dark mirror to psychologically torment and battle the samurai amid a massive bounty on his head.[54] |
| 9 | Jack Under the Sea | September 3, 2001 | Jack dives into the submerged ruins of an ancient city in search of a legendary time portal, only to confront betrayal and underwater guardians loyal to Aku.[54] |
| 10 | Jack and the Lava Monster | November 5, 2001 | After navigating volcanic perils, Jack battles a massive lava monster unleashed by Aku to prevent him from reaching a potential time device.[54] |
| 11 | Jack and the Scotsman | October 29, 2001 | Chained together after a confrontation, Jack and the bombastic Scotsman must cooperate to escape bounty hunters pursuing them across a precarious rope bridge.[54] |
| 12 | Jack and the Gangsters | November 26, 2001 | Posing as a criminal, Jack infiltrates a gangster syndicate to steal a magical jewel from Aku, guarded by elemental warriors representing earth, wind, and fire.[54] |
| 13 | Aku's Fairy Tales | December 3, 2001 | To undermine Jack's growing legend, Aku spreads corrupted fairy tales among children, portraying the samurai as a villain while promoting his own rule.[54] |
Season 2 (2002)
Season 2, consisting of 13 episodes, expands on Jack's encounters with diverse foes and allies, premiering March 1, 2002.[53]| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 | Jack Learns to Jump Good | March 1, 2002 | In exchange for teaching a primitive tribe self-defense against raiders, Jack learns advanced jumping techniques from their agile leader to enhance his mobility.[54] |
| 15 | Jack Tales | March 8, 2002 | Three interconnected tales depict Jack solving a serpent's riddle, battling metal-devouring robots, and rescuing a fairy from a monstrous captor.[54] |
| 16 | Jack and the Smackback | March 15, 2002 | Captured and forced into gladiatorial combat in the Dome of Doom, Jack defeats a series of champions to liberate enslaved fighters and escape.[54] |
| 17 | Jack and the Scotsman (2) | March 22, 2002 | The Scotsman recruits Jack to rescue his kidnapped wife from Aku's forces, leading to explosive battles across rugged terrain.[54] |
| 18 | Jack and the Ultra-robots | March 29, 2002 | Jack pursues a squad of indestructible ultra-robots ravaging villages, uncovering their connection to Aku and a deceptive troll engineer.[54] |
| 19 | Jack Remembers the Past | April 5, 2002 | Amid the ruins of his ancestral home, Jack experiences vivid flashbacks of his youth and training, reflecting on the path that led to his exile.[54] |
| 20 | Jack and the Monks | April 12, 2002 | Seeking inner peace after repeated failures, Jack joins meditative monks on a perilous mountain ascent to confront his doubts and Aku's illusions.[54] |
| 21 | Jack and the Farting Dragon | September 6, 2002 | Jack cures a dragon's digestive ailment causing toxic fumes that plague a village, revealing the beast's gentle nature beneath its fearsome exterior.[54] |
| 22 | Jack and the Hunters | September 13, 2002 | Captured by elite alien bounty hunters for Aku, Jack earns their respect through a grueling chase, leading to an unexpected alliance.[54] |
| 23 | Jack Versus Demongo, the Soul Collector | September 20, 2002 | Aku's servant Demongo, who wields weapons infused with stolen warrior souls, ambushes Jack in a bid to claim his spirit for his master.[54] |
| 24 | Jack Is Naked | September 27, 2002 | Stripped of his gi by thieving raiders, Jack navigates a hostile city while evading an irate mob and pursuing his stolen belongings.[54] |
| 25 | Jack and the Spartans | October 4, 2002 | Jack assists legendary Spartan warriors in their eternal stand against an endless horde of Aku's mechanical invaders.[54] |
| 26 | Jack's Sandals | October 11, 2002 | After biker robots destroy his trusted sandals, Jack quests for replacements at a specialized outpost, fending off automated threats.[54] |
Season 3 (2002–2003)
The 13 episodes of Season 3 delve into mythological backstories and bizarre challenges, beginning October 18, 2002.[53]| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 27 | Chicken Jack | October 18, 2002 | A mischievous wizard transforms Jack into a chicken, forcing him to compete in an underground creature combat arena to break the curse.[54] |
| 28 | Jack and the Rave | November 1, 2002 | Jack disrupts Aku's hypnotic rave party, freeing entranced youths from the spell of a demonic DJ broadcasting mind-control music.[54] |
| 29 | The Good, the Bad and the Beautiful | November 8, 2002 | Aboard a speeding train, Jack evades a ruthless bounty hunter and his seductive ex-wife, who attempt to claim the reward on his head.[54] |
| 30 | Jack and the Zombies | November 15, 2002 | Lured into a fog-shrouded cemetery by Aku, Jack battles an undead horde resurrected by the demon to overwhelm and destroy him.[54] |
| 31 | Jack in Egypt | November 22, 2002 | In the pyramids, Jack confronts minions awakened by Aku from ancient Egyptian lore, using forgotten knowledge to survive the traps and beasts.[54] |
| 32 | Jack and the Travelling Creatures | April 26, 2003 | Jack hitches a ride across a vast, treacherous lake with nomadic creatures, only to face monstrous threats emerging from the depths.[54] |
| 33 | Jack and the Creature | May 3, 2003 | A seemingly clumsy desert creature repeatedly saves Jack during his pursuit of a sacred crystal, revealing its true prowess in a climactic showdown.[54] |
| 34 | Jack and Swamp Monster | May 10, 2003 | Guided by a reclusive hermit through a perilous swamp, Jack learns of scattered pieces of Chronos' time-manipulating armor while battling a lurking behemoth.[54] |
| 35 | Jack and the Haunted House | May 17, 2003 | Drawn by eerie visions, Jack enters a ghostly mansion in the bayou, exorcising vengeful spirits tied to Aku's corruption of the land.[54] |
| 36 | Jack, the Monks, and the Ancient Master's Son | May 31, 2003 | Jack spars with Shaolin monks guarding a hidden time portal, ultimately aiding them against invaders threatening their sacred monastery.[54] |
| 37 | The Birth of Evil (1) | August 16, 2003 | In a mythological flashback, primordial gods clash with a primordial mass of evil that erupts from the Earth, forging the demon known as Aku.[54] |
| 38 | The Birth of Evil (2) | August 16, 2003 | The gods empower the young emperor with divine gifts, including a holy sword, to combat the rampaging Aku and protect humanity from his darkness.[54] |
| 39 | Jack and the Labyrinth | August 26, 2003 | Jack traverses a Minotaur-haunted labyrinth to claim a time-restoring diamond, outwitting a cunning thief and deadly mechanical traps along the way.[54] |
Season 4 (2003–2004)
Season 4's 13 episodes feature epic duels and flashbacks, airing from June 14, 2003, to September 25, 2004.[53]| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | Samurai Versus Ninja | June 14, 2003 | An elite ninja assassin dispatched by Aku stalks Jack through shadows, but the samurai counters with light-based tactics during a village defense against crab-like monsters.[55] |
| 41 | Robo-Samurai Versus Mondo Bot | June 21, 2003 | Piloting a colossal robo-samurai, Jack clashes with Aku's towering Mondo Bot in a city-destroying melee of metal and firepower.[55] |
| 42 | Samurai Versus Samurai | June 28, 2003 | Jack duels a rival samurai from his past, both grappling with similar exiles and quests in a test of honor and skill without weapons.[55] |
| 43 | The Aku Infection | August 23, 2003 | Infected by a fragment of Aku's essence during combat, Jack battles internal corruption while seeking aid from the wise but treacherous Master Ning.[56] |
| 44 | The Princess and the Bounty Hunters | August 23, 2003 | Bounty hunters ally with a rogue princess to ambush Jack in icy northern wastes, forcing uneasy teamwork to survive Aku's pursuing forces.[56] |
| 45 | Scotsman Saves Jack (1) | November 5, 2003 | Amnesiac and despondent, Jack is discovered by the Scotsman, who embarks on a quest to restore his friend's memories and will to fight.[56] |
| 46 | Scotsman Saves Jack (2) | November 12, 2003 | The Scotsman drags a reluctant Jack through perilous lands to confront illusions and foes, reigniting the samurai's purpose against Aku.[55] |
| 47 | Jack and the Flying Prince and Princess | November 19, 2003 | Jack pursues a royal siblings' crashed ship to Aku's domain, aiding the winged prince and princess in their rebellion against the tyrant.[56] |
| 48 | Jack Versus Aku | November 24, 2003 | In a rare direct confrontation, Aku challenges Jack to a no-holds-barred duel, stripping the samurai of his sword while forgoing his own powers.[56] |
| 49 | The Four Seasons of Death | September 25, 2004 | A sadistic executioner forces Jack through lethal trials themed around the seasons—winter freeze, spring pitfalls, summer blaze, and autumn blades—in a bid to end his life.[55] |
| 50 | Tale of X9 | September 25, 2004 | A decommissioned Aku robot, burdened by guilt from past hunts, reactivates to track Jack but ultimately aids him against its creator's will.[56] |
| 51 | Young Jack in Africa | September 25, 2004 | Flashback to Jack's childhood training under African tribal masters, evading Aku's early assassins while honing survival and combat skills.[56] |
| 52 | Jack and the Baby | September 25, 2004 | Jack safeguards a seemingly ordinary infant from Aku's minions, discovering the child's hidden powers as a potential threat to the demon's empire.[55] |
Season 5 (2017)
The final season, with 10 episodes, concludes Jack's saga after a long hiatus, airing on Adult Swim starting March 11, 2017.[53]| No. | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 53 | Episode XCII | March 11, 2017 | Decades after his arrival in the future, a weary and battle-hardened Jack resumes his hunt for Aku, haunted by lost time and fading hope.[57] |
| 54 | Episode XCIII | March 18, 2017 | Disarmed and cornered, Jack endures a brutal assault from Aku's seven deadly daughters, questioning if this marks the end of his quest.[57] |
| 55 | Episode XCIV | March 25, 2017 | Wounded from relentless attacks by the Daughters of Aku, Jack presses on through visions and combat to alter his doomed path.[57] |
| 56 | Episode XCV | April 8, 2017 | Swallowed by a colossal beast, Jack allies with one of Aku's assassins to carve their way out from within its labyrinthine guts.[57] |
| 57 | Episode XCVI | April 15, 2017 | Jack defends a remote village from encroaching darkness and the Daughters, forging bonds that remind him of his original vow.[57] |
| 58 | Episode XCVII | April 22, 2017 | After Jack departs with a enigmatic guide, Ashi, one of the daughters, begins a personal journey to track him and unravel her loyalties.[57] |
| 59 | Episode XCVIII | April 29, 2017 | While Jack scours desolate lands for his lost sword, Ashi confronts remnants of her assassin upbringing in fierce skirmishes.[57] |
| 60 | Episode XCIX | May 6, 2017 | Jack and Ashi evade a voracious space-faring predator across alien terrains, testing their fragile partnership amid cosmic perils.[57] |
| 61 | Episode C | May 13, 2017 | In a climactic clash, Jack battles Aku directly, but the demon uncovers Ashi's corrupted origins, twisting her against her will.[57] |
| 62 | Episode CI | May 20, 2017 | With the universe hanging in balance, Jack launches a final assault on Aku, confronting ultimate sacrifices to restore time itself.[57] |