Jodie Starling (ジョディスターリング ,Jodi Sutāringu?), referred to in earlier episodes as Jodie Saintemillion (ジョディサンテミリオン ,Jodi Santemirion?), is an FBI agent in the manga and anime franchise Detective Conan.
She seems to be skilled at shooting as she was able to shoot faster than Vermouth at episode 345, also during Kir interrogating and capturing Rikumichi. She was the one who use a gun for stoping them.
Detective Conan Episode 345 Eng
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Ran, feeling she met the mysterious man before, attempts to remember why. Jodie interrupts the daydreaming Ran in class and asks her the meaning of X to which she is unable to answer correctly. On the way home, they meet Jodie who takes them to the cafe in a department store to warn them about a serial groper. Conan notices a business man named Norihisa Kisugi making a suspicious phone call to a private detective agency director named Katsunori Chuujou. Chuujou demands Kisugi to pay four times the promised amount or he will not hand over the investigation documents concerning an unknown individual. Kisugi agrees and Chuujou enters the department store only to be killed by the unknown culprit.
Jodie appears around the same time as Vermouth as Ran's new English teacher at Teitan High under the name of "Jodie Saintemillion". She comes off as somewhat strange, and refers to Conan as "Cool Guy", which caused fans to believe that she knew his secret. (In fact, she now knows he's an incredible detective, but it is unclear if she suspects his true identity). She is noted for often using the phrase of her enemy, Vermouth ('A secret makes a woman woman'). In Episode 226-227, Jodie informs someone over the phone that she has found their target, that said target has 'changed their appearance and is currently at school', and refers to them as a "Rotten Apple". The vague way her statement is made casts suspicion on whether or not her target is Conan, although much later it becomes clear that her description best applies to Vermouth.
The first indications of Jodie's FBI training are shown during the confrontation with the bus hijackers. She stealthily turns on the safety to one of the hijacker's guns, while knocking him down thus he cannot shoot it when he attempts to fire at her. She appears later in Episodes 271-272 and gives Conan information that allows him to solve the case. In Episodes 277-278, she is investigated by Conan and Heiji, both believing her to be Vermouth in disguise, as she pretends to be terrible at japanese despite evidence in her speaking pattern that she's actually perfectly fluent, and even helps them solve a case in the same episode.
Impressed by his intelligence, deductionary abilities and knowledge, Jodie considers Conan her "favorite detective"or"cool kid". She always takes him seriously, and lets him help her in figuring out plans. Also, it is shown that Jodie has placed great trust on the boy detective. It is because when Conan asks a favor, or is asked by him to do a certain action, even though it doesn't make much sense, Jodie complies without question.
Jodie has some interest in Heiji. In the English Teacher vs. Great Western Detective case, both Heiji and Jodie learn a lot about each other and their secrets. She correctly deduces that Heiji is very proficient in English, and in turn, Heiji deduces that she is also very good in Japanese. She relates Shinichi with Heiji; the two share a lot in common, which she found very interesting. Though Conan is her favorite detective, she respects Heiji's capabilities and helps Heiji and Conan whenever circumstances bring them together on a case.
In episode 341 upon arriving at Beika Airport, Vermouth calls him with orders to shoot a particular person once they are in his sight. Later in Episode 345 he is called by Vermouth to stake out at the docks to help her kill Jodie after Vermouth (disguised as Jodie) had sent the FBI agents, who were originally hiding there to apprehend her, back. He shoots Jodie in the stomach and disables her and just as he was about to kill Haibara, Ran pops up from the truck of Jodie's car to protect Haibara. Calvados repeatedly tries to shoot her down (despite Vermouth's orders to stop) and misses, he stops when Vermouth shoots a bullet in his direction. Shuichi Akai later breaks both of Calvados legs and takes his rifle, shotgun and 3 handguns. He later commits suicide in order to avoid being taken prisoner for questioning.
The Case Closed anime series, known as Meitantei Conan (名探偵コナン, lit. Great Detective Conan, officially translated as Detective Conan) in its original release in Japan, is based on the manga series of the same name by Gosho Aoyama. It was localized in English as Case Closed by Funimation due to unspecified legal problems.[1] The anime is produced by TMS Entertainment and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation with the directors being Kenji Kodama, Yasuichiro Yamamoto, Masato Satō, Kōjin Ochi, and Nobuharu Kamanaka.[2] The series follows the teenage detective Jimmy Kudo, who transforms into a child after being poisoned with APTX 4869 by the Black Organization. Now named Conan Edogawa and living with the Moores, Conan solves murders during his daily life as he awaits the day to defeat the Black Organization.
Case Closed premiered on January 8, 1996 on Nippon Television Network System in Japan and is currently ongoing.[3] It has aired over 900 episodes in Japan making it the sixteenth longest running anime series. In 2010, Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation began making the episodes available for video on demand.[4][5] The anime spun off theatrical films, two OVA series, and a TV special titled Lupin the 3rd vs Detective Conan; these spin offs were created with the same staff and cast as the anime series. The theme music supplier for the series was initially Universal Music Group, whom released the first two openings and ending theme songs, and is currently Being Incorporated.[6][7]
In 2003, the first 104 episodes were licensed by Funimation for distribution in North America under the name Case Closed where it debuted on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block on May 24, 2004;[8] no more than 50 episodes were licensed from Funimation due to low ratings.[9] The Canadian channel YTV picked up the Case Closed series and broadcast 22 episodes between April 7, 2006, and September 2, 2006, before taking it off the air.[10] Funimation made the series available with the launch of the Funimation Channel in November 2005 and was temporary available on Colours TV during its syndication with the Funimation Channel.[11][12] Funimation began streaming Case Closed episodes on their website in March 2013.[13]
A separate English adaptation of the series by Animax Asia premiered in the Philippines on January 18, 2006, under the name Detective Conan.[14][15] Because Animax were unable to obtain further TV broadcast rights, their version comprised 52 episodes. The series continued with reruns until August 7, 2006, when it was removed from the station.[16][17] Meitantei Conan has also been localized in other languages such as French, German, and Italian.[18][19][20] As of 2018, the Detective Conan anime has been broadcast in 40 countries around the world.[21]
This character was supposed to be unnamed when he first appeared in episode 66, but due to the VA of Inspector Megure who adlibed in the recording and called him by the VA's name (Takagi), the character was henceforth named Takagi.
The relationship between detective fiction and psychoanalysis has been explored at length and repeatedly, particularly insofar as a "detective story reorders our perception of the past through language" (Hutter 231), in the same way that psychoanalysis does, to give it new meaning and coherence. A recent manifestation of this phenomenon is the proliferation of historical detectives, especially Victorian ones. In these contemporary stories, the nineteenth century is portrayed as an acceptable illusion of that time, as the authors feel it should have been: self-aware, uncomfortable about social divisions and gender discrimination, instead of generally smug and self-satisfied, safe in the attitude that "God's in His heaven--All's right with the world," which Browning so powerfully satirizes. It is a process of transference of guilt, and sublimation of atonement, perhaps. In a curious mixture of wish-fulfillment fantasies and Orwellian restructuring of the past, "facts," as they have been handed down in various w ritings or in the memory of human beings, are cast aside. And yet, as Winston Smith in Nineteen-eighty-four, reflects, "how could you establish even the most obvious fact when there existed no record outside your own memory.
Facts, objective or subjective or deliberately distorted, and memory, reliable or unreliable, are the very basis of detective fiction, but some authors combine the detective's reconstruction of the events of the crime in the past in order to heal the present, with a nostalgic presentation of a way of life that is dying out, inevitably if regrettably, but still affects the present. In this essay I want to look closely at some works by one such author, the expatriate Englishman in Australia, Arthur Upfield, to examine his juggling of time past.
Auerbach, in Mimesis, bases his distinction between history and legend on the role the past plays in the narrative. Where the narrative leaves gaps, where there is a sense of a shadowy past in the background, according to Auerbach, we are dealing with history, whereas legend brings the past into the foreground, turning it into a local and total present. In what have been called "the golden years of detective fiction," with the major exponents of the cerebral detective story that adhered to the formula set by Conan Doyle in his Sherlock Holmes stories, the genre approximated Auerbach's definition of legend, in its presentation of a uniformly even foreground, balancing past and present in equal weight. However, contemporary detective fiction has more and more blurred the distinction, as defined by Auerbach, between legend and history, creating a new kind of tension in the dialectic of narrative and meaning. The narrative of detection follows the linear, backward-looking structure, whereas the meaning struggles to pull into different directions to expand in range. 2ff7e9595c
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