Episode 83— The Bewitching Harp! A Musical Prelude of Death Tempts Shun
Aired June 25, 1988 · 24 min

Synopsis
Hyoga buries Hägen and entrusts Freya to Kiki before heading to Valhalla Palace. Hilda remains confident in her chances despite the deaths of three of her God Warriors, especially since many Bronze Saints are still injured. After falling off a cliff, Seiya recalls that the Gold Saints sacrificed part of their blood to revive the Bronze Cloths, a gesture of gratitude for the Bronze Saints' role in saving Athena.
Episode ratings & reviews
Media & Uploads
Stills, clips, and fan art from this episode.
Did you or a loved one work on Saint Seiya · S1E83 — The Bewitching Harp! A Musical Prelude of Death Tempts Shun?
Every stage matters — pitch decks and treatments from development, location scouts and table-reads from pre-production, set photos and crew anecdotes from production, edit-bay notes from post, and press kits, festival memories, or marketing ephemera from distribution. Any moment that didn't make the press tour, any document or photograph that's been sitting in a box — please share it so it's not lost to time.
We particularly welcome contributions from writers, producers, cast, crew, festival programmers, distributors, marketing teams, their families, and anyone who was there at any stage.
Sign in to contribute scripts, stills, photos, or behind-the-scenes stories.
Be the first to share something on Saint Seiya · S1E83 — The Bewitching Harp! A Musical Prelude of Death Tempts Shun.
Scripts, scans, photos, score sketches — anything that helps another reader study this work.
Memorable quotes
Browse all →No quotes logged for Saint Seiya · S1E83 — The Bewitching Harp! A Musical Prelude of Death Tempts Shun yet — add the first memorable line below.
Got a quote we’re missing?
Submit a line from any film, show, or game.
Where to watch
Not currently streaming on any platform we track.
Parents Guide
Comments (0)
on Saint Seiya · S1E83No comments yet. Be the first to share what you think.
Edit history
Loading edit history…
