bucket list of the dead scan tome 10
Tokyo, Japan: Kodansha. 1993.
ISBN 978-4-06-206489-7. ^ Official booklet, The Roots of Japanese Anime (DVD). Zakka Films. 2009. ^ Douglass, Jason Cody (2019). Beyond Anime?
Rethinking Japanese Animation Through
Early Animated Television Commercials. Palgrave MacMillan. p. 213.
Is it entertaining? absolutely. Just mostly not for the
right reasons. My own experience of the show wasn't fully hate-watching. The most awful plot beats pass by quickly, so there's not much to feel truly angry at. The enjoyment came from being aware that the plot was so ridiculous, and yet the story moved on, undeterred, seemingly unaware of everything it was doing wrong.
I presume that the main demographic of the show is young girls who already read and see dozens of bad romcoms concurrently, and older girls who _are_ aware of how depraved the premise itself is, of how awful a human being the male romantic interest is, and enjoy every second of it. If you find yourself in one of these two categories, chances are you already watched the show, and perhaps are
considering watching it again. Go ahead. No one's judging.
For the rest, take the show as an educational experience, as a presentation of the most sordid aspects of the Shoujo genre. Or perhaps, as an introspective experience: find yourself interested in the story, wanting to know what happens next, all while knowing you are watching one of the biggest train wrecks in recent anime history.
Seven years later, in 2010, Satoru has become a successful manga artist. One day, Satoru surprisingly encounters Airi under the same bridge where they used to sit earlier, and where he had disappeared during his last Revival trip into the past, which has now reactivated itself. Live-action adaptations[edit] Film[edit] Main article: Erased (2016 film) A live-action film adaptation of Erased featuring Tatsuya Fujiwara as Satoru Fujinuma debuted in cinemas throughout Japan on March 19, 2016. [52] The theme song is "Hear ~Shinjiaeta Akashi~" (Hear 〜信じあえた証〜, lit. Hear ~A proof that you could trust~) by Chise Kanna. [53][54] Drama series[edit] In March 2017, Netflix announced a live-action adaptation of the manga series, co-created with Kansai TV. [55] The Netflix
Original series was released worldwide on December 15, 2017. Unlike the anime and live-action film, the live-action web drama covers the manga fully and does not deviate from the source material. [52] The drama stars Yuki Furukawa as 29-year-old Satoru Fujinuma, Reo Uchikawa as Satoru as a child, and Mio Yūki as Airi. [7] Novel[edit] A spin-off novel titled Boku Dake ga Inai Machi: Another Record, written by Hajime Ninomae, was serialized in Kadokawa's monthly digital novel magazine Bungei Kadokawa from November
2015 to March 2016. [56] A volume collecting the chapters was released on March 30, 2016.