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[6] Nana ran in the magazine for 84 chapters, until the July 2009 issue (published on May 26),[10] and the series was put on hiatus in June of the same year due to Yazawa falling ill. [11] Yazawa returned from the hospital in early April 2010, but it was not specified when or if she would resume the manga. [12] The individual chapters of Nana have been collected by Shueisha into 21 tankōbon volumes, published under the Ribon Mascot Comics Cookie imprint, between May 15, 2000, and March 13, 2009. [13][14] Its latest four chapters have not been published in a tankōbon volume. [6] Nana is licensed for English-language release in North America by Viz Media. It was serialized in Viz's manga anthology Shojo Beat, premiering in the July 2005 debut issue and continuing until the August 2007 issue. [15][16] They published all 21 collected volumes as of July 6, 2010. Films[edit] Main articles: Nana (2005 film) and Nana 2 Two live-action film adaptations have been made for Nana. The first, Nana, was released on September 3, 2005. The film stars Mika Nakashima as the punk star Nana Oosaki, Aoi Miyazaki as Hachi (Nana Komatsu), Ryuhei Matsuda as Ren Honjou, Tetsuji Tamayama as Takumi Ichinose, Hiroki Narimiya as Nobuo Terashima, and Kenichi Matsuyama as Shinichi Okazaki. The DVD edition was released on March 3, 2006.

If you’re sold on that premise, you should check out Vivy: Fluorite Eye’s Song. I was surprised to see that Vivy branched a typical sci-fi action series into a thoughtful exploration of what makes us human. The show has many hearty episodes that focus on the complex natures of jealousy, greed, and loneliness. Some of the standout episodes even rival that of an introspective Cowboy Bebop episode (the anime not the live-action show) in how they let ideas and heartbreaking scenes breathe. Plus, when the action hits, it hits. Vivy’s sick-ass fight scenes feature some of the smoothest movie-quality sakuga animation I’ve seen in an anime series, which shouldn’t come as any surprise since Wit Studio is the same production company behind the first three seasons of Attack on Titan. AdvertisementPrevious SlideNext Slide6 / 14List slidesTo Your EternityList slidesTo Your Eternity AdvertisementNot many anime pass the three-episode test run from the jump, but To Your Eternity had me choking back tears from the first episode. To Your Eternity is the anime adaptation of Yoshitoki Ōima’s The Immortal. The series follows an immortal creature called Fushi that starts its long existence as a rock before taking the forms of a wolf and human as it observes humanity. Ōima-san also happens to be the mangaka behind A Silent Voice, and its opening theme “Pink Blood” is sung by none other than Hikaru Utada, so my being moved to tears doesn’t come as a surprise. The show pulls no emotional punches.

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Beloved L is a Chinese webcomic but has been mistaken for a Yuri Genre manga (or manhwa) due to its art style. Beyond Bloom is a OEL Manga-type webcomic. Characters are drawn with a heavy manga influence mixed with a more western styled roundness. Blue Sky mimics manga tropes in much the same way as Project 0. Cat Nine from cat girls to its relatively simplistic style. Plus, it's based somewhere in the Philippines. Dave Cheung's Chugworth Academy and Boss Noodle are anime influenced, seeing as they are so risqué. City of Trees draws clear inspiration from early-2000's anime and manga. Claude & Monet has a heavy manga influence. 4. She also wrote that the volume "succeeds in identifying the stakes, but it completely fails in anchoring the reader with characters to care about. " Rebecca Silverman and Teresa Navarro both gave it a 2 and noted its status as a "set-up book," with each new character introduced in the same manner. Both Hopper and Silverman said that Baki reminded them of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. [50] Reviewing the first 24 episodes of the 2001 anime, Mark Thomas of Mania Entertainment gave it a B− rating, stating that fans of shōnen and fight series would enjoy it, but others should look elsewhere. He felt it had plenty of good, realistic fight scenes, but fell short on the story. Explaining that despite a lot of story arcs, it ultimately feels like a setup for the second season. [51] Thomas gave the same rating to the final 24 episodes, and "mildly recommended" the series. While he started to enjoy this set more thanks to its more action focus, he stated that not showing Baki's final fight with Yujiro, which was built up the entire show, really ruined it for him. [52] The 2012 comedy film Graffreeter Toki is based on the March 2011 play of the same name, which in turn was inspired by Grappler Baki. [53] Sociologist Junko Kaneda interpreted Baki the Grappler as homoerotic and published an essay book about it titled Notes of a Girl Who Spent 30 Hours a Day for 300 Days Thinking "So Baki The Grappler Is BL, Right?" The essay was adapted into a live-action television series titled A Story of Grappler Baki and Me (グラップラー刃牙はBLではないかと考え続けた乙女の記録ッッ, Gurappurā Baki wa BL de wa Nai ka to Kangaetsuzuketa Otome no Kiroku) that was broadcast on Wowow in August 2021.
Stone Anime Season 2 Premiered in January 2021". Anime News Network. Retrieved July 2, 2020. ^ Mateo, Alex (March 25, 2021). "Dr. Stone Anime Gets Sequel". Anime News Network. Archived from the original on March 6, 2022. Retrieved March 25, 2021. ^ Rafael, Pineda Antonio (December 19, 2021). "Dr.