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Sumire Morohoshi Performs Ending Theme for Sugar Apple Fairy Tale Anime

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Series about woman who seeks friendship with fairy premieres in January 2023

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Kadokawa announced on Sunday that Sumire Morohoshi (theme songs for Ascendance of a Bookworm, BNA: Brand New Animal) will perform the ending theme song “Kanaeru” (To Grant) for the television anime adaptation of Miri Mikawa and aki‘s Sugar Apple Fairy Tale light novel series. Naohiro Minami is composing the song, Yuho Iwasato is writing the lyrics, and NAOKI-T is arranging the song.

The anime will premiere in January 2023. Crunchyroll will stream the series as it airs. The anime’s cast includes Yuka Nukui as Anne Halford, Masaaki Mizunaka as Shalle Fen Shalle, Rie Takahashi as Mythril Lid Pod, and Tomoaki Maeno as Hugh Mercury.

Youhei Suzuki (Urara Meirochō, Planet With, Kiyo in Kyoto: From the Maiko House) is directing the anime at J.C. Staff. Seishi Minakami (A Certain Scientific Railgun, Occult Academy, No. 6) is in charge of series composition. Haruko Iizuka (Umi Monogatari, School-Live!, Horimiya) is designing the characters for animation. Hinako Tsubakiyama (Sabikui Bisco) is composing the music. Flying Dog is credited for music production.

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Yen Press has licensed both the original light novel series and YozoranoUdon’s manga adaptation, and it describes the story:

In a world where fairies are bought and sold to the highest bidder, humans aren’t exactly on friendly terms with the fae folk. But friendship is exactly what Anne Halford seeks with Challe, her new fairy bodyguard, though he’s not so keen on the idea. As his new master, Anne tasks him with escorting her through a particularly dangerous area, but with a reluctant bodyguard eager to escape a life of servitude, she’ll have to deal with a lot more than she bargained for…

Writer Mikawa and artist aki launched the novels in April 2010, and ended the series in the 17th volume in February 2015. The original novel series is getting a new Collector’s Edition for the first three volumes. The volumes will ship on December 28; February 1, 2023; and March 1, 2023. Additionally, Kadokawa Beans Bunko will launch a new arc for the novel series on December 28.

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Alto Yukimura published a two-volume manga adaptation of the novels on Hakusensha‘s Hana to Yume Online website from 2013 to 2014.

YozoranoUdon launched the novels’ second manga adaptation in Kadokawa‘s Young Ace magazine in November 2021. Yen Press is releasing chapters of the manga in English simultaneously with the Japanese release, and will also release the manga in print.

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Image ©2023 三川みり・あき/KADOKAWA/「シュガーアップル・フェアリーテイル」製作委員会

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Source: Press release




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Live-Action Drops of God Show Premieres on April 21

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© Legendary Television

Entertainment news magazine Variety reported on Sunday that Drops of God, the new internationally co-produced, multilingual live-action television series of Tadashi Agi and Shū Okimoto‘s The Drops of God (Kami no Shizuku) manga, will premiere on April 21.

Apple TV+ has acquired the eight-part series and will broadcast and stream it worldwide simultaneously in 2023.

The official title in Japan is Kami no Shizuku/Drops of God. (Similar to the title in Japan for the second Fullmetal Alchemist television series, the live-action series’ title includes both the Japanese and English titles of the manga.)

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Legendary Television is handling worldwide distribution outside of France and Japan. Hulu Japan will exclusively stream the series inside Japan alongside its world premiere. The series filmed over 10 months in France, Italy, and Japan.

The series is a collaboration between U.S., French, and Japanese companies. Legendary Television, Dynamic Television, France Televisions, and Hulu Japan are backing the project, and are producing the project with Adline Entertainment. Oded Ruskin (Absentia, No Man’s Land) is directing the series, and Quoc Dang Tran (Marianne, Parallel) wrote the scripts. Dynamic’s Klaus Zimmermann (Borgia, Trapped) is producing the series.

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© Legendary Television

As previously announced, Tomohisa Yamashita (pictured left) and French actress Fleur Geffrier (Elle) star in the series. The announcement noted that Geffrier’s character is named Shizuku Kanzaki, the protagonist of the manga. A previous announcement noted that rival character Issei Tōmine would be the show’s protagonist, but an earlier report in 2021 from entertainment news service Variety described the series as having a female protagonist, with Geffrier playing the role.

Variety describes the story of the TV series:

The story involves a woman who discovers that her estranged father has left her the world’s greatest wine collection in his will. But, to claim her inheritance she must compete against a Japanese man who her father regarded as a son and may have been more.

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©Tadashi Agi, Shū Okimoto, Kodansha, Kodansha USA Publishing, Comixology

Siblings Shin and Yuko Kibayashi — under the pen name Tadashi Agi — launched The Drops of God manga with artist Okimoto in Kodansha‘s Morning magazine 2004. A live-action series based on the manga aired in Japan in 2009. The manga ended in June 2014, and the 44th and final compiled book volume shipped in July 2014. The manga’s final arc, titled Marriage ~Kami no Shizuku Saishūshō~ (Marriage ~The Drops of God Final Arc~), launched in May 2015, and it ended in October 2020.

Comixology and Kodansha USA Publishing have released the manga in English digitally.

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Throughout its serialization, the manga had famously boosted the sales of wines profiled in the story. The French wine magazine La Revue du vin de France has recognized the manga, giving it the magazine’s top award in 2010. The New York Times also profiled the manga in its Dining and Wine section in 2008.

Source: Variety (Marta Balaga)



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Toho Animation Posts Music Film Project Collaboration for Bump of Chicken, loundraw

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Tentai Kansoku” animated short streams, 4 more shorts to premiere until Friday

TOHO animation began streaming director loundraw, Flat Studio, and rock band BUMP OF CHICKEN‘s animated short titled “Tentai Kansoku” (Stargazing) on Monday. It is the first of five animated shorts featured in the TOHO animation Music Films project. The video is in Japanese without English subtitles.

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The short’s story goes back and forth between a young boy sending letters to himself on a makeshift mailbox. It shows the moments he has with his girlfriend, up to the last night they spend together stargazing before the girl transfers to another school. The two friends meet again after a few years, and they go back to the place where they went stargazing.

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The short features Junya Enoki and Atsumi Tanezaki as the main characters.

BUMP OF CHICKEN originally released the song “Tentai Kansoku” in 2001 as their third single.

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The project is part of the overall 10th anniversary celebrations for TOHO animation. As part of the project, TOHO animation is partnering with anime creators and music artists to create five short anime.

Director Namiko Ishidate and musicians Ryokuoushoku Shakai’s “Himitsu no Hana no Niwa” (Secret Flower Garden) will premiere on Tuesday. Mizuki Ito and musicians Hentai Shinshi Club‘s “Neko to Wakai se na” (Don’t Reconcile with Cats) will premiere on Wednesday. Director China and CreepHyp‘s “Detarame na Sekai no Melodrama” (The Melodrama of the Rubbish World) will premiere on Thursday. Director Tetsuro Araki, character designer Mai Yoneyama, animation studio Wit Studio, and musicians SawanoHiroyuki[nZk]:Hata Motohiro’s “COLORs” will premiere on Friday.

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One of the five animated shorts will premiere on TOHO animation‘s YouTube channel each day at 6:00 p.m. JST (5:00 a.m. EDT). The shorts will then play at TOHO animation‘s booth at the AnimeJapan convention on March 25 and 26.

Sources: TOHO animation‘s YouTube channel, Comic Natalie




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Tōsōchū: The Great Mission Anime’s Promo Video Previews fhána’s Opening Theme

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New visual also revealed

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The official website for Tōsōchū: The Great Mission, an anime inspired by the Fuji TV game show run for money Tōsōchū (known as Run for the Money in English), revealed the show’s promotional video on Monday. The video previews fhána‘s opening theme song “Runaway World.”


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The website also revealed a new visual from original character designer Takeshi Okano.

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©フジテレビ・東映アニメーション
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©フジテレビ・東映アニメーション

The series will premiere on April 2.

The previously revealed cast includes: (Note: English name romanizations not confirmed)

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Yukio Kaizawa (Digimon Tamers) and Kōhei Kureta (One Piece, Kirakira Precure a la Mode) are directing the anime at Toei Animation. Yōichi Ōnishi is designing the characters based on original art by Takeshi Okano (Jigoku Sensei Nube). Kotaro Nakagawa (Code Geass) is composing the music. Ayaka Kami and Kentaro Akiyama (Revue Starlight) are the art directors. Kenji Fukuda is handling the art setting. Shōhei Tamura is in charge of 3D stage design.

Boys group AB6IX is performing the ending theme song “Fly Away.”

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The anime is set in the future when humanity has migrated to the Moon due to Earth’s climate change. The anime incorporates its own elements such as the human drama of survival on a diverse field that blurs countries and eras such as Shibuya, Edo-period Japan, and London.

The game show has been airing irregularly on Fuji TV since 2004. The “runaway” contestants try to survive in theme parks, shopping centers, and other venues to earn cash as “hunters” pursue them. The show has already inspired stage productions, publications, and a Netflix release.

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Sources: Tōsōchū: The Great Mission anime’s website (link 2), Comic Natalie




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