KAREshi KANOjyo no Jiyo

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-{{Anime-manga-stub}}+'''''Kare Kano'''''|彼氏彼女の事情|Kareshi Kanojo no Jijō|lit. "His and Her Circumstances", is a manga series by Masami Tsuda. It was serialized in ''LaLa (magazine)'' from 1996 to 2005 and collected in 21 ''tankōbon'' volumes by Hakusensha. It depicts the romance between "perfect" student Yukino Miyazawa and her academic rival Soichiro Arima, and the relationships of several of their friends.
-==Links==+ 
 +The series is licensed and was published in English in North America by Tokyopop. The chapters from the first seven volumes were adapted into a 26-episode [[anime]] television series by Gainax. Directed by Hideaki Anno and Kazuya Tsurumaki, the episodes were broadcast in Japan on TV Tokyo from October 1998 to March 1999. It is licensed for distribution in North America by Right Stuf International, which released it as ''His and Her Circumstances''. It is also sub-licensed for release by Enoki Films USA under the title ''Tales at North Hills High''.
 + 
 +==Plot==
 +{{See also|List of Kare Kano Characters}}
 +Yukino Miyazawa is a Japanese high school freshman who is the envy of classmates for her good grades and immaculate appearance. However, her "perfect" exterior is a façade, a charade she maintains to win praise. In the privacy of her own home, she is spoiled, stubborn, a Couch potato|slob, and studies relentlessly and obsessively to maintain her grades. On entering high school, she is knocked from her position at the top of the class by Soichiro Arima, a handsome young man whose very existence Yukino considers a threat to the praise on which she thrives, and she vows to destroy him. When Soichiro confesses that he has a crush on her, Yukino rejects him then boasts about it at home. Her observant little sister Kano points out that her rivalry with him comes from admiration, causing her to rethink her own feelings.
 + 
 +Before she can figure out if she hates or likes Soichiro, he visits her home and discovers her being herself. He uses the information to blackmail her into doing his student council work. At first Yukino accepts it, coming to realize that he is also not the perfect student he pretends to be. Tired of being used, Yukino revolts and Soichiro apologizes, and admits he still loves her and just wanted to spend time with her. Yukino realizes she loves him as well, and together they resolve to abandon their fake ways and be true to themselves, though she initially has trouble breaking of her lifelong habit of pretend-perfection and her competitive ways.
 + 
 +As the series progresses, Yukino is able to open her true self to others and earns her first real friends beyond Soichiro. It is eventually revealed that Soichiro was striving to be perfect in order to avoid turning "bad" like the parents who abandoned him. Falling in love with Yukino, he is able to become more true to himself, but he also finds himself becoming increasingly jealous of Yukino's change bringing new friends and new activities into her life, and of her having parts of her life that don't involve him. When Yukino unknowingly hurts him, he becomes even more jealous and afraid, and begins to wear another facade of the "perfect boyfriend" in an effort to protect her from his "ugly" self.
 + 
 +The return of both of his parents into his life sends Soichiro into a dark area, but helps him finally break free to truly be himself as Yukino and their friends help him learn to lean on and trust others. The end of the series shows Yukino and Soichiro in their 30s, with their three children, and gives updates on the various friends they made along the way.
 + 
 +===Differences in anime adaptation===
 +The anime adaptation uses the material from the first seven volumes of the manga, stopping just before the school's annual Japanese Cultural Festival.
 + 
 +==Production==
 +''Kare Kano'' was Masami Tsuda's first lengthy manga series. Still new to professional manga writing in general, shortly after starting the series, Tsuda had to put it on hold while she finished working out the framework of the story and where she ultimately wanted it to go.
 + 
 +In adapting the first seven volumes into an anime television series, director Hideaki Anno kept the same general scenes and dialogue but modified the overall feel and focus of the series, making it into a "personal case study of relationships". He emphasizes the dialog over the animation using a variety of techniques, including iconic scenes, production sketches, real-life location shots, repeated imagery, and even using animation version of manga panels or simply printing the lines of the dialog being spoken over static screens.
 + 
 +==Media==
 +===Manga===
 +{{Main|List of Kare Kano chapters}}
 +Written by Masami Tsuda, ''Kare Kano'' was first serialized in ''LaLa (magazine)'' between February 1996 and June 2005.The 101 individual chapters, referred to as "Acts", were compiled into 21 ''tankōbon'' volumes by Hakusensha. The first volume was released on June 5, 1996, with the final volume released on August 5, 2005.
 + 
 +''Kare Kano'' was initially licensed for an English language release by Mixx Entertainment in 2002, but it subsequently lost those rights before publication began. In July 2001, the company's Tokyopop division announced that it had reacquired the license and that it would be serializing the title in their ''Smile (magazine)'' magazine starting in 2002. However, ''Smile'' was discontinued in 2002 before the Tokyopop released the first collected volume of the series on January 21, 2003; the final volume was released on January 10, 2007.It was one of the first manga series that Tokyopop released in the original Japanese orientation, in which the book is read from right to left, and with the original sound effects left in place.< In February 2008, Tokyopop reissued the first three volumes in a single omnibus volume.
 + 
 +The series is licensed for regional language releases by Editions Tonkam in France by Grupo Editorial Vid in Mexico, by Glènat España in Spain, by Dynamic Italia in Italy, by Carlsen Comics in Germany, and by Planet Manga in Portugal. It chapters were also serialized in the French magazine ''Magnolia'' and the German magazine ''Daisuki''.
 + 
 +===Anime===
 +{{Main|List of Kare Kano Episodes}}
 +''Kare Kano'' was adapted as an [[anime]] television series produced by Gainax. Episodes 1–16 were directed by Hideaki Anno and episodes 17–26 by Kazuya Tsurumaki. The 26 episodes were broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1998 to March 1999. The opening theme was "Tenshi no Yubikiri" by Fukuda Mai, and the ending themes were "Yume no Naka e" by Atsuko Enomoto & Chihiro Suzuki for episodes 1–24 and 26 and "Kaze Hiita Yoru" by Yuki Watanabe & Maria Yamamoto for episode 25.
 + 
 +===Soundtracks===
 +Four CD soundtracks have been released in Japan for the anime series by Geneon Entertainment. The first, ''His and Her Circumstances: Act 1.0''|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 1.0 contained 24 tracks, including musical scores by Shiro Sagisu and vocals performed by Norio Ariga and Yōsui Inoue. It was released in Japan on December 23, 1998; ''His and Her Circumstances: Act 2.0''|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 2.0, containing an additional 25 tracks, followed in Japan on February 26, 1999 and in the US on November 1, 2005. The third volume, ''His and Her Circumstances: Act 3.0''|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 3.0, also contained 25 tracks. It was released in Japan on May 28, 1999. The three CDs were released as a box set in Japan, along with a fourth disc containing an additional 22 tracks, on February 23, 2005.
 + 
 +==Reception==
 +The tenth volume of the series was listed as the top selling graphic novel in Japan on October 31, 2000. In ''The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917'', Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy praised the anime adaptation for its innovative techniques and the use of "surreal 'cartoon' effects". They felt the use of on-screen text for comments on events in the series and change the meaning of what characters were saying was a perfect way to capture "the adolescent power struggles and hypocrisies" in the original manga, while still being a "very funny satire about unlikable people" that manages to still make the characters sympathetic.
 + 
 +==External links/References==
 +* [http://www.gainax.co.jp/anime/karekano/ Official Gainax ''Kareshi Kanojo no Jijō'' anime site]
 +* [http://www.b-ch.com/cgi-bin/contents/ttl/det.cgi?ttl_c=477 Official Bandai Channel ''Kareshi Kanojo no Jijō'' anime site]
 +* [http://www.enokifilmsusa.com/library/northills.htm Official Enoki Films USA ''Tales at North Hills High'' site]
 +* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kare_Kano Wikipedia ''Kare Kano'' article]
*[http://www.animegalleries.net/category/22 Kare Kano Image Gallery] *[http://www.animegalleries.net/category/22 Kare Kano Image Gallery]
 +*[http://www.animegalleries.net/album/2747 Kare Kano Wallpaper Gallery]
 +
 +[[Category:Anime/Manga Series]]

Current revision

Kare Kano|彼氏彼女の事情|Kareshi Kanojo no Jijō|lit. "His and Her Circumstances", is a manga series by Masami Tsuda. It was serialized in LaLa (magazine) from 1996 to 2005 and collected in 21 tankōbon volumes by Hakusensha. It depicts the romance between "perfect" student Yukino Miyazawa and her academic rival Soichiro Arima, and the relationships of several of their friends.

The series is licensed and was published in English in North America by Tokyopop. The chapters from the first seven volumes were adapted into a 26-episode anime television series by Gainax. Directed by Hideaki Anno and Kazuya Tsurumaki, the episodes were broadcast in Japan on TV Tokyo from October 1998 to March 1999. It is licensed for distribution in North America by Right Stuf International, which released it as His and Her Circumstances. It is also sub-licensed for release by Enoki Films USA under the title Tales at North Hills High.

Contents

Plot

Yukino Miyazawa is a Japanese high school freshman who is the envy of classmates for her good grades and immaculate appearance. However, her "perfect" exterior is a façade, a charade she maintains to win praise. In the privacy of her own home, she is spoiled, stubborn, a Couch potato|slob, and studies relentlessly and obsessively to maintain her grades. On entering high school, she is knocked from her position at the top of the class by Soichiro Arima, a handsome young man whose very existence Yukino considers a threat to the praise on which she thrives, and she vows to destroy him. When Soichiro confesses that he has a crush on her, Yukino rejects him then boasts about it at home. Her observant little sister Kano points out that her rivalry with him comes from admiration, causing her to rethink her own feelings.

Before she can figure out if she hates or likes Soichiro, he visits her home and discovers her being herself. He uses the information to blackmail her into doing his student council work. At first Yukino accepts it, coming to realize that he is also not the perfect student he pretends to be. Tired of being used, Yukino revolts and Soichiro apologizes, and admits he still loves her and just wanted to spend time with her. Yukino realizes she loves him as well, and together they resolve to abandon their fake ways and be true to themselves, though she initially has trouble breaking of her lifelong habit of pretend-perfection and her competitive ways.

As the series progresses, Yukino is able to open her true self to others and earns her first real friends beyond Soichiro. It is eventually revealed that Soichiro was striving to be perfect in order to avoid turning "bad" like the parents who abandoned him. Falling in love with Yukino, he is able to become more true to himself, but he also finds himself becoming increasingly jealous of Yukino's change bringing new friends and new activities into her life, and of her having parts of her life that don't involve him. When Yukino unknowingly hurts him, he becomes even more jealous and afraid, and begins to wear another facade of the "perfect boyfriend" in an effort to protect her from his "ugly" self.

The return of both of his parents into his life sends Soichiro into a dark area, but helps him finally break free to truly be himself as Yukino and their friends help him learn to lean on and trust others. The end of the series shows Yukino and Soichiro in their 30s, with their three children, and gives updates on the various friends they made along the way.

Differences in anime adaptation

The anime adaptation uses the material from the first seven volumes of the manga, stopping just before the school's annual Japanese Cultural Festival.

Production

Kare Kano was Masami Tsuda's first lengthy manga series. Still new to professional manga writing in general, shortly after starting the series, Tsuda had to put it on hold while she finished working out the framework of the story and where she ultimately wanted it to go.

In adapting the first seven volumes into an anime television series, director Hideaki Anno kept the same general scenes and dialogue but modified the overall feel and focus of the series, making it into a "personal case study of relationships". He emphasizes the dialog over the animation using a variety of techniques, including iconic scenes, production sketches, real-life location shots, repeated imagery, and even using animation version of manga panels or simply printing the lines of the dialog being spoken over static screens.

Media

Manga

Written by Masami Tsuda, Kare Kano was first serialized in LaLa (magazine) between February 1996 and June 2005.The 101 individual chapters, referred to as "Acts", were compiled into 21 tankōbon volumes by Hakusensha. The first volume was released on June 5, 1996, with the final volume released on August 5, 2005.

Kare Kano was initially licensed for an English language release by Mixx Entertainment in 2002, but it subsequently lost those rights before publication began. In July 2001, the company's Tokyopop division announced that it had reacquired the license and that it would be serializing the title in their Smile (magazine) magazine starting in 2002. However, Smile was discontinued in 2002 before the Tokyopop released the first collected volume of the series on January 21, 2003; the final volume was released on January 10, 2007.It was one of the first manga series that Tokyopop released in the original Japanese orientation, in which the book is read from right to left, and with the original sound effects left in place.< In February 2008, Tokyopop reissued the first three volumes in a single omnibus volume.

The series is licensed for regional language releases by Editions Tonkam in France by Grupo Editorial Vid in Mexico, by Glènat España in Spain, by Dynamic Italia in Italy, by Carlsen Comics in Germany, and by Planet Manga in Portugal. It chapters were also serialized in the French magazine Magnolia and the German magazine Daisuki.

Anime

Kare Kano was adapted as an anime television series produced by Gainax. Episodes 1–16 were directed by Hideaki Anno and episodes 17–26 by Kazuya Tsurumaki. The 26 episodes were broadcast on TV Tokyo from October 1998 to March 1999. The opening theme was "Tenshi no Yubikiri" by Fukuda Mai, and the ending themes were "Yume no Naka e" by Atsuko Enomoto & Chihiro Suzuki for episodes 1–24 and 26 and "Kaze Hiita Yoru" by Yuki Watanabe & Maria Yamamoto for episode 25.

Soundtracks

Four CD soundtracks have been released in Japan for the anime series by Geneon Entertainment. The first, His and Her Circumstances: Act 1.0|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 1.0 contained 24 tracks, including musical scores by Shiro Sagisu and vocals performed by Norio Ariga and Yōsui Inoue. It was released in Japan on December 23, 1998; His and Her Circumstances: Act 2.0|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 2.0, containing an additional 25 tracks, followed in Japan on February 26, 1999 and in the US on November 1, 2005. The third volume, His and Her Circumstances: Act 3.0|彼氏彼女の事情 ACT 3.0, also contained 25 tracks. It was released in Japan on May 28, 1999. The three CDs were released as a box set in Japan, along with a fourth disc containing an additional 22 tracks, on February 23, 2005.

Reception

The tenth volume of the series was listed as the top selling graphic novel in Japan on October 31, 2000. In The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917, Jonathan Clements and Helen McCarthy praised the anime adaptation for its innovative techniques and the use of "surreal 'cartoon' effects". They felt the use of on-screen text for comments on events in the series and change the meaning of what characters were saying was a perfect way to capture "the adolescent power struggles and hypocrisies" in the original manga, while still being a "very funny satire about unlikable people" that manages to still make the characters sympathetic.

External links/References

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