Azumanga Daioh | |||
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The Azumanga Daioh logo. |
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あずまんが大王 (Azumanga Daiō) |
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Genre | Comedy, High school, Slice of Life | ||
Manga | |||
Author | Kiyohiko Azuma | ||
Publisher | MediaWorks | ||
English publisher | ADV Manga | ||
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Demographic | Shōnen[1] | ||
Magazine | Dengeki Daioh | ||
Original run | February 1999 – June 2002 | ||
Volumes | 4 | ||
ONA: Azumanga Web Daioh | |||
Director | Fumiaki Asano | ||
Studio | Chara-ani.com | ||
Episodes | 1 | ||
Released | December 28, 2000 | ||
TV anime: Azumanga Daioh: The Animation | |||
Director | Hiroshi Nishikiori | ||
Studio | J.C.Staff | ||
Licensor | Madman Entertainment ADV Films |
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Network | TV Tokyo | ||
English network | Anime Network | ||
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Original run | April 8, 2002 – September 30, 2002 | ||
Episodes | 26 | ||
Related works | |||
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Anime and Manga Portal |
Azumanga Daioh (あずまんが大王 Azumanga Daiō?) is a Japanese comedy manga written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma.[2] It was published by MediaWorks in the magazine Dengeki Daioh from 1999 to 2002 and collected in four tankōbon volumes.[3] It is drawn as a series of vertical four-panel comic strips called yonkoma and depicts the lives of a group of girls during their three years as high-school classmates.
It was adapted as an anime, Azumanga Daioh: the Animation, which was produced by J.C.Staff and aired from the week of April 8, 2002 until the week of September 30, 2002.[4] It was broadcast on TV Tokyo, Aichi Television Broadcasting, Television Osaka, and AT-X in five-minute segments every weekday,[5] then repeated as a 25-minute compilation that weekend, for a total of 130 five-minute segments collected in 26 episodes. The compilation episodes, which were the only versions to include the title and credits sequences, were released on VHS and DVD by Starchild Records;[6] the five-minute segments can be distinguished by their individual titles.
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The series title has no particular significance to the story. "Azumanga" is a portmanteau of "Azuma" (the author's name) and "manga," while "Daioh" comes from the magazine in which it was originally published, Dengeki Daioh.[3] In the anime, "Daioh" is mentioned during the next episode previews, in context meaning "great king."
The name "Azumanga" is also used as a general term for Kiyohiko Azuma's other works (illustrations and comics).[7] The titles of two collections published in 1998 and 2001 containing official comics of Pioneer animations were Azumanga and Azumanga 2.[8][9] Azumanga was later republished in a reduced-size edition called Azumanga Recycle.[10]
Azumanga Daioh chronicles everyday life in an unnamed Japanese high school in Tokyo,[11] following the trials and triumphs of six girls: reserved Sakaki's obsession with cute animals, Chiyo's struggle to fit in with girls five years older, Osaka's spacey nature and skewed perspective on the world, Yomi's aggravation at an annoying best friend, Tomo, whose energy is rivaled only by her lack of sense, and Kagura's efforts in sports and school. The story covers three years of tests, culture festivals, and athletic events at school, after-school life at the nearby shopping district, at Chiyo's large house, vacations spent at Chiyo's summer home on the beach and at Magical Land, a theme park. It is generally realistic in tone, marked by occasional bursts of surrealism and absurdity, such as Osaka's bizarre imaginings, Chiyo's ponytails being "unscrewed", and an episode featuring the characters' New Year's dreams.
The manga and anime follow the same story line, though there are differences in small details.[12] Some jokes could not be dramatized as written and were either changed or excised completely. In the first manga volume, Osaka's appearance is noticeably different from in the anime and succeeding manga volumes. In the same vein, Sakaki's initial unapproachable demeanor in the manga is downplayed in the anime.
The main cast of Azumanga Daioh consists of six schoolgirls and two of their teachers. Secondary characters include Kimura-sensei, a creepy male teacher with an unhealthy obsession with teenage girls, and Kaorin, a classmate with a crush on Sakaki.
In Japan, the Azumanga Daioh manga received a Jury Recommendation during the sixth Japan Media Arts Festival in 2002.[13]
English reviewers have commented positively about Azumanga Daioh. Fred Patton of Animation World Magazine, has described Azumanga Daioh as "delightfully witty and even an educational window onto what Japanese high school life is really like."[14] Chris Beveridge of Anime on DVD, stated that "There's a lot to laugh with here and a cast of characters that grow quickly on you as you start finding those you favor and those you don't."[15] Andrew Shelton from Anime Meta explains that "The character of the girls (the only male is the rather creepy Kimura-sensei who has a, thankfully, minor role) is extremely well brought out. The superb observation, and ability to capture expression, makes the anime incredibly fun to watch in addition to meeting the story requirements. The action, and very rich comedy, are also wonderfully represented. There is just so much meaning, and charm, in even the most minor of expressions."[16] The licensed manga had sales that reached top 100 lists on occasions and was included in the top 25 manga recommended by International Correspondence in Retailers Guide to Anime/Manga.[17][18] The English dub for the show was well received, earning 6 ADR Awards from fans voting on AnimeonDVD.com and Dubreview.com. Volumes 3, 4 and 6 won "Best Dub of the Month" and Allison Sumrall (Kagura), Kira Vincent-Davis (Osaka) and Christine Auten (Sakaki) won individual "Best Actress of the Month" awards.[19]
Four of the girls were included in Newtype Magazine's top 100 anime heroines of 2002: Osaka was awarded 7th, Chiyo 11th, Sakaki 21st, and Yomi 78th. Together they made Azumanga Daioh the second most popular series of 2002 for female characters.[20]
Marc Hairston describes Azumanga Daioh as being "slightly disjointed", with "frequently oblique" and "culturally biased" humour, and says it is both "lighter" and "more wry" than Maria-sama ga Miteru. He describes the characters of Azumanga as being "individuals with slightly offbeat personalities".[21]
Azumanga Daioh was originally published in yonkoma (four-panel) format by MediaWorks' in the magazine Dengeki Daioh from February 1999 to May 2002 and collected in four tankōbon volumes.[3]
The series is licensed in English in North America and the United Kingdom by ADV Manga,[22] who has released all four volumes, with the fourth being released on April 20, 2004. ADV later reprinted the series on November 7, 2007 in an omnibus edition (ISBN 978-1-4139-0364-5).[3] In Europe, Azumanga Daioh is licensed in French by Kurokawa, in German by Tokyopop, in Spanish by Norma Editorial, and in Finnish by Punainen jättiläinen. In Asia, the series has been licensed in Korean by Daiwon C.I., in Thai by Negibose Comics and in Chinese by Tong Li.[3]
# | Japanese | English | ||
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Release date | ISBN | Release date | ISBN | |
1 | 2000-02-25 | ISBN 4-8402-1467-0 | 2003-09-16 | ISBN 978-1-4139-0000-2 |
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2 | 2000-11-15 | ISBN 4-8402-1691-6 | 2003-11-18 | ISBN 978-1-4139-0023-1 |
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3 | 2001-09-25 | ISBN 4-8402-1943-5 | 2004-02-24 | ISBN 978-1-4139-0030-9 |
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4 | 2002-06-25 | ISBN 4-8402-2128-6 | 2004-04-20 | ISBN 978-1-4139-0048-4 |
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The television anime, Azumanga Daioh: the Animation, was produced by J.C.Staff and aired from April 8, 2002 until September 30, 2002.[4] It was broadcast on TV Tokyo, TV Aichi, TV Osaka, and AT-X in five-minute segments every weekday,[23] then repeated as a 25-minute compilation that weekend, for a total of 130 five-minute segments collected in 26 episodes. The compilation episodes, which were the only versions to include the title and credits sequences, were released on VHS and DVD by Starchild Records;[6] the five-minute segments can be distinguished by their individual titles.
Besides the television anime, there have been two other animated adaptations: The Very Short Azumanga Daioh Movie, a six minute trailer released to movie theatres to publicize the upcoming television series, and Azumanga Web Daioh, a shorter pilot episode that appeared on the official Japanese Azumanga Daioh website for a limited time.[24] Azumanga Web Daioh was originally intended to gauge whether there was enough interest to create a web-released anime adaptation; because of overwhelming demand, the original plan for web-release was changed to a television release. As a pilot, it featured different voice actors and music from the regular series.
In the United States, the television anime was released in a six DVD volume set September 9, 2005 and then later in a five DVD volume "Thinpak" set, both by ADV Films.[25] The sixth DVD volume included The Very Short Azumanga Daioh Movie. The manga was published in English by ADV Manga.[26] Of the three soundtrack albums released in Japan ("Original Soundtrack" Vol 1 and 2, collecting the show's score and themes, and "Vocal Collection", collecting the image songs sung by the characters themselves), Vol 1 and the Vocal Collection were released in the United States by Geneon.[27]
After the animated series ended, there was a hoax announcement of a live-action adaptation, as being created by the Tokyo Broadcasting System and Suntory and which would be named either Azudorama Da Yo! or Azumanga Daioh: The Drama. Professional-looking promotional material and photos were prepared and presented on the internet with "actresses" who closely resembled their animated counterparts.[28]
There is an Azumanga Daioh PlayStation video game, Azumanga Donjyara Daioh, which is a puzzle game similar to mahjong.[29]
Azumanga Daioh Advance was released for the Game Boy Advance,[29] taking the form of a simplistic collectible card game (or CCG). The idea was to arrange five-card hands into an order that maximised the number of lines of three stars or more, either horizontally or diagonally. The eight main characters (the six girls, Yukari and Nyamo) were playable, the two teachers being unlockable. Secondary characters, such as Mayaa, Tadakichi-san, Kami-neko, Kaorin, Kimura-sensei and even Neko-Koneko (if the latter can be called a character), appeared if good hand scores were achieved. Chiyo-chichi appeared as a 5-second warning.
Azumanga Puzzle Daioh, an arcade-only Puzzle Bobble spin-off was produced.[29] As well as featuring characters, graphics and sound-bytes from the series, the 2-player mode allowed each player to fire balls into the other player's arena, a feature not present in any other official Puzzle Bobble game.
There is also a game/simulator/screensaver called "Kasuga Ayumu Mail-Order Life" the link "http://www.hirahira.net/products/tsu_hanFinal/index.html" references the product which is in Japanese and seems to be discontinued.
Several Azumanga Daioh dōjin soft games exist. One is a Japanese PC game called Ah, Let's Fight (あ、対戦しよ~ A, Taisen Shiyo?), modeled after the popular Street Fighter series, is entirely produced by a third party.[30] Single player game mode, single player vs chosen character, two-player, and practice modes are available playing options. A sequel called A, Taisen Shiyo: Come Back was created a year later and featured more playable characters.
The open source screen saver package Xscreensaver for POSIX operating systems contains a module called FuzzyFlakes which emulates, and was inspired by, the pink-on-green snowflake/flower art shown in the ending credits of the anime.[31] (To get the closest mimicry of the anime, the -color parameter of the screensaver module needs to be set to the X11 color "palegreen".)
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