Idolmaster: Xenoglossia
Idolmaster: Xenoglossia | |
Screenshot of the series' logo | |
アイドルマスター XENOGLOSSIA (Aidorumasutā: Xenoglossia) | |
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Genre | Drama, Mecha |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Tatsuyuki Nagai |
Written by | Jukki Hanada |
Studio | Sunrise |
Licensed by | |
Network | Kansai TV |
English network | |
Original run | April 4, 2007 – September 24, 2007 |
Episodes | 26 |
Idolmaster: Xenoglossia (アイドルマスター XENOGLOSSIA Aidorumasutā: Xenoglossia) is a 26-episode anime television series by Sunrise, based on the Namco Bandai Games series The Idolmaster.[1] It aired between April 4 and September 24, 2007 on Kansai TV and various other UHF television stations. The series was also broadcast over the Internet on the Japanese website @nifty. The series has been licensed by Sentai Filmworks in North America.[2] The word Xenoglossia in the title is a term taken from Greek for using a language (talking, reading or writing) that is completely unknown to the user.
Plot
Idolmaster: Xenoglossia centers around mecha and re-imagines the ten prospective idols from The Idolmaster as fighter pilots of those robots, with eight of them also posing as students. The large robots are called IDOLs and their pilots are called Idolmasters. IDOL pilots have to be girls, and they have to be chosen by the IDOL itself. The Moon was destroyed 107 years prior to the beginning of the story in an event called Lost Artemis. This event caused numerous fragments to fall onto the Earth, which killed about one quarter of the Earth's total population. The remaining fragments of the Moon which orbit around the Earth are called Kompeito or Confeito. Once a fragment falls onto Earth, it is called a Drop. If the Drop is big, resulting in a moderate threat to the Earth, then it will be called Mint Drop or Lemon Drop according to sizes. Humans found a special silicon on Earth, probably from fallen Drops, and started research to turn that silicon into IDOL cores, of which there are five. The IDOLs are named after Lunar maria.
Haruka Amami, initially unsure of herself, passes an audition to be a singing idol and she is sent to Tokyo to start a career in the entertainment. She does not know that the agency that recruited her is actually a front for a big task force called Mondenkind which uses the IDOLS to save the Earth from falling fragmented pieces of the Moon. Mondenkind's job is to handle any Drop that is bigger than Lemon–class. While the other countries of the world have missiles to handle Drops, Japan is currently the only country which uses IDOLs to destroy Drops. Yukiho Hagiwara and Iori Minase, who also want to be idols, are also taken into the same task force.
Cast
- Haruka Amami (天海 春香 Amami Haruka): Yuka Iguchi
- Yukiho Hagiwara (萩原 雪歩 Hagiwara Yukiho): Yui Horie
- Iori Minase (水瀬 伊織 Minase Iori): Yukari Tamura
- Yayoi Takatsuki (高槻 やよい Takatsuki Yayoi): Ami Koshimizu
- Makoto Kikuchi (菊地 真 Kikuchi Makoto): Eri Kitamura
- Ritsuko Akizuki (秋月 律子 Akizuki Ritsuko): Mai Nakahara
- Azusa Miura (三浦 あずさ Miura Azusa): Tomo Sakurai
- Chihaya Kisaragi (如月 千早 Kisaragi Chihaya): Kaori Shimizu
- Ami Futami (双海 亜美 Futami Ami): Kaori Nazuka
- Mami Futami (双海 真美 Futami Mami): Momoko Saitō
- R.I.F.F.A (リファ Rifa): Yukana
- Naze Munakata (宗方 名瀬 Munakata Naze): Mamiko Noto
- Naraba Daidō (大道 楢馬 Daidō Naraba): Daisuke Ono
- Sorewa Suzuki (鈴木 空羽 Suzuki Sorewa): Mikako Takahashi
- Chikako Minamoto (源 千佳子 Minamoto Chikako): Naomi Shindō
- Hotaru Yasuhara (安原蛍 Yasuhara Hotaru): Ryōka Yuzuki
- Hibiki Saku (朔 響 Saku Hibiki): Takuma Takewaka
- Karasu (カラス): Akira Ishida
- Joseph Shingetsu (ジョセフ・真月 Josefu Shingetsu): Kazuhiro Nakata
Media
Anime
The 26-episode anime television series is produced by Sunrise and directed by Tatsuyuki Nagai.[1] The scenario was written by Jukki Hanada, and Hiroshi Takeuchi based the character design used in the series on Toshiyuki Kubooka's original designs. The mechanical design was handled by Junichi Akutsu and Hiroyuki Ōkawa. The art director for the series was Toshiyuki Tokuda. The sound director was Yōta Tsuruoka, and the music in the series was composed by Tsuneyoshi Saito. The first opening theme is "Binetsu S.O.S!!" (微熱S.O.S!!) by Miyuki Hashimoto and the second opening theme is "Zankoku yo Kibō to Nare" (残酷よ希望となれ) by Aira Yūki. The ending theme is "Yūkyū no Tabibito ~ Dear boy" (悠久の旅人~Dear boy) by Snow*.
Other media
A manga adaptation was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Comp Ace between volumes 12 and 23 sold between February 26, 2007 and January 26, 2008. A single tankōbon volume was released on September 26, 2007. It is not a direct adaptation from the anime and features a different story line.
There are two light novels based on Idolmaster: Xenoglossia. The first, Idolmaster: Xenoglossia ~Bonds~ (アイドルマスター XENOGLOSSIA ~絆~ Aidorumasutā Xenoglossia ~Kizuna~), was published in Fujimi Shobo's Gekkan Dragon Magazine between the July and November 2007 issues. The second, Idolmaster: Xenoglossia Iori Sunshine! (アイドルマスター XENOGLOSSIA 伊織サンシャイン! Aidorumasutā Xenoglossia Iori Sanshain), was published in Hobby Japan's Charano! between the August 2007 and February 2008 issues.
An Internet radio show to promote the series called Haruka and Yayoi in the Spring-style Radio (春香とやよいの弥生式らじお Haruka to Yayoi no Yayoishiki Rajio) broadcast 51 episodes between March 9, 2007 and February 22, 2008. It was hosted by Yuka Iguchi and Ami Koshimizu and produced by Lantis Radio, Beat Net Radio! and Nifty.
See also
- List of The Idolmaster episodes for the 2011 series
References
External links
- Idolmaster: Xenoglossia at Sunrise (Japanese)
- Idolmaster: Xenoglossia (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
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