Ai Yori Aoshi
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Ai Yori Aoshi (藍より青し) is a manga by Kou Fumizuki released in 1998 on Hakusensha's Young Animal, a magazine for young men. The original manga series ended its run in 2005.
The literal translation of the title is "Bluer Than Indigo," however the title is a play on words, where the word "Ai" implies the word love even though the kanji used for the "Ai" in the title literally means indigo (藍 Ai). Thus, the title is also translated as "True Blue Love."
Ai Yori Aoshi was made into an anime in 2002 and a video game was released for the PlayStation 2. The title is taken from a quote from the Chinese philosopher Xun Zi , Ao wa Ai yori Idete Ai yori Aoshi (青は藍より出でて藍より青し), (青出於藍而勝於藍) in Traditional Chinese. The anime series was completed when its second season under the title Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi was completed in 2003 (藍より青し ~縁~). The anime was released in North America by Geneon and in Singapore by Odex. The manga was released in English by TOKYOPOP. The visual novel game was released in English for Windows PCs by Hirameki International.
The series is sometimes referred to as a halfway point between a harem anime and a magical girlfriend story.
Story
Kaoru Hanabishi appears to be an average university student but in actuality he is the eldest son of Yuji Hanabishi, the head of Hanabishi Zaibatsu, and was set to take over the zaibatsu after his father retired. His mother, Kumi Honjo, and his father never married, and this had made life difficult for both him and his mother. Kaoru's father died when he was five years old. Since then, Yuji's father, grandfather to Kaoru, took Kaoru under his wing and began educating him for the eventual succession. Yet Kaoru never was at home in the Hanabishi family and left to live by himself after his mother died.
There is, however, someone who loved Kaoru so much that she would do whatever was necessary to be with him.
Her name is Aoi Sakuraba. Aoi is the only daughter of the owner of Sakuraba Kimono Store (later renamed to Sakuraba Department Store). Kaoru's family and Sakuraba's family had agreed for Kaoru to wed Aoi but after Kaoru walked out, the marriage was cancelled. Both families had a friendly relationship and Aoi had been in love with Kaoru from the start, which Kaoru was unaware of. The Sakuraba family had already been searching for someone suitable but Aoi was unwilling to marry someone else and walked out, chasing Kaoru.
Both were freed from their families' affair but did not know how to make their living. Miyabi Kagurazaki, who had been looking out for Aoi, offered the two a way. Aoi and Miyabi would live together in a grand western style summer house of Sakuraba family and Kaoru would live in a house for servants next to it. This would prevent a scandal, much like the one that had made Kaoru's life difficult, as the two would be living separately. But soon, Kaoru's friends, who just happen to be attractive females, took residence in the house, and it quickly became a dormitory. Very soon, Aoi became a landlady of the dormitory.
Major characters and seiyū
Names are in Western order, with the given name before the surname.
- Kaoru Hanabishi (花菱薫 Hanabishi Kaoru) by Soichiro Hoshi
- Aoi Sakuraba (桜庭葵 Sakuraba Aoi) by Ayako Kawasumi
Aoi's given name (Aoi) has the same pronunciation as the Japanese word for "blue" (青), but the kanji used (葵) translates to "mallow." Her surname (桜庭 - Sakuraba) means "cherry blossom garden."
- Tina Foster (ティナ・フォスター) by Satsuki Yukino
In many respects, Tina is one of the more deeply developed - and somewhat tragic - characters of the show, despite her ditzy behavior. Being an American, and yet having been raised in Japan, she is constantly haunted by the fact that she can never truly fit in either country. When she left Japan to attend high school in America, she explained that she was unable to fit in there because she was culturally Japanese. But she also realizes that she can never truly fit in Japan either, because of her appearance. Tina wishes that she had been born Japanese, so that perhaps she would have a better chance at winning Kaoru's heart.
Tina is very deeply in love with Kaoru, but pains her heart with efforts to hide her feelings, because she thinks that he could never feel the same way about her. Towards the end of Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi she realizes that Kaoru loves Aoi, and that her own opportunity to win his heart has passed.
- Miyabi Kagurazaki (神楽崎雅 Kagurazaki Miyabi) by Akiko Hiramatsu
- Taeko Minazuki (水無月妙子 Minazuki Taeko) by Kaori Mizuhashi
Taeko's given name (Taeko) means "delicate child" in Japanese, reflecting her clumsy personality.
- Mayu Miyuki (美幸繭 Miyuki Mayu) by Sayaka Narita
Mayu shares a rivalry with Tina, whom she considers uncouth, and cannot stand to be in her presence. The two characters are opposites in many ways. Where Mayu is serious, Tina is playful. Where Mayu is uncharacteristically open in her unrealistic desire for Kaoru, Tina is uncharacteristically shy in her [almost] reciprocated love of Kaoru. Where Tina is an American who embraces Japanese culture, Mayu is Japanese and embraces Western culture. When Tina accidentally bumped into her during their first meeting, Mayu reprimanded her in English, while the out-of-practice Tina struggled to recall an appropriate retort in her native language. Even their introduction to Kaoru are mirrors of one another. Kaoru did much to lift Mayu out of her loneliness, while Tina lifted Kaoru out of his own loneliness and apathy following his defection from the Hanabishi clan.
Mayu's given name (Mayu) means "cocoon," a reference to her family owning a silk company. The material from the cocoons of silkworms are used to make silk.
Mayu is a gifted pianist, though this is never mentioned until the Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi series.
- Chika Minazuki (水無月ちか Minazuki Chika) by Haruko Momoi
- Uzume (ウズメ) by Yuka Inokuchi - Tina's pet ferret. He seems to prefer the company of Miyabi, much to Tina's chagrin.
Enishi
Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi (藍より青し ~縁~) is the second season of an animated television series based on the manga Ai Yori Aoshi. The anime is distributed in DVD format by Geneon in North America. It was originally aired in Japan in 2003. Ai Yori Aoshi Enishi takes place two years after the events of Ai Yori Aoshi. Kaoru is now a graduate student, and Chika is now a high school student. The other characters are still in the same positions that they were at the end of Ai Yori Aoshi. Like Ai Yori Aoshi, few episodes are centred around developing the relationship of the two leads, Kaoru and Aoi. Instead, the majority of episodes are devoted to slice of life episodes for the other characters. However, there are major changes that take place within the series. Many of the later episodes are used to develop Tina Foster's character. The end of the final episode includes brief glimpses at the near-term futures of the show's characters following the series' end.Manga
- Volume 1 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133714; English Edition: ISBN 1591826454)
- Volume 2 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133722; English Edition: ISBN 1591826462)
- Volume 3 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133730; English Edition: ISBN 1591826470)
- Volume 4 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133749; English Edition: ISBN 1591826489)
- Volume 5 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133757; English Edition: ISBN 1591826497)
- Volume 6 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133765; English Edition: ISBN 1591826500)
- Volume 7 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133773; English Edition: ISBN 1595323708)
- Volume 8 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592133781; English Edition: ISBN 1595323716)
- Volume 9 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 459213379X; English Edition: ISBN 1595323724)
- Volume 10 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134400; English Edition: ISBN 1595323732)
- Volume 11 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134419; English Edition: ISBN 1595323740)
- Volume 12 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134427; English Edition: ISBN 1595323759)
- Volume 13 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134435; English Edition: ISBN 1595323767)
- Volume 14 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134443; English Edition: ISBN 1598162012 — due to be released October 302006)
- Volume 15 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134451)
- Volume 16 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 459213446X)
- Volume 17 (Japanese Edition: ISBN 4592134478)
External links
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