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Friday, May 25, 2012

Hanasaku Iroha movie premieres this fall!

It turns out that the upcoming anime is actually a special feature film!



The current June issue of Gangan Joker magazine has formally confirmed that the Hanasaku Iroha: Home Sweet Home anime is an original feature film that will hit Japanese theaters later this year. Studio P.A. Works’ 26-episode original slice-of-life anime drama TV series aired from April through September 2011.

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Dog Days trailer, premieres on July 7

The homepage for the Dog Days anime franchise has released the first trailer to reveal animation footage from the show’s upcoming second series. The Dog Days’ TV series will premiere on July 7.
source: AnimeNation

Hagure Yūsha no Estetica anime promo; premieres on July 6

The series adapts Tetsuto Uesu's light novel series. The story follows an international training organization named Babel which protects the young people returning from another world. A wayward hero named Akatsuki has come back to the real world from a world of sword and magic called Areizaado, along with a beautiful girl who is a demon king's daughter. Uesu launched the novel series in 2010, and eight volumes have so far been released.


Dragon Age: Dawn of The Seeker Trailer; BD/ DVD will be released on May 29

A-MAZING!
 
In the film's Japanese-dubbed version, actress Chiaki Kuriyama (Battle Royale, Kill Bill, The Sky Crawlers) plays the knight heroine Cassandra Pentaghast, actor Shosuke Tanihara (Vexille, The Sky Crawlers, Pokémon the Movie: Black - Victini and Reshiram) plays a mage named Regalyan D'Marcall, and Gackt (Shiki, Supernatural: The Anime Series, Sket Dance) voices a Knight-Commander.

 In the English-dubbed version, Colleen Clinkenbeard plays Cassandra Pentaghast. Previously, anime distributor FUNimation Entertainment began streaming the official U.S. trailer and an English-dubbed 6-minute clip from the Dragon Age: Dawn of the Seeker film, also on May 8. G4 also streamed a series of 3 clips last week.
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Smile Precure! movie to premiere on October 27

The official Toei website has revealed that a feature-length film based on the Smile Precure! television series is slated to premiere on October 27 of this year. A final title for the film has yet to be determined.

 While a Precure film is traditionally released every fall in Japan, this is the first official listing to reveal definitive information on this year's film, which makes it the 13th feature-length film from the Precure franchise since it began in 2004. The Smile Precure! series began airing on Japanese television on February 5 of this year.

source: ANN

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Girls und Panzer trailer

o.o It will premiere this fall. The story centers around high school girls who drive tanks that exist in real life, as they compete in teams.



Moe is getting more amusing these days.

Black God manga to end in 3 chapters

Black God (manga)

Also known as Kurokami, Square Enix's Young Gangan magazine announced that Dall-Young Lim and Sung-woo Park will end their Black God supernatural action manga in three more chapters.

The manga has been running in the magazine since 2004, and Square Enix will publish the 19th and final compiled book volume on August 25. The story revolves around a game programmer named Keita who gets caught in a battle being fought by Kuro. Kuro is a Tera Guardian — a Mototsumitama or a guardian who maintains the Coexistence Equilibrium.

Kuro saves Keita's life during the battle and regenerates Keita's arm that Keita loses in the fight. This exchange creates a bond that unites the two in the battles ahead. Yen Press will publish the 17th volume of the manga in North America in October. source: ANN

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Muv-Luv Alternative: Total Eclipse trailer

This side story follows the test pilots and mechanics in the United Nations Forces' Tactical Surface Fighter Testing Unit in Alaska. Japanese-American Yūya Bridges (Daisuke Ono) is the Argos Test Team's main pilot for "XFJ Project," the initiative that is developing the newest Tactical Surface Fighter. Yui Takamura (Mai Nakahara) is the head of development for the project from the Japanese Empire's side.
source: ANN

Friday, May 18, 2012

Store: Shop 4 Used Cars review

Located in Salt Lake City, Utah, the ever growing used and new car dealer known as Ken Garff still holds to its 1932 principles of honesty, integrity, personalized customer service, and being a good corporate citizen.

This is still perfectly reflected in their site, Shop4usedCars.com, their great layout gives you all the options available so you can locate the nearest and best deal possible for you. Being IP based, their Google powered map will automatically direct you to the deals near your area.



For example, Houston and Pasadena residents can inmediately find a dealer in Clear Lake Chrysler Jeep Dodge Ram FIAT, with phone and address, so they can communicate right away to see what cars are there. Or if you are in Baytown, Texas, you can be redirected to Baytown GMC Buick, it can't be more simple.

Even after that, you can refine and classify your search even further by choosing a specific model and a range of price. By clicking on the Financing tab, you can apply right away for financing if available.

If you just want to find a good deal without looking for a place, their Specials tabs lists the best offers available along with the car's mileage so you can compare. Or, you can still choose to filter the search to an area and it tells you how far away the deal is in miles to you.

Once you decide to check on an offer, an accurate description and photos of the car will help you make the decision. Live support chat is available, as well as chat with the dealer. With one click you can get pre-approved for financing or a trade-in appraisal, or even better, you can name your price by filling the small form and get more for your money.



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Sunday, May 13, 2012

Code Geass: Akito the Exiled Trailers

It will premiere on August 4 in Japanese theaters. The title is Code Geass: Boukoku no Akito.




Mangirl! gets anime adaptation!

Comic Earth Star Magazine has formally announced that Kagari Tamaoka’s 4-koma comedy manga Mangirl! will be getting a TV anime adaptation from studio Dogakobo (Yuruyuri, Koihime Muso). The manga, which presently has one compiled volume, depicts the daily struggles of “Japan’s cutest manga editors,” an inexperienced but ambitious team of girls who hope to develop Japan’s best-selling manga magazine.

A moe version of Bakuman, well, let's see how it turns out. 

Zetsuen no Tempest Manga Gets anime adaptation

Not bad :) Something to look forward to.

The June issue of Square Enix's Monthly Shonen Gangan magazine is announcing on Saturday that a television anime adaptation of the Zetsuen no Tempest: The Civilization Blaster fantasy mystery manga has been green-lit. Kyou Shirodaira created the story with Arihide Sano, and Ren Saizaki draws the manga.

 The story centers around Yoshino, an ordinary high school student with a mysterious friend named Mahiro. Mahiro made a deal with a witch named Hakaze to hunt down the killers of his parents and sister. Now Mahiro is missing, and Hakaze confronts Yoshino. Yoshino find himself involved in a crisis that may doom the entire world.

 Source: ANN

Kuragehime author puts manga on hold due to injury

Princess Jellyfish
Princess Jellyfish 
Oh no :(

Kodansha's Morning magazine announced this week that manga creator Akiko Higashimura is putting Kuragehime on hold. She explained that she had fallen from the top of the stairs in her apartment complex and fractured the first joint in her right middle finger. As a result, Higashimura is also putting her Kuragehime (Princess Jellyfish) manga on hold for one issue.

The manga is not running in this year's 10th issue of Kodansha's Kiss magazine, which went on sale on Thursday. However, Higashimura plans on resuming the manga in the next issue on May 25. Higashimura then assured her followers on Twitter that she is almost completely recovered from her injury, and is already getting back to work this week.

She submitted the draft for the next Kuragehime chapter this Wednesday. She even added that she is now drawing the return of Kisekae Yuka-chan, the irregularly serialized manga that runs in Shueisha's Cookie magazine. She apologized for making her fans worry.
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One Piece won the 41st Japan Cartoonist Awards

The Japan Cartoonists Association of manga creators announced the winners of the 41st Japan Cartoonist Awards on Friday. Eiichiro Oda's One Piece pirate manga (pictured right) and Kimuchi Yokoyama's Nekodarake Nice cat manga (pictured below) won this year's 500,000-yen (about US$6,000) Grand Prizes. 

The judging committee also gave a 200,000-yen (US$2,500) Special Award to the Kyoto International Manga Museum for its contributions to manga culture. Kyoto Seika University took a shuttered elementary school in the heart of Kyoto and transformed it into a museum and center for manga studies.

 The Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Award went to shōjo and modern science-fiction manga pioneer Keiko Takemiya in recognition for her entire body of work and her other efforts. In addition to creating such acclaimed manga as Kaze to Ki no Uta and To Terra (Terra e), Takemiya has been an instructor at Kyoto Seika University.
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The Kyoto International Manga Museum used to b...
The Kyoto International Manga Museum used to be a school

Sunday, May 6, 2012

The controversy on 'Say Hello to Black Jack' author Satou Shuuhou, the financial situation of manga artists

Shuho Sato has been one of the most vocal authors over what are the earnings and the expenses of a manga artist, think of Fukuda Shinta from Bakuman in real life.This all starts with the news that the author pulled out of his contract with Kodansha, due to his dissatisfaction with the publishing company, stating that they were "making light of him."

 He explained that the certificate was stamped with the seal of the editor-in-chief of Morning, the magazine that Say Hello to Black Jack was serialized in, rather than the Kodansha company seal; the certificate is technically for an agreement between Kodansha and Sato's own company.

In a follow-up post, he stated that as a result of the contract being cancelled, the book was immediately considered as out of print, and that readers who find any unreturned copies of the title in bookstores should report them as "illegal publications."

He is famous for indicating that the top 100 mangaka in Japan apparently make 70 million yen a year on average from royalties. Sato met with some manga researchers the day before and the topic had come up in the discussion:

In 2009, 5300 people published mangaka in tankoubon format, and among them, the top 100 mangaka earned around 70 million yen a year. Everyone knows that Japan's best-selling manga of all time is Oda Eiichirou's "ONE PIECE", and it has been estimated that his yearly earnings amount to 3.1 billion yen (38 million USD), of which 1.3 billion come from tankoubon royalties. However, the rest of the 5200 mangaka who were published earned only a meager 2.8 million a year. The average salaryman earns 4.9 million a year, so for a mangaka to maintain a similar lifestyle, they need to publish at least a volume a year and sell over 120,000 copies in total. It is said that it is next to impossible to live one's whole life as a mangaka.
If we also take Bakuman series into account:

The average salary of a mangaka is: (5200 yen) $2905 monthly / $34860 per year, which is the equivalent of what an Illustrator / Graphic Designer earns in the US.

 In Bakuman (chapter 35), we are told that for a one-shot, mangaka are paid 9000 yen (~111 USD) per page. As for serialized mangaka, they are paid 12000 yen (~150 USD) per page as their starting pay (increases with seniority), though color pages are worth 1.5x more.

 The main cost is going to be assistant salaries. Assistant salaries were mentioned in the manga (Chapter 35, page 11). 380,000 yen a month (that's roughly $4,750 per month) for a head assistant and 160,000 yen a month (that's $2,000 per month) for a newbie assistant.

Assuming a veteran and two newbies, that is a monthly cost of approximately $8750 for assistants. But in the series the assistants were paid by the company.

Assuming a 16 page chapter each week (the color pages are variable), a mangaka makes $9,600 a month, ignoring royalties. Rent and other costs would probably eat away the difference (likely more).

When Shuho's Uzimaru was serialized. He made public his expenses, and it mostly goes away with the payment to assistants:

Costs per month: 

Tax: 80,000 yen (~USD$895)
Monthly pay for 3 assistants: 470,000 yen total (~USD$5,257) 
Monthly food expenses for the staff: 100,000 yen (~USD$1,118)
Cost of drawing materials and reference materials every month: 100,000 yen(~USD$1,118)
Rent for the studio: 70,000 yen(~USD$782)
Utilities bill and other misc expenses: 50,000 yen(~USD$559)

Satou Shuuhou got 800,000 yen(~USD$8,946) a month for Uzimaru, so deducting everything he has a deficit of 70,000 yen(~USD$782).

He stated that he makes a loss of 200,000 yen(~USD$ 2,236) a month if he includes his daily expenses and needs. Of course, since the cost of living in Japan is very high for all, natives and foreigners. And I'm not even mentioning that a mangaka works 20 hours a day.

So either you are a famous author who earns an insane amount of money per month, or you struggle at the bottom, earning less than the minimum wage, no wonder it's a gamble.

The question that remains is: would digital publishing change the situation for manga artists?








is Hayao Miyazaki's Spirited Away a story about child prostitution?!

Cover of "Spirited Away"


This is quite a rather amusing and warped interpretation of the message and subtext of the classic film by Hayao Miyazaki, the same way that Alice in Wonderland can be read as a tale about pedophilia.
From: http://japattack.com/main/node/81

Take it as you will, personally I don't believe it.
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Tari Tari teaser, premieres in July

This upcoming series is by P.A Works, the same studio that has brought us Hanasaku Iroha and Another.

663114 cicada anime short to be screened at Los Angeles Film Festival

This short by Isamu Hirabayashi is about a 66 year old cicada, who fights to shed its skin in order to survive. The short has been highly acclaimed, as it represents a metaphor of the tragedies of Hiroshima and Fukushima.  The official synopsis reads:
Every sixty-six years a cicada makes its way out of the earth and climbs up a tree to shed its skin. This is the way it's been since time immemorial. But this time it's different. A Japanese animation film in which an ostensibly resistant insect's monologue draws a parallel between the catastrophes of Hiroshima and Fukushima. The insect poses a fundamental question about the future of our planet. A film that takes different point of view. Short but hard-hitting.
The short can be found in youtube here:

Claymore manga ends this May in Jump Square magazine

The cover of the first tankōbon of the Claymor...

In the June issue of Shueisha's Jump Square magazine this week, the last panel of Norihiro Yagi's Claymore manga announced that the series has come to an end.

The magazine issue does not reveal what Yagi is planning to do next. In the issue's back page, where authors are given a line of text to send messages to readers, Yagi simply wrote, "My editor dropped off some of those super-spicy Peyoung noodles that everyone is talking about these days. I tried them, and they did a number on me."

The June issue's preview page for the next issue does not list Claymore. Volume 22 of the manga is slated to be released on June 4 in Japan. In North America, Viz will publish the 20th manga volume in July, and Funimation released the Claymore anime adaptation produced by MADHOUSE.
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Rosario+Vampire is the #1 selling manga in U.S. bookstores

The latest Nielsen BookScan list for April indicates that Sailor Moon manga fell from place #2 to place #18, and Naruto from #3 to #10.