Kamikaze Girls | |
下妻物語 (Shimotsuma Monogatari) | |
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Genre | Comedy, drama[1] |
Light novel | |
Written by | Novala Takemoto |
Published by | Shogakukan |
English publisher | Viz Media |
Published | September 2002[2] |
Live-action film | |
Directed by | Tetsuya Nakashima |
Written by | Tetsuya Nakashima |
Music by | Yoko Kanno |
Licensed by | |
Released |
|
Runtime | 102 minutes |
Manga | |
Written by |
|
Published by | Shogakukan |
English publisher | Viz Media |
Imprint | Flower Comics |
Magazine | Betsucomi |
Demographic | Shōjo |
Published | 2004 |
Volumes | 1 |
Kamikaze Girls, originally released in Japan as Shimotsuma Monogatari: Yankī-chan to Rorīta-chan (下妻物語 ヤンキーちゃんとロリータちゃん, "Shimotsuma Story: Delinquent Girl and Lolita Girl"),[4][5] is a 2002 Japanese light novel written by Novala Takemoto. The story centers on the friendship between two students named Momoko Ryugasaki and Ichigo "Ichiko" Shirayuri. These two are from completely different backgrounds: one is a Lolita-fashioned girl and the other, her antithesis, is a yankī (juvenile delinquent). Viz Media licensed the novel for an English-language release in North America in 2006.[6][7]
A live-action film adaptation of the novel directed by Tetsuya Nakashima premiered in Japan in May 2004. It starred Kyoko Fukada as Momoko and Anna Tsuchiya as Ichigo.[8][9] It was filmed in the town of Shimotsuma in Ibaraki Prefecture in eastern Japan. Viz Media screened the film in select theaters in the United States in late 2005 under the title Kamikaze Girls.[10] They released it on DVD with hardcoded English subtitles in January 2006.[11] The DVD extras include the original Japanese movie trailers, an interview with the lead actors, and a music video featuring Anna Tsuchiya. Third Window Films released Kamikaze Girls on Blu-ray in the United Kingdom in February 2010. The Blu-ray contains optional English subtitles, the same extras as the DVD, and the short film Birth of Unicorn Ryuji.[12]
A manga series based on the novel was illustrated by Yukio Kanesada and serialized in Shogakukan's Betsucomi magazine in 2004. The chapters were later collected into a single tankōbon (bound volume) published under Shogakukan's Flower Comics imprint. Viz Media licensed the manga for an English-language release in North America in 2006.
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