Miyuki | |
みゆき | |
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Manga | |
Written by | Mitsuru Adachi |
Published by | Shogakukan |
Magazine | Shōnen Big Comic |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | 1980 – 1984 |
Volumes | 12 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Mizuho Nishikubo[a] |
Produced by |
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Written by |
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Music by |
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Studio | Kitty Film Mitaka Studio |
Original network | Fuji TV |
Original run | March 31, 1983 – April 20, 1984 |
Episodes | 37 |
Live-action film | |
Directed by | Kazuyuki Izutsu |
Produced by | Tomohiro Iji |
Music by | |
Studio | Kitty Film Mitaka Studio |
Released | September 16, 1983 |
Runtime | 97 minutes |
Television drama | |
Directed by | Setsurō Wakamatsu |
Produced by |
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Studio |
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Original network | Fuji TV |
Original run | August 4, 1986 |
Miyuki (Japanese: みゆき) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Mitsuru Adachi. It was published by Shogakukan from 1980 to 1984 in the biweekly manga magazine Shōnen Big Comic (precursor to the current Weekly Young Sunday). The series was adapted into a film, an anime television series, and a live-action television drama. It was very popular in Japan and was one of the winners of the 1982 Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen and shōjo manga, along with Adachi's Touch manga.[1]
Miyuki was Adachi's first manga adapted as an anime. The 37-episode anime series was broadcast from March 31, 1983, until April 20, 1984, on the Fuji Television network.[2] The live-action film version was released on September 16, 1983.[3] The television drama, produced by Fuji TV and Kyodo Television (a television production house), aired on August 4, 1986. The anime has been dubbed into several other languages including French and Spanish.
Masato Wakamatsu, 16 years old, is working at the beach one summer. Having made a bad impression on his classmate/crush Miyuki Kashima, he makes a pass at another pretty girl. To Masato's shock, the girl turns out to be his younger stepsister Miyuki (15), who has been living abroad with their father for the past six years.
As school progresses, Masato starts dating Miyuki Kashima. He and his sister Miyuki are living alone together, and he is troubled by his conflicting emotions: filial and romantic feelings toward a sister who may or may not know she is not related to him by blood.[4]
No. | Japanese release date | Japanese ISBN | |
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1 | April 10, 1990[7] | 4-09122-821-6 | |
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Masato Wakamatsu is working at a summer beach house and tries to court his classmate Miyuki Kashima. After failing and humiliating himself, he befriends a pretty girl at the beach; he returns home and discovers that pretty girl is his step-sister, Miyuki Wakamatsu, whom was separated from him for the past six years and has returned to live with him. At school, Kashima empathizes with Wakamatsu's mistakes and the two begin dating. Meanwhile, Masato's friend, Ryūichi Masaki, attempts to court Miyuki, who plays along but is apathetic towards his approach. Meanwhile at home, Masato is conflicted between seeing Miyuki as a girl and sister and continues adjusting to his life with her. Later, Masato goes on a date with Kashima but is sabotaged by Miyuki, who feels neglected by him. Afterwards, Torao Nakata, Miyuki's middle school gym teacher, and Yasujirō Kashima, Kashima's father, fall for Miyuki's beauty and attempts to court her. A year passes and Miyuki enrolls into Masato's school and is stalked by Torao who becomes the highschool gym teacher. Later, Yasujirō blackmails Masato into inviting him and Miyuki to a picnic in order to date his daughter. Masato agrees, regrets it immediately, and expresses relief when weather cancels their trip. Masato's popular classmate, Kenji Kōsaka, attempts to court Kashima and Miyuki only to be outdone by Masato. | |||
2 | May 10, 1990[8] | 4-09122-822-4 | |
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Masato discovers a letter from his father asking Miyuki to return abroad with him; Miyuki declines and opts to stay with Masato instead. Torao comes down with a cold and is visited by Miyuki. Torao attempts to propose to Miyuki but mistakenly proposes to Miyuki Euhara, his marriage candidate. Later, Masato and his friends arrange a mountain trip and are sabotaged by Ryūichi, who blackmails them to work at his beach house so he could be with Miyuki. At the beach house, Ryūichi attempts to rape Miyuki but is outwitted by her and falls asleep instead. Later, Ryūichi needs a blood transplant and demands one from Miyuki; Masato worries Miyuki might discover they are not blood related but learns they coincidentally share the same blood type; Masato then donates blood in her place. After summer, Torao convinces Miyuki to go on a pity date with him, and antagonizes his fiancé's father to escape marriage. Masato's class has a field trip leaving Miyuki alone. Ryūichi, Torao, and Yasujirō then intrude upon Miyuki's home, hoping to seduce her. Masato is able to deduce Miyuki's situation, despite her facade, and returns home early. Kashima begins to feel neglected by Masato, who prioritizes Miyuki over her, and asks another guy out. That person is revealed to have neglected his family for Kashima, causing her to end the date and gain new insight towards Masato. During the winter break, a Canadian man attempts to marry Miyuki but is deported and returned to his fiancé. School resumes and Ryūichi is to be expelled from school due to multiple repeats. In his anger, he accidentally performs notable good deeds, earning him media recognition and pressures the school to promote him to the next grade. | |||
3 | June 10, 1990[9] | 4-09122-823-2 | |
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Masato's class arranges a play with Kashima as the heroine and Kenji as the hero. Masato saves Kenji's life and usurps the role as the hero due to the latter becoming injured. Later, the plane Masato's father is on crashes and the two plan on how to survive financially without him. Shortly after, they learn he is alive. This event causes Masato to wonder what to do with his life and decides to enter a university with Kashima. Kashima is living with Masato until her parents return from their vacation. Miyuki tells her a story about a boy who saved her from a lion whom she promised marriage to in return. Kashima discovers claw marks on Masato's back and realizes he was the boy. After Kashima's parents return, at school, Ryūichi cons the students to take pictures of girls in their underwear. Masato almost enters pictures of Miyuki, who volunteered, but reconsiders at the thought of people seeing Miyuki's body. Later, Kenji makes multiple attempts to sabotage Masato's relationship with Kashima but is overcome by the couple. Returning home from the trip, Ryūichi avoids Miyuki, hoping his disappearance would trick her into seeing him. He begins to develop Miyuki-withdrawals and becomes sick; a coincidental meeting with her cures him and he returns to his normal courting activities. Later, Masato meets his childhood caretaker who he asks to keep his non-existent blood relationship with Miyuki a secret. Right after, he realizes he lost the family registry at school. A loner student finds it and blackmails Masato to treat him to ramen. | |||
4 | July 10, 1990[10] | 4-09122-824-0 | |
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The loner student attempts to blackmail Masato to set him up on a date with Miyuki. After being rebuffed by Miyuki, the loner student gains a new personality and is able to befriend his classmates before transferring schools. Masato discovers he failed his university entrance exam. In response, Kashima takes a year off to attend cram school with him. The two then continue their daily lives until summer, where Miyuki's father requests to send her to Australia for the break. Masato discovers that Ryūichi and Torao intend to follow Miyuki to Australia. After hearing about the aggressive nature of men there, Masato tells Miyuki to stay with him. After enjoying their summer, Ryūichi blackmails his teacher to host a play where he and Miyuki are the romantic leads. Ryūichi and his replacement both require a sudden appendectomy, allowing Masato to usurp his position in the play. The play concludes with a kiss between the two. | |||
5 | August 10, 1990[11] | 4-09122-824-0 | |
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The school exam date approaches and Miyuki makes herself scarce so Masato can concentrate. After passing the test, Masato collapses from Miyuki-withdrawal. Their daily life continues until spring, where Masato's childhood friend, Yūichi Sawada, returns to visit. Yūichi falls in love with Miyuki and asks Masato for permission to marry her. Masato accepts, believing it is his duty as a brother and Yūichi would bring her happiness, but is uncomfortable with his decision. During Yūichi and Miyuki's wedding, Masato confesses his non blood-relation to Miyuki and his feelings of love towards her. Months later, Masato and Miyuki are married in the Philippines offscreen and send postcards to all their acquaintances in Japan. Elsewhere, Yūichi meets Kashima in the streets and the two approach each other happily. |
The anime television series aired from March 31, 1983, to April 20, 1984, on the Fuji TV network. Because Kitty Film was already producing the popular Urusei Yatsura anime television series, they asked Tomoyuki Miyata from Tatsunoko Pro to produce the Miyuki series, Mizuho Nishikubo to be the supervising director for the series, and had their own in-house studio (Kitty Mitaka Studio) handle the animation. Fuji TV had wanted Group TAC, the studio which had done the animation for the first Nine TV special, to do the animation, but arrangements had already been made. Subsequent Adachi works were all animated by Group TAC.
The lead role of voicing Miyuki Wakamatsu was given to Yōko Oginome after she auditioned for Kitty Film's Shonben Rider. Masatoshi Nagase, the voice actor for Masato Wakamatsu, is known for his passionate acting and his love scenes.
Kitty Records was contracted to provide the music for the series, and one group, H2O, supplied the opening theme and two of the three ending themes. H2O's song "'Full of Memories" (想い出がいっぱい, Omoide ga Ippai) was a hit, reaching #6 on the Oricon charts. It is considered one of the "standard songs" from 1980's era Japan.
The series uses four pieces of theme music: an opening and three closing themes. The opening theme is "10% Chance of Rain" (10%の雨予報, Jū-pāsento no Ame Yohō) by H2O, with the lyrics of the chorus slightly altered from the original version to be more appropriate to the series. The first ending theme is "Full of Memories" (想い出がいっぱい, Omoide ga Ippai) by H2O and was used up to episode 13 and returns for episodes 20 to 22. The second ending theme is "Summer Holiday" (サマー·ホリデー, Samā Horidē) by Michiko Kawai and was used between episodes 14 and 19. The final ending theme is "Good-bye Season" (Good-bye シーズン, Guddobai Shīzun) by H2O and was used for the remaining episodes.
After its original run on the Fuji TV network, the series was rebroadcast on the NTV network in 1986.
A Spanish language dub of the anime series was made in Venezuela in 1992 and aired on Telecinco in Spain and in Latin America. The series is known as Vacaciones de verano ("Summer Vacation") in Spanish and the dubbers changed the given names of most of the main characters, with Masato becoming Tony, Miyuki Kashima changed to Katia, and Miyuki Wakamatsu altered to Monica.
The Miyuki anime television movie aired in the Fuji TV Nissei Family Special slot on September 16, 1983. It was directed by Kazuyuki Izutsu. Screenwriter Yumiko Takaboshi later worked on the composition of Touch anime series. It came out at the same time the Nine the Original movie was released in theaters. The Nine movie was made by the same staff which later worked on the Touch anime series.
The TV drama special aired as part of the Monday Dramaland (月曜ドラマランド, Getsuyō Doramarando) on Fuji TV on August 4, 1986.
Sources:[12]