We Were There | |
僕等がいた (Bokura ga Ita) | |
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Genre | |
Manga | |
Written by | Yuki Obata |
Published by | Shogakukan |
English publisher | |
Imprint | Flower Comics |
Magazine | Betsucomi |
Demographic | Shōjo |
Original run | April 13, 2002 – February 13, 2012 |
Volumes | 16 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Kōichirō Sōtome (Chief) Akitaro Daichi |
Produced by | Susumu Hieda Yasushi Ōshima Takuya Yui Fuyuna Iizuka (#1–14) Aya Kawamura (#15–26) Chikako Furuya (#15–26) |
Written by | Mamiko Ikeda |
Music by | Jun Abe Seiji Mutō |
Studio | Artland |
Original network | Chiba TV, KBS, Tokyo MX, TV Saitama, GBS, Kids Station, TrueVisions |
Original run | July 3, 2006 – December 25, 2006 |
Episodes | 26 |
Live-action film | |
Directed by | Takahiro Miki |
Written by | Tomoko Yoshida |
Music by | Suguru Matsutani |
Released | March 17, 2012 April 21, 2012 (Part 2) | (Part 1)
Runtime | 100 minutes |
We Were There (Japanese: 僕等がいた, Hepburn: Bokura ga Ita) is a Japanese romance manga series written and illustrated by Yuki Obata. The story follows the relationship between Motoharu Yano and Nanami Takahashi, starting from their teenage years and continuing into their early twenties. It was serialized in Shogakukan's Betsucomi magazine from April 2002 to February 2012 and later collected into 16 bound volumes under the Flower Comics imprint. The manga is licensed for an English-language release in North America by Viz Media.
We Were There was adapted into a 26-episode anime television series, produced by Artland and directed by Akitaro Daichi, which aired in Japan from July 3 to December 25, 2006. A two-part live-action film adaptation, starring Toma Ikuta and Yuriko Yoshitaka, and directed by Takahiro Miki, was released in Japan on March 17 and April 21, 2012, respectively.
In 2005, the series won the 50th Shogakukan Manga Award in the shōjo manga category.
Nanami Takahashi, a teenage girl in her first year of high school, hopes to make new friends quickly. The center of attention at her school is Motoharu Yano, a very popular boy, whom Nanami dislikes at the beginning, due to his apparent superficiality. However, she soon falls in love with him, but Yano is still affected by the loss of his girlfriend, Nana Yamamoto. Nana was killed in a car crash a year before the beginning of the story. Because she was with her ex-boyfriend at the time of her death, Yano suspects she was cheating on him. Due to this, he is unable to trust people or to talk about his relationship with her; instead, he chooses to pretend he does not care very much about the situation.
Nanami confesses her love to Yano but is rejected when he is unable to tell her if he loves her back. Despite that, she is still willing to support him and reassures him she will always be by his side. Soon, Yano realizes he has fallen in love with her as well, so they start going out. However, Yano's secrets (including the fact that he slept with Nana's little sister, Yuri, after the accident and his unwillingness to talk about his feelings for his dead girlfriend) make Nanami unsure to the point that she decides to end the relationship, believing she is unable to make him happy. The story becomes even more complicated when Masafumi Takeuchi, Yano's best friend, also falls in love with Nanami and becomes Yano's rival.
Due to these circumstances, Nanami is confused over whom she should choose, but she soon realizes that Yano is the one she genuinely loves. She agrees to start going out with him again, on the condition that she can find out more about the relationship between Nana and Yano and his true feelings about what had happened. Their romance takes an unexpected turn when Yano finds out that his mother, Yoko, wants to move to Tokyo. Upon hearing this, Nanami tells him to make a decision without taking her into consideration. The anime ends with Yano's departure; however, the two of them decide to continue their relationship.
The manga picks up four years later. It is revealed that Yano and Nanami kept in touch for about six months; then, suddenly, he stopped contacting her and disappeared without a trace. Tired of waiting, hurt and confused, Nanami starts a relationship with Takeuchi. Even so, she is still in love with Yano and unable to forget about their common past. She befriends a co-worker named Akiko Sengenji, who is revealed to be one of Yano's classmates from the Tokyo high school he transferred to. In a series of flashbacks, it is shown that Yano was forced to work part-time when his mother was diagnosed with cancer, but kept everything hidden from Nanami, not wanting to worry her. Following an unexpected visit from Michiko, her former friend and the wife of Yano's father, Yoko became increasingly paranoid, fearing he would leave her. When Yano announced his decision to go and visit Nanami, she accused him of being insensitive. After a short, but violent fight, Yoko hung herself; as in Nana's case, Yano blamed himself for her death and therefore decided to sever all the ties with his past.
Sengenji is also in love with Yano, but, despite this, she sees Nanami as a friend, not as a rival. She is the one who reveals Yano's whereabouts to Nanami (including the fact that he adopted his father's name, Nagakura) and later the fact that he lives with Yuri Yamamoto. As a result, Nanami rejects Takeuchi when he proposes to her, feeling that it wouldn't be fair to marry him. Upon meeting Nanami for the first time in more than five years, Yano claims he is in love with another woman. However, when he and Nanami meet again, she tells him that she knows about the relationship between him and Yuri. He then admits that he only stays with Yuri because her mother is dying and he feels he can't leave her alone. He also tells Nanami about his mother's suicide, and also about his panic attacks. During this meeting, it is hinted that he's still in love with her.
Meanwhile, Takeuchi decides to continue his relationship with Nanami, but only as friends. He tells her that she will eventually reach Yano and asks her to wait for him. He also starts to push Yano to admit his own feelings for Nanami and points out that no matter how strong she seems, she is unable to deal with the situation by herself. Nanami and Yano have an unexpected meeting, during which Yano finally confesses he wanted her to hold him back instead of letting him leave with his mother. Shortly after, Yuri's mother dies, which prompts Yuri to end her relationship with Yano. She reveals to him that her sister Nana never cheated on him and that she only wanted to have a proper break-up with her ex-boyfriend at the time of the accident.
Yano decides to start over with Nanami and tries to contact her on the telephone. He fails several times due to her busy schedule, but eventually reaches her. During their conversation, a severely over-worked and anemic Nanami falls down a flight of stairs and is brought to the hospital injured and unconscious. Terrified by the possibility of losing her as well, Yano rushes to her side; as a result, the two of them are reunited. The finale of the manga shows Yano proposing to Nanami and then visiting Nana Yamamoto's gravesite with her.
Written and illustrated by Yuki Obata, We Were There was serialized in Shogakukan's monthly shōjo manga magazine Betsucomi, starting in the May 2002 issue (released on April 13).[3][4] The series went on an 18-month hiatus following the January 2008 issue (released in December 2007) and resumed serialization in the July 2009 issue (released in June).[5] The final chapter was published in Betsucomi's March 2012 issue (released on February 13).[2][6] The individual chapters were collected into 16 tankōbon (bound volumes) by Shogakukan under the Flower Comics imprint. The first volume was published on October 26, 2002, and the last volume was published on March 26, 2012.[7][8]
The series is licensed for an English-language release in North America by Viz Media under the Shojo Beat imprint. The first volume was published on November 4, 2008, and the last volume was published on May 7, 2013.[9][10] We Were There is also licensed for regional language releases in France by Soleil Manga,[11] in Germany by Egmont Manga & Anime,[12] and in Argentina and Spain by Editorial Ivrea.[13]
No. | Original release date | Original ISBN | English release date | English ISBN | |
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1 | October 26, 2002[7] | 4-0913-8191-X | November 4, 2008[9] | 1-4215-2018-4 | |
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2 | February 26, 2003[14] | 4-0913-81928 | January 6, 2009[15] | 1-4215-2019-2 | |
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3 | June 26, 2003[16] | 4-0913-8193-6 | March 3, 2009[17] | 1-4215-2020-6 | |
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4 | November 26, 2003[18] | 4-0913-8194-4 | May 5, 2009[19] | 1-4215-2021-4 | |
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5 | April 26, 2004[20] | 4-0913-8195-2 | July 7, 2009[21] | 1-4215-2022-2 | |
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6 | July 26, 2004[22] | 4-0913-8196-0 | September 1, 2009[23] | 1-4215-2023-0 | |
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7 | December 20, 2004[24] | 4-0913-8197-9 | November 3, 2009[25] | 1-4215-2024-9 | |
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8 | April 25, 2005[26] | 4-0913-8198-7 | January 5, 2010[27] | 1-4215-2025-7 | |
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9 | December 20, 2005[28] | 4-0913-0280-7 | March 2, 2010[29] | 1-4215-2026-5 | |
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10 | April 26, 2006[30] | 4-0913-0437-0 | May 4, 2010[31] | 1-4215-2027-3 | |
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11 | November 24, 2006[32] | 4-0913-0718-3 | July 06, 2010[33] | 1-4215-2028-1 | |
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12 | August 24, 2007[34] | 978-4-0913-1080-4 | May 3, 2011[35] | 1-4215-2160-1 | |
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13 | October 26, 2009[36] | 978-4-0913-2716-1 | November 1, 2011[37] | 1-4215-3673-0 | |
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14 | August 26, 2010[38] | 978-4-0913-3390-2 | May 5, 2012[39] | 1-4215-4098-3 | |
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15 | June 24, 2011[40] | 978-4-0913-3798-6 | November 6, 2012[41] | 1-4215-4216-1 | |
16 | March 26, 2012[8] | 978-4-09-134317-8 | May 7, 2013[10] | 1-4215-5155-1 |
We Were There was adapted into an anime television series, produced by Artland and directed by Akitaro Daichi, which premiered in Japan on July 3, 2006.[42] It aired for 26 episodes until its conclusion on December 25, 2006.[4] The episodes were released on nine Region 2 DVD volumes by Pony Canyon, with each volume containing three episodes, except the final volume which contained two. The first volume was released on October 4, 2006, and the last on June 6, 2007.[43][44]
In May 2011, production on a live-action film adaption of the manga was announced.[45] The film was released in two parts in Japan on March 17 and April 21, 2012.[46] It was directed by Takahiro Miki and starred Ikuta Toma and Yoshitaka Yuriko in the lead roles.[47]
Two CD soundtracks, produced by Marvelous Entertainment, were released by Geneon Entertainment on February 7, 2007, using music from the anime adaptation. Eternity (永遠, Eien) contained twelve tracks, while Locus (軌跡, Kiseki) contained 22 tracks.[48]
A fan book, We Were There Official Fan Book (僕等がいた 公式ファンブック, Bokura ga Ita Koushiki Fan Bukku), containing character profiles, a summary of the story, and commentary on the series from Obata was published by Shogakukan on November 25, 2005.[5][49]
A 36-page postcard book was also published by Shogakukan on December 21, 2007.[50]
In 2005, We Were There won the 50th Shogakukan Manga Award in the shōjo category, tied with Hinako Ashihara's Sand Chronicles.[51] The manga has sold over 10 million copies in Japan.[52]