翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Book of Discipline (Church of Scotland)
・ Book of Discipline (Quaker)
・ Book of Discipline (United Methodist)
・ Book of Divine Worship
・ Book of Documents
・ Book of Dogma
・ Book of Dowth
・ Book of Dragons
・ Book of Dreams
・ Book of Dreams (disambiguation)
・ Book of Dreams (novel)
・ Boogie-Woogie String Along for Real
・ Boogiemonsters
・ Boogiepop and Others
・ Boogiepop Phantom
Boogiepop series
・ Boogiepop wa Warawanai
・ Boogies Diner
・ Boogiest Band In Town
・ BoogiRoot
・ Boogity Boogity
・ Boogity, Boogity – A Tribute to the Comedic Genius of Ray Stevens
・ Boohbah
・ Booher
・ Booher, West Virginia
・ Boohwal
・ Booi Aha
・ Booie, Queensland
・ Booing
・ Booji


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Boogiepop series : ウィキペディア英語版
Boogiepop series

The of Japanese light novels is written by Kouhei Kadono and illustrated by Kouji Ogata. It includes titles from different media, each connected by repeating characters and related plots. Presented in vignettes, each chapter presents the reader with only snapshots of what is happening, leaving them to find clues to understand the greater plot.
''Boogiepop'' is best characterized as young adult fiction and is credited with starting the light novel trend in Japan. By March 2000, two million copies of Kadono's Boogiepop light novels works were in print. The anime and live action film inspired by the original light novels have been released in English by The Right Stuf International, while Seven Seas Entertainment released four of the light novels and the manga.
== Overview ==

To face the "enemies of the world", the ''shinigami'' Boogiepop automatically rises to the surface. In Boogiepop's world, the Towa Organization, a shadowy group seeking to control humanity, managed to capture an alien organism who had taken the form of a highly evolved human. By studying him, the Towa Organization was able to create synthetic humans, people who have been artificially enhanced with special abilities. The mission of the Towa Organization and its agents is to find and kill MPLS, people who are more evolved than others and possess special abilities. However, Boogiepop will not let the Towa Organization get its way and he is not alone in his efforts.
The Boogiepop series is very much about the characters: their relationships, their pasts, their memories. This is especially true for how their pasts molded them into the people they are today. It can also be seen through scenes being presented from the perspective of different characters, and how the individual casts a different "feel" by how they relate to events.〔DVD commentary featuring Jeff Thompson and Joe DiGiorgi (August 2001) ''Boogiepop Phantom Evolution 1''〕 Another important theme is change. How the world changes and our different perceptions of this change, especially how one's perception of things changes as they grow up.〔DVD commentary featuring Jeff Thompson, Crispin Freeman, and Rachel Lillie (2001) ''Boogiepop Phantom Evolution 2''〕 ''Boogiepop Phantom'' is also highly metaphorical, with a character or an image representing much more than face value.〔DVD commentary featuring Jeff Thompson and Angora Deb (2002) ''Boogiepop Phantom Evolution 4''〕 It is also "a show about the inter-related nature of people's lives and the concept that they know of as time."
Kadono has published fourteen light novels and has serialized short stories in ''Dengegi HP'', many of which have been published as a four-volume series about Pete Beat, a member of the Towa Organization. Two manga serials have been drawn for this series, which were serialized in ''Dengeki Daioh'' and ''Dengeki Animation''.〔 In 2000, the anime series ''Boogiepop Phantom'' aired on Japanese television; a drama CD, featuring Kaori Shimizu, was released to promote this series.〔 Later that year, the movie ''Boogiepop and Others'' was released.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Boogiepop series」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.