Baby Due April 25 Full Moon on April 19
| Chibi Maruko-chan | |
Encompass of the get-go tankōbon volume, featuring Momoko Sakura (Maruko) | |
| ちびまる子ちゃん | |
|---|---|
| Genre | Piece of life |
| Manga | |
| Written by | Momoko Sakura |
| Published past | Shueisha |
| Imprint | Ribon Mascot Comics |
| Magazine | Ribon |
| Demographic | Shōjo |
| Original run | August 1986 – Dec 2018 |
| Volumes | 17 |
| Anime television set series | |
| Directed past | Yumiko Suda Tsutomu Shibayama |
| Music past | Nobuyuki Nakamura |
| Studio | Nippon Blitheness |
| Original network | Fuji TV |
| English network | IN Nickelodeon Republic of india Ocean Animax Asia |
| Original run | January 7, 1990 – September 27, 1992 |
| Episodes | 142 |
| Anime film | |
| Directed by | Yumiko Suda Tsutomu Shibayama |
| Written past | Momoko Sakura |
| Music past | Nobuyuki Nakamura |
| Studio | Nippon Animation |
| Released | December 15, 1990 |
| Runtime | 94 minutes |
| Anime motion picture | |
| Chibi Maruko-chan: My Favorite Song | |
| Directed past | Yumiko Suda Tsutomu Shibayama |
| Written by | Momoko Sakura |
| Studio | Nippon Animation |
| Released | December 19, 1992 |
| Runtime | 93 minutes |
| Anime television series | |
| Directed by | Jun Takagi |
| Music by | Nobuyuki Nakamura |
| Studio | Nihon Animation |
| Original network | Fuji Television receiver |
| English network | Bounding main Animax Asia |
| Original run | Jan 8, 1995 – present |
| Episodes | 1203 |
| Television drama | |
| Chibi Maruko-chan (alive-activeness special) | |
| Original network | Fuji Idiot box |
| Original run | April 18, 2006 – Oct 31, 2006 |
| Episodes | 2 |
| Television drama | |
| Marumaru Maruko-chan | |
| Original network | Fuji TV |
| Original run | April 19, 2007 – February 28, 2008 |
| Episodes | 31 |
| Anime film | |
| |
Chibi Maruko-chan (Japanese: ちびまる子ちゃん, "Fiddling Maruko-chan") is a shōjo manga serial written and illustrated past Momoko Sakura. The series depicts the unproblematic, everyday life of Momoko Sakura, a young girl anybody calls Maruko, and her family in suburban Japan in the yr 1974. Maruko is a troublemaker, and every episode recounts Maruko's trouble and how she and her friends succeed in solving the situation. The serial is prepare in the former of Irie District (入江町), Shimizu, now function of Shizuoka Metropolis, birthplace of its author.
The first story under the title "Chibi Maruko-chan" was published in the August 1986 edition of the shōjo manga mag Ribon. Other semi-autobiographical stories past the author had appeared in Ribon and Ribon Original in 1984 and 1985, and were included in the starting time "Chibi Maruko-chan" tankōbon in 1987. The author first began writing and submitting strips in her last twelvemonth of senior high school, although Shueisha (the publisher of Ribon and Ribon Original) did non decide to run them until over a year later on. The writer'due south intent was to write "essays in manga grade";[1] many stories are inspired past incidents from her own life, and some characters are based on her family and friends. The cornball, honest and thoughtful tone of the strip led to its becoming popular among a wider audition.
Chibi Maruko-chan was adapted into an anime television series by Nippon Animation, which originally aired on Fuji Television and affiliated TV stations from January 7, 1990 to September 27, 1992. It has also spawned numerous games, animated films and merchandising, besides equally a second Television series running from 1995 to the present. Maruko's mode and themes are sometimes compared to the classic comic Sazae-san. In 1989, the manga tied to receive the Kodansha Manga Award for shōjo.[two] As of 2006, the collected volumes of the manga had sold more than 31 million copies in Nippon, making it the fifth acknowledged shōjo manga ever.[3]
On April 25, 2020, it was announced that the second serial would exist suspended due to the COVID-nineteen pandemic.[4] On June 14, 2020, it was announced that it would resume on June 21, 2020.[5]
Themes [edit]
The trademark face fault of this serial, in reaction to an bad-mannered "don't know what to say" state of affairs (or sometimes, embarrassment) is the sudden advent of vertical lines ( 黒い線 , kuroi sen ) on a graphic symbol'southward face, sometimes with an unexplained gust of wind bravado higher up that character'southward head.
Characters [edit]
The series has a big number and variety of secondary and recurring characters, some inspired past people who Sakura met. Some of them debuted in the anime and others derive from the original manga. Following are descriptions of the primary characters and family members that appear frequently in all chapters and episodes.
Sakura family [edit]
Dorsum row, from left: Hiroshi, Sumire, and Tomozo; eye row, from left: Sakiko and Kotake; and front row: Momoko (a.m.a. Maruko)
- Momoko "Maruko" Sakura ( さくらももこ , Sakura Momoko , まる子 Maruko)
- Voiced past: Tarako, Alive-Action: Ei Morisako (2006 special), Ayaka Ito (2007 show)
- The title character, Maruko (born May 8, 1965), is a nine-yr-old third-grade educatee raised in a small-scale family of 6. It is implied that the prove is drawn by Maruko herself.
- Sakiko Sakura ( さくらさきこ , Sakura Sakiko )
- Voiced by: Yūko Mizutani (1990-2016), Machiko Toyoshima (2016-), Alive-Activeness: Mayuko Fukuda (2006 special), Maaya Murasaki (2007 show)
- Maruko'south older sis. Her birthday is March 21, 1963, making her 11 in the series.
- Hiroshi Sakura ( さくらひろし , Sakura Hiroshi )
- Voiced by: Yūsaku Yara, Live-Action: Katsumi Takahashi (2006 special), Masakazu Mimura (2007 testify)
- Maruko's father. He was introduced to Maruko'south mother past her friend. His birthday is June 20, 1934, making him twoscore years old during the series.
- Sumire Sakura ( さくらすみれ , Sakura Sumire )
- Voiced by: Teiyū Ichiryūsai, Live-Action: Michiko Shimizu (2006 special), Noriko Sakai (2007 show)
- Maruko's female parent. Her birthdate is May 25, 1934. Information technology is revealed in one episode that her maiden name is Kobayashi.
- Tomozou Sakura ( さくら友蔵 , Sakura Tomozō )
- Voiced by: Kei Tomiyama (1990-1995), Takeshi Aono (1995-2010), Bin Shimada (2010-), Live-Activeness: Fuyuki Moto
- Maruko's kind but absent paternal grandpa, Hiroshi'south father, and Sumire's father-in-law. His birthday is October 3, 1898, making him 76 in the series. The author has said that she used her own grandpa as the model for Tomozou, simply that his personality is the contrary of Tomozou'southward.
- Kotake Sakura ( さくらこたけ , Sakura Kotake )
- Voiced by: Yūko Sasaki, Live-Action: Yoshie Ichige (2006 special), Yoshiko Miyazaki (2007 show)
- Maruko'south paternal grandmother, Hiroshi'south mother, and Sumire'due south mother-in-law. She'due south wise and knows what's good for the human body and wears a traditional Kimono. She was born on Apr iv, 1902. Her name of Kotake was never known in the series until it appeared in a 4-panel manga (Yonkoma) on July i, 2007.
Media [edit]
Manga [edit]
The original Chibi Maruko-chan manga was serialized in the shōjo-oriented Ribon Mag. 14 volumes were published from July 1987 to December 1996, with a 15th volume published in February 2003. In July 2007, a 4-frame version of Chibi Maruko-chan was published in every morning time edition of several Japanese newspapers such every bit the Tokyo Shimbun and the Chunichi Shimbun.
The 16th volume of the manga was published on April 15, 2009.
The 17th book was issued on Dec 25, 2018 mark its terminate.
Spin-offs [edit]
A spin-off manga by Momoko Sakura titled Nagasawa-kun ( 永沢君 , ながさわくん ) focuses on the grapheme Kimio Nagasawa on High School, was published on the magazine Shogakkan's Big Comic Spirits from January 1993 and May 1995. It was made into an live-action drama, premiering on Tokyo Broadcasting System Goggle box on April i, 2013.
A square-headed parody version of manga Chibi Maruko-chan titled Chibi Shikaku-chan ( ちびしかくちゃん ) was published on Shueisha's Yard Jump magazine from October 19, 2016.
Anime [edit]
First series [edit]
Chibi Maruko-chan originally aired on Fuji Goggle box and affiliated Idiot box stations. 142 episodes were broadcast, from January 1990 to September 1992. Maruko was voiced by Tarako; other phonation actors included Kappei Yamaguchi and Hideki Saijo. Original manga author Momoko Sakura wrote the teleplay for almost episodes. The first series was directed by Yumiko Suda, animated by Masaaki Yuasa (who later directed Mind Game in 2004), while the music was composed by Nobuyuki Nakamura. The series attained a TV viewer rating of 39.9% on Oct 28, 1990, the highest rating e'er attained past an blithe Television serial in Japan.[6] The outro vocal Odoru Ponpokorin became a hit and was interpreted past several artists including the KinKi Kids and Captain Jack. The series was exported throughout Asia and was particularly popular in Taiwan. In addition, 65 episodes were dubbed into Standard arabic (chosen Maruko Assagheera, which ways Little Maruko), where it garnered attention from people of all ages. Information technology also aired in Germany with the aforementioned title as the original and was broadcast by RTL 2, Super RTL and Jetix. It aired weekdays on Nick India in Bharat.[vii]
Opening theme:
- Yume Ippai (ゆめいっぱい "Full of Dreams") by Yumiko Seki (eps. 1–142)
Catastrophe themes:
- Odoru Pompokolin (おどるポンポコリン) by B.B.Queens (eps. ane-66)
- Hashire Shoujiki-mono (走れ正直者 "Run, Honest Person") by Hideki Saijo (eps. 67-142)
Second series [edit]
A second series debuted on Fuji Boob tube and affiliated Telly stations in January 1995, airing on Sundays in the half dozen:00 pm time slot, before Sazae-san at half dozen:thirty pm. The series is directed by Jun Takagi and Nobuyuki Nakamura, like the get-go serial, composes the music. Majority of the voice actors from the first series reprised their role. The first 219 episodes were written past Momoko Sakura, nonetheless, she had supervised the episode screenplays from episode 220 upward until her decease in 2018. In Spain, the evidence is available via VOD on the website of Neox's children's block, Neox Kidz.[viii] On TV Japan, which is bachelor in the U.s.a. and Canada, the 2nd series (starting with the episodes circulate in 2009) now broadcasts weekly in Japanese. In Latin America, is distributed by The Nippon Foundation, the dub was produced in Mexico and broadcast on several local, public and other private television networks.
Opening themes:
- Ureshii Yokan (うれしい予感 "Feeling Happy") by Marina Watanabe (eps. one-73), Chibi Maruko-chan (Tarako) (ep. 28)
- Humming ga Kikoeru (ハミングがきこえる "Hear the Humming") by Kahimi Karie (eps. 74-179)
- Odoru Ponpokorin (おどるポンポコリン) past ManaKana & Shigeru Izumiya (eps. 180–253)
- KinKi no Yaruki Man Man Song (KinKiのやる気まんまんソング) by KinKi Kids (eps. 254–294)
- Odoru Ponpokorin (おどるポンポコリン) by B.B.Queens (eps. 295–746; 793–807; 888–953)
- Odoru Ponpokorin (2010 Version) (おどるポンポコリン(2010年バージョン)) by Kaela Kimura (eps. 747-792)
- Odoru Ponpokorin (25th Anniversary Version) (おどるポンポコリン(ちびまる子ちゃん誕生25周年バージョン)) past B.B. Queens (eps. 808–887)
- Odoru Ponpokorin (2014 Version) (おどるポンポコリン(2014年バージョン)) past E-Girls (eps. 954–1046)
- Odoru Ponpokorin by Sakurako Ohara (Special nineteen)
- Odoru Ponpokorin by Golden Bomber (eps. 1047–1190)
- Odoru Ponpokorin by Momoiro Clover Z (eps. 1091-)
Ending themes:
- Hari-kiri Jiisan no Rock 'north' Gyre (針切じいさんのロケン・ロール) by Hitoshi Ueki (eps. i-27, 29–73)
- Hari-kiri Jiisan no Rock 'northward' Roll by Grandfather (Takeshi Aono) and the children (ep. 28)
- Akke ni Torareta Toki no Uta (あっけにとられた時のうた) past Tama (eps. 74-130, 132–179)
- Yume Ippai Shin Version (ゆめいっぱい(新バージョン) "Full of Dream (New Version)")
- Jaga Buttercorn-san (じゃがバタコーンさん) by ManaKana (eps. 180–230)
- Chibi Maruko Ondo (ちびまる子音頭) by ManaKana (eps. 231–340)
- Kyuujitsu no Uta (Viva La Viva) (休日の歌(Viva La Vida)) by Delighted Mint (eps. 341–416)
- Uchū Dai Shuffle (宇宙大シャッフル "Big Shuffle in Outer Space") by Love Jets (eps. 417–481)
- Arara no Jumon (アララの呪文) by Chibi Maruko-chan with Bakuchu Mondai (eps. 482–850)
- Hyaku-homo Nen no Shiawase!! (100万年の幸せ!! "100 K Years of Happiness!!") past Keisuke Kuwata (eps. 851-special 21)
- Kimi o Wasurenai yo (キミを忘れないよ "I Won't Forget Y'all") past Sakurako Ohhara (special 19)
- Susume Nonsense ( すすめナンセンス ) by PUFFY (eps. 1119–1216)
- Itsumo no Fūkei ( いつもの風景 ) by Kazuyoshi Saito (eps. 1217–)
Live action [edit]
A live action series was shown on Fuji Television in 2006. The series was created to commemorate Chibi Maruko-chan's 15th anniversary and had 3 episodes, each 2 hours. All costumes and hairstyles are faithful to the original manga. A Taiwanese live-action adaptation was besides made begin airing on March 13, 2017.[9] [10]
Both of the second television serial and the alive action series were broadcast in 1080i HDTV.
Films [edit]
"Frame Ritz Cinema is famous In this earth" (Festival Frame Ritz Picture show Layar Lebar)
- Chibi Maruko-chan (Toho, 1990)[11]
- Chibi Maruko-chan: My Favorite Song (television receiver film, 1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: A Boy from Italy (2015)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: The Fantastic Notebook (2022) (Chinese 3DCG moving-picture show)[12]
Video games [edit]
All the Game Boy titles (which consists of minigames) were developed by Kid and published by Takara. The other titles were published by different companies like Namco, Konami, Epoch and Banpresto.
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Uki Uki Shopping (Famicom, 1990)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Okozukai Daisakusen (Game Boy, 1990)
- Chibi Maruko-chan 2: Palatial Maruko Earth (Game Boy, 1991)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Harikiri 365-Nichi no Maki (Super Famicom, 1991)
- Chibi Maruko-chan 3: Mezase! Game Taishou no Maki (Game Boy, 1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan four: Korega Nihon Dayo Ouji Sama (Game Male child, 1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Quiz de Piihyara (PC Engine, 1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Waku Waku Shopping (Mega Bulldoze, 1992)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Maruko Deluxe Quiz (Arcade/Game Boy/Neo-Geo, 1995)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Mezase! Minami no Island!! (Super Famicom, 1995)
- Chibi Maruko-chan no Taisen Puzzle Dama (Sega Saturn, 1995)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Maruko Enikki World (PlayStation, 1995)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Go Chounai Minna de Game Dayo! (Game Boy Color, 2001)
- Chibi Maruko-chan DS Maru-chan no Machi (Nintendo DS, 2009)
- Chibi Maruko-chan (Nintendo 3DS, 2016)
- Chibi Maruko-chan: Dream Stage iOS/Android, 2016
Notes [edit]
- Kenta Hasegawa (former Japanese international football player). Momoko Sakura, the author of the manga, created a grapheme called Kenta-kun who occasionally makes an appearance. He loves football and is a classmate of Chibi Maruko. This character was created after Hasegawa. Sakura and Hasegawa attended the same primary schoolhouse during the aforementioned period.
References [edit]
- ^ "夢の音色" Chibi Maruko-chan, January 18, 1989, volume 4, page 135.
- ^ Hahn, Joel. "Kodansha Manga Awards". Comic Book Awards Almanac . Retrieved 2009-05-25 .
- ^ "Historic Shōjo Manga Circulation Numbers". ComiPress. 2006-05-24. Archived from the original on 2012-01-28. Retrieved 2008-01-06 .
- ^ "Maruko-chan Anime Delays New Episodes Due to COVID-19".
- ^ "Chibi Maruko-chan Anime Resumes New Episodes After COVID-xix Delay".
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2005-x-29. Retrieved 2005-09-04 .
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Nick India-Chibi Maruko Chan Accessed May 25, 2009
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2016-04-24 .
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as championship (link) - ^ "Live Version of "Chibi Maruko Chan TV Drama" Now on dimsum Exclusive & Simulcast in Malaysia – Press Room". media.dimsum.my.
- ^ "😍哇☺️哇😘哇😉 👏🏻就是明天✌🏻️ 👊大家準備好了嗎🤘🏻 ❤️櫻桃小丸子真人版電視劇❤️ 👍🏼three 月13日起週一至週五晚上六點🤘🏻 💪🏻中視💪🏻". Facebook (in Chinese). 櫻桃小丸子真人版電視劇. March 12, 2017. Archived from the original on Feb 26, 2019. Retrieved February 26, 2019.
- ^ "劇場作品 | 作品紹介 | NIPPON Animation". world wide web.nippon-blitheness.co.jp . Retrieved 2019-10-02 .
- ^ "Chibi Maruko-chan Series Gets 3DCG Blithe Film in Communist china".
External links [edit]
- Official website (in Japanese)
- Official International website (in English)
- Chibi Maruko-chan (manga) at Anime News Network'southward encyclopedia
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chibi_Maruko-chan
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