I don’t get the chance to watch much anime anymore and when I do it’s not the big-name popular series like Naruto, Bleach, Death Note and er…is InuYasha still popular? It’s the shoujo series that I tend to be drawn to. Most of my favourite series are from the 90s, when I could actually be called a decent anime fan. But here are some ‘new’ anime series that I’ve enjoyed which I hope get licensed.
LOVELY COMPLEX
I was introduced to “Love*Com” when Viz licensed the manga and ran a preview of it in Shojo Beat. The story revolves around two classmates–Koizumi, a girl who is much taller than average–and Otani, a guy who is much shorter than average. They both have trouble finding a boyfriend/girlfriend because of their height. I’m a sucker for cute highschool romances and this series has the added charm of being incredibly funny. I’m pretty sure the live-action movie version of the series was licensed by Viz and released here in North America, but I would love to see the anime available. It’s on my must-buy list.
ITAZURA NA KISS
“ItaKiss” would seem like a fairly stereotypical shoujo anime series if you didn’t know that it’s based on an 11 year old manga series, which was fairly revolutionary in its time. A lot of what happens can seem a bit cliche, but I think it has been the manga’s influence on other shoujo series throughout the years that has made them now seem cliche. The manga series was left incomplete when the mangaka, Kaoru Tada, died do to a moving accident. The ending of the anime series was said to be based on the planned ending she had told her husband. The story is about a highschool girl in class “F” who develops a crush on the #1 student, Irie, a guy in class “A”. Unlike many highschool shoujo romances, Itakiss follows the two main characters after highschool and into their adult lives. Though I didn’t much like how dependant the main character, Kotoko, is on her love of Irie for her own happiness, the series was fairly addictive.
I’d love to add these series to my DVD shelf (especially since most of my small anime collection is made of VHS boxsets). I could mention NANA, though I already talked about that series in my last ‘Manga Break’ post, since it is absolutely on the top of my very short list of series I want. The good news is that Viz has licensed the anime version of NANA, but I haven’t heard an update on when it will be released. Again, I’m kinda out-of-the-loop when it comes to anime, but I’d say that Itakiss and LoveCom aren’t in the same league as NANA when it comes to success and popularity; which might explain why NANA has been licensed (manga sales of issues of NANA not only compete, but can beat sales records of heavyweight shonen titles like Naruto).

This (first) manga break is of my absolute favourite manga series, NANA. The series creator is Ai Yazawa and it’s still ongoing and serialized in Cookie (a monthly manga magazine in Japan). NANA is a hugely popular shoujo series; Volume 19, released last May, broke 2008 sales record by selling 780 000 copies in one week (the previous record was held by Naruto Vol. 42, which sold 505 000 copies in the week of May 2nd). The series gets its name from the two main characters; both named Nana, which means ‘seven’ in Japanese. The two girls end up living together in apartment 707, in Tokyo, and become good friends despite their opposite personalities.
NANA is more mature than the typical shoujo series you might find licensed here in North America. Personally, I would consider NANA more of a “josei” manga-geared more towards young adults than teens. I can imagine American promoters comparing it to popular teen TV dramas like the O.C. or Dawson’s Creek to try and market to the audience of those kinds of shows, but I don’t think that comparison would do it justice. The story deals with breakups, cheating, drugs, pregnancy, and other familiar drama themes, but none of it feels like it’s been dumped in-nearly everything that occurs in the plot feels necessary to the story-everything feels natural and, again, believable.
