También puedes leer este artÃculo en:Español
At first glance, the anime Suzuka looks like it might be your average sports anime. We know that sports are filled with triumph, tragedy, excitement and drama. The best parts of real-world sporting events are the amazing stories of underdogs, the comebacks, and the unlikely heroes. Suzukaâs story has all those elements, and sport is merely a backdrop to this romance drama.
KissAnime, you can watch Suzuka (Dub) Episode 6 Anime online free and more Anime online Free in high quality, without downloading. Suzuka episode 6 To continue his studies, the young Akitsuki Yamato has live with his aunt. He does not have to pay rent though and instead maintains the residence that comprises a public bath, also occupied by three attractive tenants: Saotome Yuuka, Matsumoto Megumi and Asahina Suzuka.
The 26-episode anime focuses on Yamato Akitsuki, a young man who moves from the country to Tokyo for high school. Young Yamato moves in with his aunt and his cousin who operate a womenâs public bath and apartment building. You get the feeling that this is going to turn into your classic harem comedy with plenty of âlucky pervertâ opportunities.
One day Yamato sees a girl on the school track practicing the high jump. He is immediately transfixed by her beauty and is shocked to find out that the girl, Suzuka, is living in the apartment next door. You get to experience the life of a boy many consider a goof and unreliable as he attempts to win the object of his affection.
The drama isnât completely focused on Yamato; we get the chance to watch one girl fight to earn and keep the love of her long-term crush. The viewer also gets to watch another girl wrestle with her emotions as she tries to come to terms with a tragedy in her past.
The following are six anime that follow similar themes as Suzuka. 1. Ao Haru Ride (Blue Spring Ride)
Blue Spring Ride is focused on Futaba, a beautiful high school girl who changed her life and personality after being ostracized by the girls in her middle school class. She tossed away the girly ways she was known for and embraced a louder, brasher version of herself in an effort to gain friends. The romance in this story starts several years before her reinvention. Like so many other stories that deal with young love, it starts with a chance encounter on a rainy day. Young Futuba and young Tanaka both take shelter from a storm under the eaves of a shrine. We donât get to see much of their early relationship, but young Tanakaâs transfer to a new school is one of the catalysts for her change to the brash girl.
The first twist comes when the older Futuba and the older Tanaka, now called Mabuchi due to the divorce of his parents, meet again in high school. The viewer as well as our heroine immediately wonders âCan you turn back time?â
Blue Spring Ride has its comedic moments, but isnât what we would call a romcom. We really think it is best defined as a shoujo school romance with some slice-of-life elements. The more specific way itâs similar to Suzuka is the pacing. The story doesnât take off at a sprinterâs pace; it takes a while to develop. We also watch Futaba and Yamato -- both considered to be sloppy, unreliable and fun to be around -- chase after cool and distant love interests. You get see the experiences of the hero and heroine of their respective stories examine their lives and consider what the changes in their lives (for Yamato joining the track team and Futuba becoming less girly) got them if it doesnât get them the romantic partner they desire.
Ao Haru Ride (Blue Spring Ride) Anime Trailer2. Mashiro-iro Symphony (Mashiroiro Symphony âThe Color of Lovers)
Our protagonist is Shingo Uryuu, a second-year student at Kagamidai Private Academy. The Academy is about to be integrated into Yuihime Girls School. Shingo is part of the first class of boys ever to attend the old all girlsâ school. We quickly see that not all the âlittle princessesâ at the school are open and accepting of the change. The story revolves around Shingo as he makes friends at school and in the Neko Club, a club dedicated to taking care of stray animals.
You get a lot of harem elements in Mashiro-iro Symphony as it centers on a guy attending a girls school and it doesnât take long for Shingo to collect quite a few friends who all happen to be female. We also see quite a few ecchi moments in the beginning as boys, mainly Shingo, adjust to a world where a girlâs privacy had never before been in question.
The romance elements develop slowly, much like in Suzuka. You also get a big hint about Shingoâs main love interest in the very beginning he spots a 3rd year girl named Amaha Miu playing with a rather strange looking cat in the grass near one of the classrooms. Their tale is sweet; we watch them slowly warm up to each other. We think the biggest connection Susuka and Mashiro-iro Symphony share is their ability to take the classic trope of the transfer student and look at the difficulties of trying to fit in to a new environment and make new friends. In Suzukaâs case, Yamato joins the track and field team; in Mashiro-iro Symphonyâs case, Shingoâs attempts to melt the icy heart of the school directorâs daughter, Airi Sena, who opposes the integration of schools.
Mashiro Iro Symphony the color of lovers Opening3. Ore no Kanojo to Osananajimi ga Shuraba Sugiru (Oreshura)
Eita Kidou is a smart guy on a mission. He plans to devote his life to medicine and, after his parents decide to split up, he decides that love and romance are just nuisances, too. We also know, however, that this is a romance and the protagonist is bound to change his mind on the subject of love. The cool, somewhat aloof role is played by two characters in this drama. The protagonist, Eita, and the prettiest girl in school, Masuzu, both play it cool even though it is all a lie. In a way the story is an anti-version of Suzuka, where there is a confession by the cool beauty, an initial rejection by the nice guy and â eventually â a contentious dating relationship.
The most significant similarity to Suzuka is the way Eitaâs childhood friend Chiwa does everything she can think of to be popular with guys, changing the way she looks and the way she acts all to get him to notice her as more than a next door neighbor. The story may not be filled with the angst-ridden teen drama of Suzuka, but the romance and the love triangle involving the protagonist, a childhood friend and a school beauty who can be quite mean-spirited is all there in this harem romcom.
Ore no Kanojo to Osananajimi ga Shuraba PV OP Version4. Kawai Complex Guide to Manors and Hostel Behavior
Kazunari Usa is a high school freshmen who has the amazing opportunity to live on his own after his parentsâ jobs are transferred. The young man takes up residence as the Kawai Complex, a boarding house filled with a rather interesting cast of characters. The rooms host the likes of masochistic Shirosaki, a beautiful Mayumi who is hopeless with men; a college girl named Sayaka; and cool and aloof Ritsu, the Senpai whose attention heâs trying to attract.
Kawai Complex offers a bit more slapstick than Suzuka, but it at its heart has a few real similarities. The most obvious is the parallel of a young high school boy living on his own in an apartment. The second major similarity is the protagonist living in the same complex as his love interest. The two also often have meals together since meals are part of the boarding house benefits. A final similarity is that the beautiful object of the protagonistâs affections, Ritsu Kawai, is shy, cool and often alone when she is not at school.
ã¢ãã¡ãåãã¯ã¿ããªæ²³åèããBDã»DVDã®CM4種é¡5. Itazura na Kiss (Teasing Kiss)
The story starts with a confession two years in the making, a rejection, and an earthquake that levels our main characterâs brand new house. Itâs just the beginning of the misfortune for Kotoko Aihara, who soon finds herself moving in with the boy, Naoki Irie, who just rejected her. The disasters would break most people, but not Kotoko. She soldiers on and, like a great heroine, finds a spark of hope and decides there is a chance for her with Naoki Irie.
The theme that makes Itazura na Kiss similar to Suzuka is the idea of transformation. Kotoko and Naoki both evolve and change in the course of the story. Thatâs what good characters do, especially over the incredibly long story arch in this anime.
We watch Yamato and Kotoko both use their significant others as catalysts and attempt to change themselves. For Yamato itâs committing himself to track and field. For Kotoko itâs deciding to become a nurse. A simple similarity is both Yamato and Kotoko are looked down on by their love interests for not measuring up to the standards that they, Naoki and Suzuka, set for themselves.
Itazura Na Kiss Ending 1 (ED)6. Kimi no Iru Machi: Tasogare Kousaten (A Town Where You Live)
Haruto Kirishima leads an uncomplicated life in his small town in the country. He goes to school. He is a member of the cooking club. He even has a girl he likes. He then has his world turned upside down when a girl named Yuzuki Eba comes to live with him. She doesnât take too long to confess her love to him, complicating his life as he still tries to win the love of another girl, Nanami Kanzaki.
The set-up is very similar to Suzuka. You have a character that moves in from out of town, in this case Yuzuki and in the former Yamato. You have the new character, Yuzuki or Yamato, living under the same roof as their love interests. You also have a very early confession, so like Suzuka, Haruto knows that despite the agreement to just be friends they are still the object of unwanted affection.
Kimi no Iru machi TrailerConclusion
Suzuka brings a lot to the table as a romance. The viewer gets all the excitement of a sports anime without it overwhelming the subtleness of the human drama. Those with track and field experience may cringe a little at the animation of Suzukaâs high jump, but we can push past it as the real story is about the relationships and the lengths we go to to change how others see us.
You do get some stand-out characters like Suzakaâs best friend Miki Hashiba and her moments of advice to her friends as she tries to help smooth over rough patches in their relationships. You also get some under-used characters like Miho, Yamatoâs twin-tail wearing middle school cousin. Miho loves her cousin even though her opinion of him as a man might not be very high at times. It would have been nice if that relationship had been explored more, if only for comic relief. The story is subtle, just like the role of track and field as a plot device. If you want a drama and not a typical teen romcom, the bar is set high by Suzuka.
Suzuka (Japanese: 涼風) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Kouji Seo. The series is a character-driven romance story that uses the athletics of track and field as a subplot. The story primarily follows the life of the teenager Yamato Akitsuki, who moved to Tokyo to change himself, and his main love interest Suzuka Asahina, a talented and highly scouted high jumper who lives in Yamato's aunt's dormitory and attends his new high school.
Suzuka was serialized in the Japanese magazine Weekly ShÅnen Magazine published by Kodansha. It was adapted into a twenty-six episode anime series and aired on TV Tokyo in Japan between 6 July 2005 and 28 December 2005. Both versions of the series have been licensed for release in North America. The manga has been licensed for publication in North America by Del Rey Manga under their mature line; it published the first 15 volumes, before it folded and transferred its publication rights to Kodansha USA. The anime series has been licensed and released by FUNimation Entertainment. Two light novels written by Ayuna Fujisaki based on the series have also been released. A related series, Kimi no Iru Machi(A Town Where You Live), ran in Weekly ShÅnen Magazine from 2008 until 2014, and a sequel, Fuuka, has been running in the same magazine since 2014 until 2018.
Suzuka Episode 6 English DubPlot[edit]
Suzuka is a sports-themed romance comedy that intertwines the pursuit of love and athletics. The story is based around Yamato Akitsuki, a young man from rural Hiroshima Prefecture moving to the big city of Tokyo, and his new next-door neighbor, Suzuka Asahina, a skilled high jumper. Yamato falls in love with Suzuka and pursuing a relationship with her he joins the track and field team hoping to impress her. After joining, Yamato discovers that he has the potential to become a top hundred-meter sprinter.
Suzuka's character-driven plot predominantly makes use of dramatic structure to facilitate character development. Characterization is further achieved through the use of character back-story. The story in general employs a realistictone, but occasionally uses surreal humour. Some events covered in the story are: track competitions, vacations, culture festivals, and outings to a Karaoke Box and a theme park. The manga and anime follow the same storyline, though there are minor differences. One of these changes is that the nude scenes are less graphic in the anime than the manga. Another disparity is the hair color of some of the characters such as the character Miki, who is depicted as having bright red hair on the covers of the manga, but is portrayed with red-brown hair in the anime.
Characters[edit]
Yamato Akitsuki, the main protagonist of the series, has moved from his home in the Hiroshima Prefecture to stay at his aunt's dormitory in Tokyo. Yamato falls in love with his new next-door neighbor, Suzuka Asahina, a girl from Yokohama who was scouted by a local high school because of her high jump athletic ability.[2] While the main female lead remains Suzuka throughout the series, Yamoto later meets several other girls: Honoka Sakurai, a girl whose family are caretakers of a local Shinto shrine, Miki Hashiba, a sprinter and friend of Suzuka, and others. Yamato also develops a friendship with Yasunobu Hattori, a perverted young man[3] who dreams about polygamy and often gives relationship advice to Yamato.
Media[edit]Manga[edit]Suzuka Episode 6 English Sub
The Suzukamanga first appeared as an initial one shot in the Japanese manga magazine Weekly ShÅnen Magazine, published by Kodansha, during December 2003.It was first serialized in Weekly ShÅnen Magazine on 3 March 2004 and was completed on 21 September 2007,[4] with one hundred sixty-six chapters in total. The chapters were compiled in eighteen bound volumes by Kodansha,[5] with each volume being released roughly quarterly. These volumes often include character profiles or extra stories. Suzuka has been licensed for North American publication by Del Rey, becoming the publisher's first sports manga and second title to be added under its mature line, the first being the manga Basilisk. Fifteen volumes had been released in English with the first volume released on 29 August 2006[6] and the last, a 592-page collection containing volumes 13, 14 and 15, released in North America on 31 August 2010, before Del Rey Manga folded and transferred its publishing rights to Kodansha USA. Currently now, it's been both relicensed and re-released by Kodansha USA continuously in digital edition up to Volume 18.[7]
Anime[edit]
In April 2005, Weekly ShÅnen Magazine announced through their website that Suzuka was being adapted into an anime.[8] The animated TV series was directed by Hiroshi Fukutomi and was co-produced by Studio Comet and Marvelous Entertainment. The twenty-six half-hour episode series originally aired weekly on TV Tokyo in Japan on Wednesdays running from 6 July 2005[9] to 28 December 2005.[10] The anime follows relatively close to the first seventy-two chapters of the manga, but changes were made to accommodate younger audiences: The hole in the wall between the rooms of Suzuka and Yamato does not exist,Yamato also sees Suzuka for the first time outside, instead of inside the school gym, and many scenes were removed or subdued such as those in the bath house. In addition, a fight song for the Hiroshima Toyo Carp baseball team Soreyuke Carp (ããè¡ãã«ã¼ã, lit. Go Go Carp) is included in the anime and soundtrack, but cuts off before the 4th stanza because of a reference to Japanese sake.
The anime was dubbed in Tagalog and broadcast by the Philippine station Hero starting on 3 December 2006. The anime series has been licensed for North America by FUNimation,[11] and released with the tagline 'Love is not a Spectator Sport'. Their first DVD was released on 12 June 2007.
Music[edit]Telestream Episode 6
The anime's music, including the background music and theme songs, was composed by Takumi Masanori and POM. The vocals for the opening and ending songs were provided by COACHâ. Except for one member of the group COACHâ, all worked as a voice actor for one of the series' characters. For the North American release, FUNimation had the opening and ending songs re-written and performed in English by Kristine Sa. In 2005, three Suzuka soundtrack albums were released in Japan through King Records.[12]
Light novel[edit]
On 17 May 2007, a Suzukalight novel was published by Kodansha under its 'KC Novel' label. It contained three short stories written by Ayuna Fujisaki with illustrations done by the series creator, Kouji Seo.
Spin-offs[edit]
A portion of Seoâs manga A Town Where You Live takes place at the apartment complex where the Akitsukis are neighbors.[13] Suzuka and Fuuka also make cameo appearances in some of the storyâs chapters. In February 2014, a manga spin-off was released under the name Fuuka. It follows the story of Yuu Haruna, a 15-year-old boy who is a loner and his only friends are those on Twitter. After moving to live with his three sisters, two older one younger, he meets Fuuka, who is Yamato and Suzuka's daughter and now a high school student. Initially, Fuuka perceives Yuu as a pervert due to an embarrassing encounter during their first meeting. However, after learning about Fuuka's dream of starting a music band, he befriends her and they later fall in love. However, a tragic event prompts a new legend involving Yuu and his friends to begin.
Reception[edit]
Suzuka has been compared to other manga such as Love Hina,[6]Maison Ikkoku,[14][15] and Kimagure Orange Road[16] since, early on, it used similar plot structure and plot devices. These comparisons became less frequent as the story developed. According to Kouji Seo, Suzuka was to be a romance story from the beginning, and he had no intention of creating a harem manga.[17] Since the North American version is uncensored, this caused the manga to be rated 'Mature' and sold in shrink wrap.[18] Despite the amount of fan service, the manga does not focus on that element.[15] Kouji Seo pays attention to detail which can be seen in the clothing that gives off the sensation they are made out of different material along with the reflections in the windows during the nighttime.[19] This detail can also be seen in his characters as they all have complex personalities that make them interesting and have substance.[20] Overall the reception of the manga has been positive.
The anime has been described as having 'all the trappings of a standard high school romantic comedy',[21] but lacks the spirit and craftsmanship of the manga.[2] Since the anime is a close adaptation from the manga, the criticisms of the plot are the same of it being described as generic. The anime sells '[itself] solely on the merits of character development'.[16] One effect of this character development is that some viewers will find the title character and the male lead unlikable, with complaints of lack of sympathy for both characters.[22][23] The animation is considered to be ordinary with some scenes that have timing problems, look awkward, or have objects that seem oversized.[2][24] The voice actors performances are considered to be mundane and sound rather flat, in both Japanese and English languages.[2] Viewers with sensitive hearing might also pick up on the switches between mono and stereo audio in the different episodes.[21] The sports scenes are poorly animated, and the best animated scenes include night-time scenes.[23] Overall the reception of the anime so far has been mixed.
The response to the soundtrack for the anime is somewhat mixed. Most find the music respectable, but some may detest it when it tries to be funny. The opening and ending songs that were re-written and performed in English made the songs fairly close approximations of the originals and worked out better than one might imagine,[2] but others still prefer the Japanese versions.[22]
References[edit]
External links[edit]Suzuka Episode 6 English Dub
Episode 6 Star Wars
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Suzuka_(manga)&oldid=917611779'
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |