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Template:Nihongo is a Japanese manga series written by Mari Okada and illustrated by Nao Emoto. It was serialized in Kodansha's [[shōnen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine from December 2016 to September 2019, with its chapters collected in eight Template:Transliteration volumes. The manga is licensed in English by Kodansha USA.
An anime television series adaptation produced by Lay-duce was broadcast on MBS's Animeism programming block from July to September 2019. A live-action television series adaptation was broadcast from September to October 2020.
Characters
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- Sugawara's friend and Izumi and Momoko's childhood friend. Since childhood, she has been in love with Izumi, but all this time she was afraid to take a step forward, while the mockery of more popular classmates did not motivate her to be more active in an attempt to attract his attention. However, as the story progresses, she notices that Izumi is clearly sexually attracted to Sugawara’s outstanding beauty and tenderness.
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- Kazusa's friend, a melancholic girl who the guys call a "crane" because of her fragile beauty. Initially, Niina ignores the boys because of a harassment experience in her childhood but gradually begins to develop feelings for Izumi because of his caring and kindness. Thus, her loyalty to her friend and their common love of one boy quickly becomes one of the main conflicts of the story. She gets along well with Momoko, who quickly becomes her friend because of her adoration and unconscious romantic feelings for Sugawara.
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- A shy girl and best friend of Kazusa. Initially, she, like other girls, begins to be interested in relationships with guys, but as the story progresses, she is becoming more and more aware of her desire and interest in other girls, that the first time she perceives as a simple misunderstanding of the reasons for the girl's interest in guys. Subsequently, she begins to develop a one-sided crush on Sugawara, whose potential feelings for Izumi are causing her deep depression.
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- The president of a literary club, a tall, prudish girl who is ashamed of her interest in the opposite sex because of her strict upbringing and serious nature. Nevertheless, in spite of her purism, she gets the most healthy relationship with guys compared to other girls. Over time she comes to realize that romantic affection and sexual attraction are not the same thing, thus she begins to lower her guard and starts a relationship with Shun Amagi.
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- A mysterious short girl who writes novels, including erotica. She maintains a relationship as Hitoto-san with Milo-san in an online adult chatroom. When her publisher describes her first novel as if it was written by a virgin 40-year-old man, she decides to gain sexual experience and arranges to meet up with Milo, discovering his identity as a member of the school faculty.
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- Kazusa's childhood friend and the subject of interest from her and Sugawara. A kind and caring young guy, he doesn't have any sexual experience or knowledge about love in general, therefore his problems with the differentiation of love and sexual attraction quickly become the cause of a love triangle and a conflict between him and two girls.
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- A young male teacher who is blackmailed into being the advisor for the Literature Club by Hitoha, in the absence of their former advisor and imminent disbanding. He is given the nickname Milo-sensei by Hitoha and is called by that nickname by the rest of the club. Hitoha later seems to develop a relationship with him that he is highly reluctant.
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- A boy infatuated with Sonezaki even when her class looked down on her.
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- A famous director, who also works in acting classes for little children, including one Sugawara attended.
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- A gyaru girl who Sonezaki detests, however she becomes friendlier to Sonezaki over time.
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- A boy who attends the same cram school as Momoko and tries to start a relationship with her.
Media
Manga
Written by Mari Okada and illustrated by Nao Emoto, O Maidens in Your Savage Season was serialized in Kodansha's [[Shōnen manga|Template:Transliteration manga]] magazine Bessatsu Shōnen Magazine from December 9, 2016, to September 9, 2019.[1][2] Kodansha collected its chapters in eight Template:Transliteration volumes, released from April 7, 2017, to October 9, 2019.[3][4]
In North America, the manga was licensed for English release by Kodansha USA.[5] The eight volumes were published from April 23, 2019, to November 3, 2020.[6][7]
Volumes
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Anime
An anime television series adaptation was announced on November 30, 2018. The series was animated by Lay-duce and directed by Masahiro Andō and Takurō Tsukada, with Mari Okada handling series composition, and Kaori Ishii designing the characters.[8] Moe Hyūga composed the music.[9] The series aired from July 5 to September 20, 2019, on the Animeism programming block on MBS, TBS, and BS-TBS, as well as AT-X.[10][11] CHiCO with Honeyworks performed the series' opening theme song Template:Nihongo, while Momo Asakura performed the series' ending theme song Template:Nihongo.[12] Sentai Filmworks has licensed the series worldwide excluding Asia, Germany, France, and Australia.[13] In Southeast Asia and South Asia, Muse Communication holds the show's rights.[14]
Episodes
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Drama
A live-action television series adaptation was announced on July 9, 2020.[15] On July 30, 2020, the main cast list and the production crew was announced, as well as that the series would be premiered on MBS and TBS on September 8, 2020.[16]
Episodes
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Reception
The series was positively received. In a review of the first episode for Anime Feminist, Caitlin Moore described the series as joining series such as Please Tell Me! Galko-chan, Yamada’s First Time, and Asobi Asobase and films like The To-Do List and Booksmart with "smart, funny, and honest humor about the weirdness that is adolescence." She said that the series is "bluntly authentic" in drawing from Mari Okada's own experiences, appreciates the experiences in a small group of "socially awkward teenage girls who aren’t having sex," with recognition that sex extends beyond "simple penetration and can be about female pleasure," and said it remains to be seen whether the series will "account for the distinct experiences of queer, asexual, and trans teens."[17] In a review of the first three episodes on the same site, Vrai Kaiser wrote that this series "hit a chorus of raw nerves about sexuality and adolescent anxieties with pointed accuracy" and described it as heartening for the series to "acknowledge queerness with Momoko," which differs from her "platonic protectiveness over Kazusa," and criticizes the blackmail plot involving Mithoha and her teacher, arguing that such thought experiences feel "woefully out of touch with the overwhelmingly unaddressed problems of teens being preyed on by adults," saying that it feels contrived and jarring, a "sour note against the refreshing honesty the rest of the show has to offer."[18] Kaiser later recommended the series for tacking "internalized misogyny," awkwardness around adolescence and sex, Niina's struggles as victim of her acting coach's grooming, and Momoko being a lovable and well-realized queer character who is "trapped in an unrequited love plot," but criticized it for Hongo attempting to seduce her teacher as playing into narratives which absolves predators, and said it crashes because its "ambitions are so high." He also said the series should have content warnings for pedophilic grooming, groping without consent, masturbation, queerphobia, fat shaming, and an unsuccessful relationship between a teacher and student.[19][20]
Rebecca Silverman reviewed the series for Anime News Network. In her review of the first three episodes, she notes that the series is primarily focused on "girls and female sexuality," and isn't easily defined as a sex comedy because it feels "too true to life," and predicted that the series will be a "frank discussion of developing female sexuality and the stigmas that can come with it."[21] In reviews of later episodes, Silverman said that the series hits on "familiar situations," noting that for teenage girls these melodramas are "serious life and death stuff," but criticized the series for being a little overwhelming if each series "tries to cover all five characters each week" and describes Hongo's relationship with Milo-sensei as "the most uncomfortable storyline."[22][23][24] Other reviews for episodes 7, 8, and 9, Silverman said it is important that the series includes a "narrative that can be read as queer," praised the series for doing a "great job with its rollercoaster of emotions" by the characters, that parts of the series "hit too close to home," and called the use of The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, as "particularly interesting."[25][26][27]
References
External links
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