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    • Death the Kid
      Por Death the Kid
      Bokura wa Minna Kawai-Sō by Love Lab's Miyahara Gets TV Anime
       
      Ruri Miyahara's teen comedy about boy who moves into complex filled with odd perverts
       
       
      The January 2014 issue of Shonengahosha's Young King Ours magazine is annoucing on Saturday that a television anime adaptation of Ruri Miyahara's Bokura wa Minna Kawai-Sō manga has been green-lit. More details will be in the next issue of the magazine.
       
      The "adolescent comedy with 3/10ths love and 7/10ths humor" revolves around Usa Kazunari, a boy who is now living alone thanks to his parents' work transfer. However, his new Kawai-Sō apartment complex is filled with only odd perverts. And yet, Ritsu Kawai, a sempai he adores, also happens to live there….
       
      Miyahara launched the manga in Young King Ours in 2010, and Shonengahosha published the fourth volume on May 30. The title literally means "We Are All From Kawai-Sō," but it is a wordplay that sounds like "We Are All Pitiful." The anime announcement has Ritsu as the head of advertising for the anime adaptation.
      Miyahara's romantic comedy manga Love Lab also inspired a television anime this past summer. 
       
      @ANN
    • Death the Kid
      Por Death the Kid
      Gingitsune Shinto Manga Gets TV Anime
      Sayori Ochiai's story of shrine priest's daughter & fox spirit that only she can see
      The May issue of Shueisha's Ultra Jump magazine is announcing on Friday that a television anime adaptation of Sayori Ochiai's Gingitsune manga has been green-lit.
      The story is set at a small Shinto harvest shrine dating back to the Edo period. Makoto Saeki lives with her father (the head priest of the shrine) and Gintarō, a kitsune (fox spirit) who happens to be a messenger for the gods. Makoto also happens to be the only one who can see the shrine's kitsune. The manga follows the everyday life of Makoto and Gintarō as they act as the go-between for the gods and humans.
      Ochiai launched the manga in Ultra Jump in 2008, and Shueisha published the eighth volume in January. The manga already inspired an audio adaptation (pictured below) in 2010. That version featured voice actress Kanae Itō as Makoto and voice actor Toshihiko Seki as Gintarō, although the cast for the anime has not been announced.The official website for the anime will be at gingitsune.net, a domain registred under Pony Canyon's name.
      @ANN
    • Death the Kid
      Por Death the Kid
      P.A. Works Animates Uchōten Kazoku by Tatami Galaxy's Morimi
      Takahiro Sakurai, Junichi Suwabe, Hiroyuki Yoshino, Mai Nakahara, Kikuko Inoue play shape-shifting tanuki designed by Zetsubou-Sensei's Kumeta
      Anime studio P.A. Works (True Tears, HanaIro, Tari Tari) is producing an adaptation of Tomihiko Morimi's Uchōten Kazoku (Ecstatic Family) novel for broadcast in July. Morimi wrote The Tatami Galaxy (Yojō-Han Shinwa Taikei) novel that inspired a 2010 television anime. Kôji Kumeta (Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei, Joshiraku) is providing the original character designs for Uchōten Kazoku — the first time he has done so for a project not based on one of his manga.
      The comedy drama of Uchōten Kazoku is set in Kyoto, where tanuki (shape-shifting racoon-dogs), tengu (long-nosed goblins of Japanese folklore), and humans intermingle. The story follows the Shimogamo family of tanuki who live in the Tadasu no Mori forest of Shimogamo Shrine.
      Takahiro Sakurai plays Yasaburō (pictured as the girl and boy in the center of the image), the lead character and the third-oldest son in the Shimogamo family. He lives for whatever strikes his fancy at the moment, and he sometimes takes the form of a high school girl. Junichi Suwabe plays Yaichirō (far right), the oldest son who is earnest but often weak-willed at the last moment. Hiroyuki Yoshino plays Yajirō, the second-oldest son who often assumes the shape of a frog and and goes off into seclusion by himself at a well. Mai Nakahara plays Yashirō (far left), the timid youngest son. Kikuko Inoue plays their mother (top left), an obsessed fan of the all-female theater troupe Takarazuka. Rounding out the cast is Mamiko Noto as the bewitching girl Benten (topmost) who can be found floating carefreely in the skies.
      The original novel has sold over 200,000 copies in Japan and won third place in the Honya Taishō awards in 2008. Masayuki Yoshihara (Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex episode director, Eden of the East assistant director) is making his television series directorial debut with this project. Shôtarô Suga (Lagrange - The Flower of Rin-ne, episodes of Darker than Black) is in charge of the scripts, and Kousuke Kawazura is adapting Kumeta's designs for animation. Yoshimasa Fujisawa (Love Live! School idol project) is scoring the music.
      @ANN