Arashi no Yoru ni
Arashi no Yoru ni | |
あらしのよるに (Stormy Night) | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama, Adventure |
Novel | |
Written by | Yūichi Kimura |
Illustrated by | Hiroshi Abe |
Published by | Kodansha |
Demographic | Children |
Published | 1994 |
Anime film | |
Directed by | Gisaburō Sugii |
Written by | Yuuichi Kimura |
Music by | Keisuke Shinohara |
Studio | Group TAC |
Released | December 10, 2005 |
Runtime | 105 minutes |
Anime television series | |
Arashi no Yoru ni: Himitsu no Tomodachi | |
Directed by | Tetsuro Amino |
Studio | Sparky Animation |
Original network | TV Tokyo |
Original run | April 4, 2012 – September 26, 2012 |
Episodes | 26 |
Arashi no Yoru ni (あらしのよるに, lit. One Stormy Night) is the first in a series of children's books authored by Yūichi Kimura and illustrated by Hiroshi Abe. In 1995, the book won the 26th Kōdansha Literature Culture Award and the 42nd Sankei Children's Literature Culture Award.
When "Arashi no Yoru ni" was published in 1994, Kimura had no plans to continue the story as a series. But due to the popularity of the story and receiving considerable encouragement, he continued the story through five more books, ending with "Fubuki no Ashita (After the Snowstorm)." As the series became more popular, a compilation called "Shiroiyami no Hate de" was released and a movie adaptation was produced. Soon after, Kimura wrote the seventh book, "Mangetsu no Yoru ni", finally ending the series.
Arashi no Yoru ni was published in Japanese textbooks by Mitsumura Tosho Publishing. In 2005, Gisaburō Sugii directed an animated film adaptation covering all seven books in the series. A CG-animated anime television series by Sparky Animation, Arashi no Yoru ni: Himitsu no Tomodachi (あらしのよるに ひみつのともだち, One Stormy Night: Secret Friends), began airing in Japan from April 4, 2012 to September 26, 2012.[1]
Plot
A goat named Mei wanders into a barn one night, seeking shelter from a storm. In the barn, the goat meets another refugee. The two can neither see nor smell each other, but nevertheless they huddle together, fending off the cold, and begin to talk. Eventually, they establish a friendship. The two decide to meet later and will recognize each other by using the password "one stormy night". The next day, when they meet, Mei learns that his companion from the night before was a wolf named Gabu. Despite their natural predisposition as enemies, they share a common bond and begin meeting regularly. However, Mei's flock and Gabu's pack eventually find out about their relationship and forbid the friendship. Mei and Gabu, hoping to preserve their friendship, cross a river during a storm. They hope to find an "emerald forest" free from persecution.
However, Giro, the leader of Gabu's pack, holds a grudge against goats and views Gabu as a traitor to all wolves. Giro and his pack begin to hunt down the two companions. Gabu and Mei reach the summit of a mountain where they stop and rest, exhausted from fighting their way through a snowstorm. Mei, knowing that Gabu has not eaten in days, offers to sacrifice himself as food. Gabu agrees initially, but soon realizes that no matter how hungry he is, he cannot eat his friend. Gabu hears his pack approaching and faces them, ready to defend his goat friend to the death. As Gabu is about to go face the wolf pack, there is an avalanche. The next morning, Mei digs through the snow blocking the cave and sees the "emerald forest" they had been searching for in the distance. Gabu is missing, but Mei finds him in another cave. Gabu has lost his memory of their friendship and all the events that preceded the avalanche. While waiting for the moon to come out, Gabu taunts Mei that he plans on eating him. Mei, saying that he wouldn't have minded being eaten by Gabu before, accuses the wolf of not being the Gabu he previously knew. Angrily, Mei shouts that he wishes that he had never met Gabu on "one stormy night". On hearing these words, Gabu's memory returns, and they happily reunite. In the end, Mei and Gabu both enjoy watching the moon as it rises. Giro and the wolf pack are shown to have survived the avalanche and are seen running away.
Book series
The picture book series, published by Kodansha, Ltd., has been released in Japanese in seven volumes.
- Arashi no Yoru ni (あらしのよるに, One Stormy Night) (1994) ISBN 4-06-252852-5
- Aru Hareta Hi ni (あるはれたひに, One Sunny Day) (1996) ISBN 4-06-252870-3
- Kumo no Kirema ni (くものきれまに, One Cloudy Day) (1997) ISBN 4-06-252874-6
- Kiri no Naka de (きりのなかで, One Foggy Afternoon) (1999) ISBN 4-06-252875-4
- Doshaburi no Hi ni (どしゃぶりのひに, One Rainy Day) (2000) ISBN 4-06-252876-2
- Fubuki no Ashita (ふぶきのあした, After the Snowstorm) (2002) ISBN 4-06-252877-0
- Mangetsu no Yoru ni (まんげつのよるに, One Full Moon Night) (2005) ISBN 4-06-252878-9
Characters
- Gabu (ガブ), a wolf pup from the Bakubaku Valley.
- Mei (メイ), a goat from the Sawasawa Mountains. While the gender is unmentioned in the original books, Mei is depicted as a male goat in the film and a female goat in the TV series.
- Giro (ギロ), the boss of the Bakubaku Valley wolves and a friend of Gabu's father.
- Barry (バリー, Barī), a red-haired wolf and Giro's right-hand man.
- Beach (ビッチ, Bitchi) and Zack (ザク, Zaku), a pair of twin wolves.
- Tap (タプ, Tapu), an overweight goat who acts as an elder brother figure to Mei.
- Mii (ミイ), a pink-colored goat and a friend of Mei. She does not appear in the book series.
- Elder Goat (長老, Chōro), the leader of the goats of the Sawasawa Mountains.
- Mei's Mother (メイの母, Mei no Haha), who attempted to save Mei from a group of wolves when he was a child, managing to bite off Giro's ear before being eaten. Though she is mentioned, she does not physically appear in the book series.
- Mei's Grandmother (メイの祖母, Mei no Soba), who raised Mei after his mother was killed, and is later shocked when Mei befriends Gabu. She does not appear in the book series.
Stage
Since 1997, Engekishūdan En has annually performed the story on the "En Kodomo Stage." Performers have included Yoshie Minami, Akio Kaneda, Rintarō Nishi, and Rieko Takahashi among others.
In 2004, Aoni Production sponsored the Voice Fair 2004's dramatization of Arashi no Yoru ni and Aru Hareta Hi ni, which starred Katsue Miwa as Mei and Minori Matsushima as Gabu.
In 2007, Yoshikazu Yokoyama directed the Engekishūdan Studio Life musical version, in which Sayaka Yoshino portrayed Mei.
Media
Animated film
The film "Arashi no Yoru Ni", directed by Gisaburō Sugii and animated by Group TAC, was released in Japan on December 10, 2005. The film stayed on the top 10 list for the Japanese box office for well over a month, with over 1,200,000 viewers in the first month alone. On January 20, 2006, "Arashi no Yoru Ni" was screened in Taiwan. The Japanese DVD was released on June 23, 2006 as both a special edition and a standard edition. In 2007, the film was nominated for the Japan Academy Prize for Animation of the Year.[2]
Cast
- Gabu: Shidō Nakamura II
- Mei: Hiroki Narimiya
- Giro: Riki Takeuchi
- Barry: Kōichi Yamadera
- Beach: Tetsuya Yanagihara (America Zarigani)
- Zack: Yoshiyuki Hirai (America Zarigani)
- Kama: Mitsuaki Hoshino
- Toro: Akimitsu Takase
- Gari: Yasuyuki Kase
- Gori: Takahiro Yoshino
- Tap: Shōzō Hayashiya IX
- Mii: Maya Kobayashi (then TBS announcer)
- Moro: Masamitsu Morita (weather forecaster)
- Grandmother goat: Kabachan
- Elder goat: Eiji Bandō
- Gabu's Mother: Yū Hayami (Friendship Performance)
- Mei's Grandmother: Etsuko Ichihara (Special Performance)
Staff
- Original story: Yūichi Kimura
- Director: Gisaburō Sugii
- Animation supervisor: Tsuneo Maeda
- Character design: Marisuke Eguchi
- Art director: Yukio Abe
- Music: Keisuke Shinohara
- Theme song: "Star" by Aiko
English Dub
A small group of voice actors and sound engineers acquired permission from the original producers Tokyo Broadcasting System Television (TBS) to make a complete English Re-dub of the Arashi No Yoru Ni movie for YouTube. The first part of the movie was uploaded on December 31, 2008 and was completed on November 5, 2009. On December 23, 2009 the team released an AC3 file which replaces the Japanese voice cast with an English voice cast. The team was unable to obtain the rights to the song Star by Aiko, the original theme song for the movie. The ending was replaced with the song "Watch the Moon Rise" written and performed by Tustin Gilmer Macafee under the name MFE. The vast majority of the voicework for the movie was also undertaken by Tustin Gilmer Macafee, a nom de voce for privacy reasons.
Drama CD
Sound Theater: Arashi no Yoru ni was released on December 22, 2006.
Cast
- Mei: Akira Ishida
- Gabu: Hiroaki Hirata
- Tap: Kappei Yamaguchi
- Giro: Jūrōta Kosugi
- Barry: Kazuya Nakai
- Narration: Shigenori Sōya
- Misses Goat: Noriko Suzuki
- Elder Goat: Hiroshi Shirokuma
- Goat A: Ai Emi
- Goat B: Takayuki Nezu
- Wolf A: Jun Nakata
- Wolf B: Keiichi Takahashi
Anime television series
A CG-animated television series, Arashi no Yoru Ni: Himitsu no Tomodachi (あらしのよるに ひみつのともだち, One Stormy Night: Secret Friends), has been produced by Sparky Animation in co-operation with Duckbill Entertainment, Baku Enterprise and Bandai Visual and began airing in Japan on TV Tokyo from April 4, 2012 with both Japanese and English audio tracks. The opening theme is "Friendship Birthday" by Sea☆A whilst the ending theme is "Dear My Friend" by U-KISS. This animation is a co-production between Japan and Singapore. The animation has been conceived in Japan, then rewritten and adapted to English with pre-recorded voices. Afterwards, it was dubbed into Japanese. In contrast to the original books, where Mei was never given a specific gender and the feature movie which had Mei as a male goat, the television series casts Mei as female.
Episode list
No. | Title | Original airdate |
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Cast
- Japanese cast
- Mei: Rie Kugimiya
- Gabu: Hiroyuki Yoshino
- Bari and Ghiro: Kōichi Yamadera
- Mii: Yui Horie
- Tap: Tatsuhisa Suzuki
Director: Amino Tetsuro
- English cast
- Terry Osada as May and Granny
- Jack Merluzzi as Gabu and Zak
- Jeff Manning as Tap, Butch and Ghiro
- Tom Clark as Moro and Bari
- Rumiko Varnes as Mii, Yoma
- Maya Jones as Boro, Lala, Bima
- Gerri Sorrells as Gabu's Mother, May as a child, Jima
Screenplay and director of English version: Gerri Sorrells
Co-production for English version: Jim Weatherford, Jarico International Inc.
References
- ^ "Arashi no Yoru ni TV Anime's Cast, Singers Revealed". Anime News Network. 2012-03-06. Retrieved 2012-03-07.
- ^ "Japan Academy Prize (2007)" (in Japanese). Japan Academy Prize. Archived from the original on February 20, 2007. Retrieved December 20, 2010.
Much of the content of this article comes from the equivalent Japanese-language Wikipedia article.
External links
- Arashi no Yoru ni at IMDb
- "Arashi no Yoru Ni" movie official website Template:Ja icon
- Anime series official website Template:Ja icon
- Yūichi Kimura's home page Template:Ja icon
- TBS's "Stormy Night" website in English
- Arashi no Yoru ni (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Arashi no Yoru Ni: Himitsu no Tomodachi (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- 2005 anime films
- 2012 anime television series debuts
- 2012 anime television series
- Fictional goats
- Fictional wolves
- Books about friendship
- Films based on Japanese novels
- Films directed by Gisaburō Sugii
- Animated buddy films
- Films featuring anthropomorphic characters
- Group TAC
- Bandai Visual
- Japanese novels
- Japanese-language films
- Television programs based on novels
- TV Tokyo shows
- Kemono
- Kemono anime and manga
- Animal tales
- LGBT-related animation