PropertyValue
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  • Uta Kata
  • Uta Kata
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  • Uta∽Kata(うた∽かた, lit. "Poem Fragment") is a 2004 TV anime series. Written differently (泡沫), the title can also refer to bubbles, which is used as such in the ending theme. The series can be loosely considered a magical girl story. However, this series deviates from more conventional magical girl themes in that it addresses topics that are for a more mature audience, such as child abuse, eating disorders, and possibly misanthropy. Nevertheless, it illustrates the main character's coming of age with each progressive episode, becoming more and more emotionally intense as the story goes on.
  • Ichika Tachibana is an ordinary 14-year old girl who one day finds that her mobile phone wound up on the other side of a huge mirror at school. When she tries to retrieve it, she sees another girl inside the mirror, who promptly exits it. This girl, Manatsu, promises to take care of her for the summer holiday, as long as Ichika does her "homework" for her. In August 2010, six years after its original Japanese broadcast, Section 23 Films announced a North American release of the series. And the Fandom Rejoiced. Tropes:
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Last
  • 2004-12-18
RomajiTitle
  • Betsuri no Hadō
  • Kakera no Uta
  • Kinsetsu no Yozora
  • Konure no Shitto
  • Nurehada no Binetsu
  • Rakurui no Raika
  • Ren'ai no Tsūyō
  • Sange no Shōdō
  • Shishō no Saikai
  • Shotō no Futanatsu
  • Shōnetsu no Sunahama
  • Shūu no Kohan
ja kanji
  • うた∽かた
Name
  • Uta∽Kata
Genre
Type
  • manga
  • novel
  • ova
  • tv series
Volumes
  • 1
First
  • 2004-10-03
Author
Demographic
  • Seinen
Title
  • Shotō no Futanatsu
Aux
  • Ken Akamatsu
  • -
  • Hajime Ueda
  • "Kaishaku"
  • "Keiko"
  • "SUEZEN"
  • Hajime Watanabe
  • Hidefumi Kimura
  • Keiji Gotoh
  • Keinojou Mizutama
  • Mine Yoshizaki
  • Rikdo Koshi
OriginalAirDate
  • 2004-10-10
  • 2004-10-17
  • 2004-10-23
  • 2004-10-30
  • 2004-11-11
  • 2004-11-13
  • 2004-11-20
  • 2004-11-27
  • 2004-12-11
  • 2004-12-18
  • 2005-04-22
EpisodeNumber
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • 13
Studio
Illustrator
Episodes
  • 12
ShortSummary
  • A trip with friends to a shrine dedicated to lovers causes Keiko and Satsuki to reflect on unpleasant memories.
  • Kai and Manatsu revisit their "reflections" one last time.
  • Ichika dreams a new dream about Manatsu and herself. When Michiru attempts to find out the truth, the power of the Djinn sends disaster her way.
  • As part of a volunteer activity, Ichika gives a wreath of dried flowers to a mentally unstable hospital patient.
  • Ichika sees Sei-san with her neighbor Saya-san and as she runs away she breaks her pearl necklace.
  • Ichika discovers that she is changing unusually. After a gust of wind scatters Kai's homework report, Ichika resolves to recover it.
  • Satsuki develops a crush on a boy she meets on the day of the fireworks festival.
  • While rescuing a former classmate at the beach, Ichika loses her father's very valuable watch.
  • During a camping trip, a girl in Ichika's cabin becomes stranded in a hole while attempting to meet a boy.
  • Ichika finds that she cannot cast away the magic charm. The Tachibana family visits the graves of their ancestors, and Ichika has a reunion of her own.
  • Ichika ventures into the house next door to determine the truth once and for all.
  • An old friend's former boyfriend causes some trouble for Ichika and Manatsu.
EnglishTitle
  • Reunion Beyond the Grave
  • Sudden Shower by the Lake Shore
  • The Flowering of Tears
  • The Flush of Damp Skin
  • The Heat of the Sandy Beach
  • The Impulse of a Falling Flower
  • The Jealousy of a Twig
  • The Neighboring Night Sky
  • The Pain of Love
  • The Poetry of Fragments
  • The Surge of Separation
  • Twin Summers of the First Winter
Released
  • 2005-04-22
Magazine
Licensor
  • Sentai Filmworks
Publisher
KanjiTitle
  • 初冬の双夏
  • 別離の波動
  • 恋愛の痛痒
  • 散華の衝動
  • 木末の嫉妬
  • 欠片の詩歌
  • 死生の再会
  • 濡肌の微熱
  • 焦熱の砂浜
  • 落涙の蕾花
  • 近接の夜空
  • 驟雨の湖畔
Director
Network
abstract
  • Uta∽Kata(うた∽かた, lit. "Poem Fragment") is a 2004 TV anime series. Written differently (泡沫), the title can also refer to bubbles, which is used as such in the ending theme. The series can be loosely considered a magical girl story. However, this series deviates from more conventional magical girl themes in that it addresses topics that are for a more mature audience, such as child abuse, eating disorders, and possibly misanthropy. Nevertheless, it illustrates the main character's coming of age with each progressive episode, becoming more and more emotionally intense as the story goes on. The story follows Ichika Tachibana's life over a summer holiday when she meets Manatsu Kuroki. The series then details their summer activities and the use of spiritual creatures called Djinn (ジン jin), non-cardinal elemental creatures that lend their powers to Ichika to help her and her friends when they invariably find themselves in danger, and eventually for their own motives.
  • Ichika Tachibana is an ordinary 14-year old girl who one day finds that her mobile phone wound up on the other side of a huge mirror at school. When she tries to retrieve it, she sees another girl inside the mirror, who promptly exits it. This girl, Manatsu, promises to take care of her for the summer holiday, as long as Ichika does her "homework" for her. Being Ichika's reflection and representation of a part of her, Manatsu has some outward semblance to Ichika and shares some of her fears and likes, but is more outspoken and a lot less serious. Ichika takes her home and finds that her parents are strangely willing to accept this girl in their house. In the following weeks strange things happen related to the yin-yang shaped charm that Ichika received from Sei, one of her homework tutors. Through this charm she can summon spirits that represent various earth elements (called Djinn), so she can see the world through their eyes – which, incidentally, is the "homework" that Manatsu is supposed to do. This thrills her immensely at first, but the more she uses this power the more she finds that it comes with a high cost, since she starts seeing herself and the world in an increasingly negative light. Ichika also appears to have had dreams about Manatsu for most of her life, but she can't quite remember what she tried to say to her. Uta Kata starts out as a seemingly ordinary Magical Girl show, but fairly quickly shifts toward a much more serious tone, when Ichika faces some big issues regarding the use of her powers and how they affect her and her surroundings. The 12-episode anime, broadcasted in 2004, had quite an ambigious ending that left some questions unanswered. The DVD-release contained an extra OVA episode in an attempt to bring some more closure to the story. The character designs and animation style are hallmarks of gímik, a creative threesome consisting of director Keiji Gotoh, character designer Megumi Kadonosono and screenwriter Hidefumi Kimura, who are perhaps better known for their work on Kiddy Grade and Kiddy Girl-and. Of special note is the fact that all of the costumes that Ichika transforms into (twelve of them - one for each episode) have been designed by different artists, known for their work on other manga, anime or figurines. Also notable is the attention to the beautiful scenery of real-life Kamakura, especially used to great effect in the beach scenes. In August 2010, six years after its original Japanese broadcast, Section 23 Films announced a North American release of the series. And the Fandom Rejoiced. Tropes: * Abusive Parents: Satsuki's step-father. * Anime First: A one-volume manga adaptation, containing a significantly higher amount of Fan Service, was released after the series. * Baker's Dozen: To promote the DVD release, a thirteenth episode was produced, serving as an epilogue to the story. * Beach Episode: Two of 'em, plus an additional swimming pool episode. * Between My Legs: Manatsu's legs frame Ichika during several of her transformations. * Bishounen: Practically every male character on the show. But mostly Sei and Kai. * Bittersweet Ending * Blue and Orange Morality: Saya operates according to a very odd set of rules. * Book Ends: The TV series starts and ends in autumn with Ichika remembering Manatsu. * Break the Cutie: And how. Happens to Ichika over the course of the series, but many of the supporting characters arguably qualify. * But Now I Must Go: Manatsu and Kai, in the OVA * Cherry Blossoms * Christmas Episode: The OVA. * Class Trip * Clingy MacGuffin * Cloning Blues: Sort of, if you see Manatsu as Ichika's clone. * Coming of Age Story * Curtains Match the Window: Michiru. * Dark Is Not Evil: The Djinn of Darkness, despite coming late in the series and being rather forbidding-looking, is one of Ichika's more pleasant transformations. * Distant Finale: In the OVA. * Driven to Suicide: Ichika seriously contemplates it at one point. * Dreaming of Things to Come: Ichika's prophetic dreams about Manatsu. * Elemental Powers, especially: * Blow You Away * Petal Power * Shock and Awe * Making a Splash * Emotionless Girl: Michiru, somewhat. Though not actually emotionless, she does fulfill most of the trope requirements. * Extraordinarily Empowered Girl * Fan Service * Festival Episode * Foot Focus: Episode 4. The girls find themselves at an old summer camp, and as soon as Manatsu runs inside one of the cabins without shoes, she finds her socks covered in a thin film of dirt. Moments later, all girls bunking in the cabin have stripped off their shoes and socks to clean it barefoot. * Furo Scene: A few, but never blatantly Fan Service-y. * Genki Girl: Satsuki, although not in a classical over-the-top sense. Manatsu is rather genki too. * Girlish Pigtails: Manatsu * Glowing Eyes of Doom: Ichika * Impossibly Cool Clothes: Just about every single outfit design, from the school uniforms to the swimwear. However, said designs are completely overshadowed by Ichika's breathtaking magical wardrobe. * Invisible to Normals: The Djinn, also Manatsu at first. * Saya can also make herself invisible, although Michiru's little sister Rui (and Michiru herself) can still see her. * I See Dead People: Michiru can sense spirits. When her friends joke that this is why she doesn't go near the sea, she doesn't disabuse them. * Kimodameshi * I Have the High Ground: Saya. * Last Kiss: Both Ichika/Manatsu and Sei/Kai, in the final episode. * Lighthouse Point * Lucky Charms Title: Note that while it's commonly written (typed) as Uta~Kata, it actually uses the much more rare reverse tilde: Uta∽Kata. As for what that symbol means, God only knows. * Male Gaze: Every other scene. * Magical Girl * Magic Mirror * Meaningful Name: Manatsu can be written with the kanji for "midsummer" (真夏), indicating the time in which she appeared to Ichika. * The kanji for "summer" also appears in Ichika's name (一夏), which literally means "one summer". * Memento MacGuffin: Manatsu's mirror shard and her soap bubble pipe. * Miko: Michiru and her younger sister Rui. * Mood Whiplash * Motif: Cell phones play an important role in many of the episodes. Ichika also uses hers to carry the yin-yang charm. * Multiple Demographic Appeal * Mundane Utility: At first, Ichika uses her powers for fairly mundane tasks, like finding her father's lost watch or retrieving the scattered papers of a windblown school report. * Mysterious Watcher: Saya * Old School Building: Setting for the first episode. * Ordinary High School Student: Sei and Kai. * Painful Transformation * Paint It Black: Ichika's final costume is a black-coloured inversion of the white one she wears in the Opening Theme. * Panty Shot * Parental Abandonment: Satsuki's mother and stepfather are almost always away. * Pinky Swear * Plot-Based Voice Cancellation * Proper Tights with a Skirt: Michiru in her school uniform. * Purple Eyes: Michiru. * Real Place Background: Most of the show takes place in Kamakura. * Red Eyes, Take Warning: Ichika * The Reveal: Several, actually. * Romantic Two-Girl Friendship: Although more sisterly overall, the relationship between Manatsu and Ichika sometimes seems to go in that direction. It's more blatant in the manga adaptation, though. Satsuki and Keiko also count. * Sadistic Choice: In the final episode, Saya forces Ichika to choose between her own death and the death of everyone else in the world. She Takes A Third Option * Scenery Porn: Using Kamakura as the setting tends to invoke this. * Secret Test of Character: Apparently, Saya is tasked by some unknown higher authority to test human children. However, the rules of these tests are that the children may not be let in on the fact that they're being tested. * The Seven Mysteries: The mirror is one of them. The others aren't important (or mentioned). * Shrines and Temples: Just throwing a rock in Kamakura will likely make it land in one of those places. * Snow Means Love: In the OVA * Spirit World * Taken for Granite: Sei, by Saya * Tall, Dark and Bishoujo: Saya * Transformation Sequence: A completely different one for each of Ichika's costumes. They gradually become less and less elaborate as the series goes on (for symbolic reasons, rather than budget). Manatsu also gets a short one which is shown a couple of times. * Transformation Trinket: The yin-yang charm. Unusually, it doesn't require a catchphrase to activate it. * Underboobs: Episode 3's costume. * What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic: Sei and Ichika get crucified against the mirror. * With Great Power Comes Great Insanity: Continued use of the djinn's powers takes a heavy toll on Ichika's emotional and psychological health. * You Can't Fight Fate * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Satsuki's is blue, Manatsu's is green, and Michiru's is purple.