Akane-banashi
Akane-banashi | |
あかね噺 | |
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Genre | |
Manga | |
Written by | Yuki Suenaga |
Illustrated by | Takamasa Moue |
Published by | Shueisha |
English publisher | |
Imprint | Jump Comics |
Magazine | Weekly Shōnen Jump |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | February 14, 2022 – present |
Volumes | 14 |
Akane-banashi (Japanese: あかね噺, "Akane's Story") is a Japanese manga series written by Yuki Suenaga and illustrated by Takamasa Moue. It follows teenager Akane Osaki as she aims to reach the highest rank in rakugo, partly to avenge her father, who was expelled from the profession six years earlier. The rakugo in the series is supervised by professional rakugoka Keiki Hayashiya. Akane-banashi has been serialized in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump since February 2022, with the chapters collected into 14 tankōbon volumes as of November 2024. Viz Media has licensed the series for English release in North America.
Akane-banashi has received a positive reception from reviewers and has been nominated for various awards.
Plot
[edit]Growing up, Akane admired her father and his rakugo, a traditional Japanese form of storytelling where a lone performer, called a rakugoka, depicts a long, complicated, and usually funny story involving multiple characters, who are distinguished by changes in pitch, tone, slight turns of the head, and hand movements, all while sitting in place. But when she was in elementary school, her father and all the other applicants were expelled from the Arakawa School during the promotional test to obtain rakugo's third and highest rank of shin'uchi. Six years later, Akane, who had been secretly receiving lessons from her father's former master, sets out to become a shin'uchi of the Arakawa School to avenge her father and prove rakugo is a legitimate profession.
Characters
[edit]Osaki family
[edit]- Akane Osaki (桜咲朱音, Osaki Akane) / Akane Arakawa (阿良川朱音, Arakawa Akane)
- Voiced by: Akane Yamaguchi
- A 17-year-old high school girl with a love of rakugo that she developed while watching her father, a former rakugoka. As a child, she got angry whenever a classmate or their parents looked down on her father for his chosen career, and hates that he was forced to give up his dream and get a "real job". Akane becomes a formal rakugoka apprentice, starting at the first rank known as zenza after graduating high school, under Shiguma Arakawa (VI).
- Tohru Osaki (桜咲徹, Osaki Tohru) / Shinta Arakawa (阿良川志ん太, Arakawa Shinta)
- Voiced by: Kappei Yamaguchi
- A former rakugoka who used the stage name "Shinta Arakawa" while studying under Shiguma Arakawa (VI); he was expelled following his shin'uchi promotion test. Before the shin'uchi test, he participated in futatsume events with his friends Chocho Konjakutei and Taizen Arakawa. After leaving the Arakawa School, he became a salaryman, selling concrete.
Arakawa School
[edit]Arakawa School rakugoka in Akane-banashi | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Arakawa masters
[edit]- Issho Arakawa (阿良川一生, Arakawa Issho)
- Voiced by: Yuki Tamai
- The top-ranked master and head of the Arakawa School, who is considered one of the greatest rakugoka of his generation. Six years ago, he was the chief judge who expelled Akane's father and the other shin'uchi applicants. He is the first-born son of the Kurogane family who was disowned for his vow of independence, and later worked at Soba Shop Kikuhiko with Shiguma (VI). Educated in the Kashiwaya school as Kisoba Kashiwaya (柏家生そば, Kashiwaya Kisoba).
- Shiguma Arakawa (阿良川志ぐま, Arakawa Shiguma) (VI)
- Voiced by: Takuya Saito
- The number two master of the Arakawa School who specializes in sentimental tales of the ninjo-banashi style and who taught Akane's father. After Shinta was expelled, Shiguma felt unfit to take on any more pupils. But he has been secretly teaching Akane rakugo for the last six years, and agrees to formally take her on as a pupil after she graduates high school, which is unusually late. Grew up without formal education in the backstreets of Tokyo, later working at Soba Shop Kikuhiko with Issho. Born as Yosuke Shiranami (白波洋輔, Shiranami Yōsuke), he was educated in the Kashiwaya school as Rokuen Kashiwaya (柏家禄ゑん, Kashiwaya Rokuen) and later inherited the legendary myoseki stage name of his master, Shiguma Arakawa V (formerly Kiroku Kashiwaya), who also founded the Arakawa School.
- Ikken Arakawa (阿良川一剣, Arakawa Ikken)
- The media-savvy master of the Arakawa School who also acts in the television drama Yin-Yang Cops. He is billed as the brains behind the Arakawa School.
- Zensho Arakawa (阿良川全生, Arakawa Zenshō)
- Zensho holds a grudge against Shiguma; he is honest to his feelings.
- Taizen Arakawa (阿良川泰全, Arakawa Taizen)
- Nicknamed "The Furious". Before becoming a shin'uchi, he participated in futatsume events with his friends Shinta Arakawa and Chocho Konjakutei. After he tearfully begged Zensho for Shinta's reinstatement, Zensho made him feel responsible for the expulsion by telling him Issho faulted Taizen for not making a larger impact like Chocho after Taizen was promoted to shin'uchi, the year before the disastrous test.
- Maikeru Arakawa (阿良川まいける, Arakawa Maikeru)
- The most senior pupil under Master Shiguma after Shinta was expelled. He fancies himself a ladies' man. During the story, he passes his shin'uchi test.
- Shiguma Arakawa (阿良川志ぐま, Arakawa Shiguma) (V)
- The founder of the Arakawa School; he was the master of both Issho (Kisoba) and Shiguma VI (Rokuen) in the Kashiwaya school and formerly used the stage name Kiroku Kashiwaya (柏家生禄, Kashiwaya Kiroku) before he was expelled and revived the myoseki name Shiguma Arakawa, as the fifth to take that name. Served as an officer in the Japanese military during World War II at Rabaul.
Arakawa students
[edit]- Guriko Arakawa (阿良川ぐりこ, Arakawa Guriko)
- Voiced by: Masayuki Suzuki
- Master Shiguma's youngest pupil until Akane; he joined shortly before Shinta was expelled and just recently reached rakugo's second rank of futatsume.
- Kyoji Arakawa (阿良川享二, Arakawa Kyōji)
- A 28-year-old futatsume in his ninth year of rakugo under Master Shiguma. Ever since Shinta was expelled, Kyoji is the disciplinarian who keeps the other pupils in line. His seriousness makes the back-and-forth banter in his rakugo even funnier. He is a lightweight, and gets drunk after one sip of alcohol. He offers to take Akane under his wing. Educated in the Kashiwaya school as Kiyoichi Kashiwaya.
- Koguma Arakawa (阿良川こぐま, Arakawa Koguma)
- A 29-year-old futatsume in his 11th year of rakugo under Master Shiguma. He is a Tokyo University graduate and the Shiguma School's best terakoya; master of old literary teachings. He meticulously researches every rakugo story he performs, including the daily customs of the period it came from, and turns into a completely different person onstage as far as his appearance and demeanor.
- Kaisei Arakawa (阿良川魁生, Arakawa Kaisei)
- An obnoxious futatsume under Master Issho. He reached that rank at 19-years-old, after only two years of zenza apprenticeship. He is particularly skilled at portraying seductive characters, which makes his silly ones stand out even more. Initially knew Issho as a regular patron of his mother's bar who helped with her hospital bills.
- Hikaru Arakawa (阿良川ひかる, Arakawa Hikaru)
- Hikaru competed with Akane and Karashi in the Karaku Cup as Hikaru Koragi; specializes in "heart-warming rakugo" and the heretical "eight blind men" technique, which draws upon her strengths as a voice actress. She is a zenza studying under Master Ikken.
- Kaichi Arakawa (阿良川嘉一, Arakawa Kaichi)
- Kaichi is one of the finalists in the Arakawa zenza renseikai event. He is in his 30s, a former salesman who was inspired by Master Issho to leave his job and make his audiences happy; officially, he is Akane's junior, as he joined the Arakawa School later than she did.
Other schools
[edit]Other rakugoka in Akane-banashi | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sanmeitei
[edit]- Karashi Sanmeitei (三明亭からし, Sanmeitei Karashi)
- Karashi competed with Akane and Hikaru in the Karaku Cup as Karashi Nerimaya; specializes in "adapted rakugo", which takes a classic story and adds modern elements. He is a zenza studying under master Enso Sanmeitei (三明亭円相, Sanmeitei Enso).
Konjakutei
[edit]- Chocho Konjakutei (今昔亭ちょう朝, Konjakutei Chōchō)
- Master Chocho Konjakutei was the youngest to ever be considered an ookanban headliner. He is an inveterate gambler, choosing the story he will perform just before taking the stage, based on a roll of the dice. Before becoming a shin'uchi, he participated in futatsume events with his friends Shinta Arakawa and Taizen Arakawa.
- Asagao Konjakutei (今昔亭朝がお, Konjakutei Asagao)
- Asagao was the senior (tate) zenza at the Yasaka-tei theatre when Akane arrived for her initial training. At that time he was a zenza known to have a hot temper, which cost him a chance for a futatsume promotion after he punched Rien Konjakuan for insulting his master. Later, he is promoted to futatsume at a debut with Akane, Taizen, and Chocho.
Tsubakiya
[edit]- Hassho Tsubakiya (樁家八正, Tsubakiya Hasshō)
- Master Hassho Tsubakiya prefers his cushion to be precisely 80 cm (31 in) from the microphone and performs in a gentle manner. He takes great pride in the craft of rakugo and does not wish to see the art cheapened by revenge stunts.
Ransaika
[edit]- Urara Ransaika (蘭彩歌うらら, Ransaika Urara)
- Master Urara Ransaika is an ookanban , a superstar capable of filling a venue on the basis of her name alone. Urara is the sole apprentice of Sharaku Ransaika (蘭彩歌しゃ楽, Ransaika Sharaku) "The Unteaching", who believed no one could properly inherit his art until he met her. Sharaku performed kuruwa-banashi, rakugo set in brothels, which emphasized the importance of dialogue and conversation, and Urara's seductive manner is capable of immersing the audience fully into those settings. Has known Issho/Kisoba, Shiguma (V)/Kiroku, and Shiguma (VI)/Rokuen since 1964, when they met after she was accosted by the son of a yakuza kumichō (family head).
Kashiwaya
[edit]- Miroku Kashiwaya (柏家ミ禄, Kashiwaya Miroku) (V)
- Master Miroku Kashiwaya (V), aka "The National Treasure", was a zenza alongside Urara, Shiguma, and Issho. He is the fifth to take the name "Miroku"; these myoseki stage names are established by legendary rakugoka and passed down within a school.
- Rokuru Kashiwaya (柏家禄郎, Kashiwaya Rokurō)
- Rokuru Kashiwaya, aka "The Wonder Child", believes the sound of rakugo is paramount and styles his performances after musicians, including John Coltrane; on "Coltrane days", the story begins in a gentle manner and ends aggressively. He defended Akane from unfair criticism by Rien Konjakuan and warned that her revenge strategy would have repercussions.
Konjakuan
[edit]- Rien Konjakuan (今昔庵りゑん, Konjuakuan Rien)
- Rien Konjakuan is an inconsiderate futatsume nicknamed "the rookie-crusher" for making unreasonable demands of zenza.
Production
[edit]Author Yuki Suenaga stated that Akane-banashi originated with Akane, a character he created but did not know what to do with.[3] A fan of manzai and conte, he was interested in rakugo, but felt it was too difficult to get into. Suspecting there were many people who felt the same way, and that it would be unexpected of the character, he decided to have Akane perform rakugo. Suenaga stated that because he is new to rakugo, he is able to predict the things readers might not know, and can depict them in the manga in a way they will understand.[3] The serialization of Akane-banashi was proposed in the fall of 2021.[4] With the help of rakugoka Keiki Hayashiya, who supervises the rakugo in the manga, Suenaga interviewed more than 20 rakugoka, including Momoka Chokaroh and Miyaji Katsura.[4]
Artist Takamasa Moue said when he first heard about the series he found it interesting, but worried whether readers of Weekly Shōnen Jump would be interested in rakugo. Realizing it was his job to make them interested, he said he tried to get readers emotionally invested in the characters, and to broaden the scope to appeal to those unfamiliar with rakugo.[3] Having previously only had a passing interest in rakugo, Moue said he had fun researching it for Akane-banashi.[5] To draw the rakugo scenes in the manga, Moue listens to a performance of the relevant story and thinks about how to convey the speed and intonation.[3]
Gendai Business columnist Kenichiro Horii wrote that Akane-banashi's Arakawa School is clearly modeled after the real-life Tatekawa School of rakugo, whose master, Danshi Tatekawa VII, expelled a group of zenza in 2002, after feeling that they were not showing enough effort to reach futatsume.[6] Although Kazuhiro Ito of Good Life with Books also noted the similarities, he reported that Suenaga stated Issho Arakawa was instead modeled after Enshō Sanyūtei VI .[7] Horii also pointed out that the Rakugo Cafe seen in the series is modeled after a real café with a similar name in Jinbōchō, Tokyo.[6] According to Hayashiya, the Yasaka-tei and Edobashi-tei theaters in the manga were modeled after Suehiro-tei in Shinjuku and the Oedo Nihonbashi-tei in Nihonbashi, respectively.[8][9] For the colored title page of chapter 29, Moue was inspired by The Breakfast Club.[10] The Shikisai Festival seen in the manga was modeled after the Rakugo Association's Sharakusai Festival.[11] The story "Giboshi" that is depicted in chapter 87 is a little-known rakugo story that was revived by Kyotaro Yanagiya . Suenaga stated that he received permission to use it in Akane-banashi.[12]
Publication
[edit]Written by Yuki Suenaga and illustrated by Takamasa Moue, Akane-banashi began serialization in Shueisha's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Jump on February 14, 2022.[13][14] The rakugo in the series is supervised by professional rakugoka Keiki Hayashiya.[15] Publisher Shueisha is collecting the individual chapters into tankōbon volumes, with the first released on June 3, 2022.[16]
Both Shueisha and Viz Media began releasing the series in English digitally the same day it began in Japan, the former on its Manga Plus website and application.[14] Viz began publishing Akane-banashi in print in summer 2023.[17]
Volumes
[edit]No. | Original release date | Original ISBN | English release date | English ISBN | ||
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1 | June 3, 2022[18] | 978-4-08-883150-3 | August 8, 2023[19] | 978-1-9747-3648-5 | ||
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Akane requests to become a formal rakugo apprentice under Shiguma Arakawa (VI), her father's former master who has been secretly giving her lessons for the last six years. Before deciding, he has her perform in front of an audience for the first time at Rakugo Cafe. After showing her skills with the classic "Scared of Manju "[a] she is well-received by the audience, shocks Shiguma's pupil Guriko, and meets Kaisei, a pupil of Issho Arakawa, the man who expelled her father. Akane is formally taken on as an apprentice after Shiguma meets with her mother for the first time since Akane's father was expelled. Shiguma's pupil Kyoji takes Akane under his guidance and, when she is disappointed with the audience reception after she performs "Praising Children ",[b] calls her rakugo selfish and puts her on the path to learning kibataraki or mindful action; which includes altering your performance to each audience and anticipating what they want ahead of time. He does this by having her work as a waitress at Umi, an izakaya. | ||||||
2 | August 4, 2022[20] | 978-4-08-883193-0 | October 10, 2023[21] | 978-1-9747-4053-6 | ||
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During a performance of "Praising Children" at a retirement home, Akane shocks Kyoji with the kibataraki she has learned. Kyoji performs "Three Men Lose One Ryo ".[d] In school, Akane's teacher Machiko Iwashimizu is concerned that her student is so firmly set on becoming a rakugoka that she will not even be applying for colleges. After attending a performance by Akane at the urging of Akane's classmate Jumbo Ozaki and seeing how passionate she is about rakugo, Iwashimizu changes her mind and informs Akane of the Karaku Cup, a rakugo competition for students. Akane wants to enter in order to win the prize, a conversation with head judge Issho Arakawa. Master Shiguma allows her to enter but under the condition that she win only with "Jugemu", a story so famous that even people unfamiliar with rakugo know it; meaning it is difficult to get laughs with, and thus never performed in competitions. Akane asks her senpai Koguma Arakawa for help, and he inspires her to research the Edo period. As the first day of the Karaku Cup begins, the unknown Akane draws attention after receiving praise from the emcee, Kaisei. | ||||||
3 | October 4, 2022[22] | 978-4-08-883260-9 | December 12, 2023[23] | 978-1-9747-4098-7 | ||
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Akane is one of eight contestants to proceed to the finals of the Karaku Cup, and positions herself as one of the three poised to win. In the finals, Karashi Nerimaya, winner of the last two years, performs his "adapted rakugo", which takes the basic concepts of the classic "Tenshiki "[e] and places them in a modern setting. Hikaru Koragi, a popular voice actress, uses her acting skills to perform "Shibahama ",[f] a heart-warming rakugo, in a theatrical style. After these two performances where the contestants purposefully showed off their strengths, Akane successfully adapts her performance of "Jugemu" to the audience's current mood so that they naturally focus on her story rather than her; she essentially disappears from the stage, showing a deeper connection to the characters' minds and outlooks, just as Master Shiguma wanted her to learn. | ||||||
4 | December 2, 2022[24] | 978-4-08-883419-1 | February 13, 2024[25] | 978-1-9747-4302-5 | ||
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Master Issho, who had been encouraging promising newcomers, declares Akane does not belong in an amateur contest, as he realizes she has studied under Shiguma. As her reward for winning the Karaku Cup, Akane has a private meeting with Issho where she asks why he expelled her father, Shinta. He explains he was protecting the art from weakness, including Shinta's unconfident shin'uchi test performance; Akane thanks him and vows to demonstrate he misjudged her father's art. Shiguma tells Akane that Shinta chose to leave rakugo forever because he could not carry on Shiguma's art. Eight months later, Akane begins zenza performance training at Yasaka-tei, a yose theatre, alongside Karashi, now studying under Enso Sanmeitei, Un'un Kenputei, and the senior (tate) zenza, Asagao Konjakutei. After a stern lecture from odious futatsume Rien Konjakuan, Asagao assigns her to open for Rien. | ||||||
5 | March 3, 2023[26] | 978-4-08-883427-6 | April 9, 2024[27] | 978-1-9747-4334-6 | ||
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After Akane performs a punning "Sango-Jigo "[g] rakugo which pointedly references their encounter yesterday, an infuriated Rien's retaliation is halted by "wonder child" Rokuro Kashiwaya. As the zenza crew at Yasaka-tei disbands, Asagao, Karashi, and Shiguma encourage Akane to learn more stories from other masters. Hassho Tsubakiya, the first she approaches, declines to teach her "Hirabayashi ";[h] Akane realizes she is earning a bad reputation from her "Sango-Jigo" stunt. She asks to participate in Rokuro's upcoming neta-oroshi event in which each rakugoka is performing a story new to them. Akane watches superstar ookanban master Urara Ransaika perform "Fetching Tea" (お茶汲み, Ochakumi).[i] Upon listening to Akane describe her conflict with Rien, Urara offers to teach her the same story. Urara invites Akane to watch Rokuro perform "The Carpenter's Inquiry ";[j] Kimihisa Kashio, a reporter for Monthly Rakugo, explains Rokuro earned the "wonder child" nickname by refusing to be cowed by the other performers. | ||||||
6 | June 2, 2023[28] | 978-4-08-883492-4 | June 11, 2024[29] | 978-1-9747-4575-3 | ||
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At their first formal lesson, Master Urara says Akane is not suited for the part of the oiran; to win Urara's approval to perform "Fetching Tea", Akane literally dresses as a courtesan and later goes on an initially awkward date with her former classmate, Jumbo Ozaki. At the neta-oroshi event, Akane's delivery is similar to Urara's, but the difference in their ages make the oiran sound false, not seductive; however, the story pivots after the oiran's deception is exposed, and Master Hassho, watching from the side of the stage, recognizes the realism of Akane's portrayal. Acknowledging her resilience, Hassho agrees to teach "Hirabayashi". In a flashback, Kaisei's childhood struggles and his connection to Master Issho are shown before he performs "The Death of Toyoshiga "[k] at an event, following an opening story by Akane; backstage, he tells her about an upcoming four-performer event in which three have already been chosen, and the fourth slot will go to the winner of the annual zenza renseikai training event, judged by Master Ikken Arakawa. | ||||||
7 | August 4, 2023[30] | 978-4-08-883592-1 | August 13, 2024[31] | 978-1-9747-4623-1 | ||
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The renseikai event includes a preliminary round with 18 zenza, with four advancing to a final evaluation one month later. Maikeru volunteers to tutor Akane if she makes the finals. From the preliminary round, Akane advances with "Hirabayashi", as does Kaichi, a former salesman now studying under Master Issho; Zenmai, apprentice to Zensho; and, in a surprise, Hikaru with "The Miller's Torment ",[l] who kept her studies under Ikken secret until that day. Maikeru offers three stories to Akane, and she chooses "Changing Time" (替り目, Kawari-me),[m] because he learned it from Shinta. To better understand her father's art, Akane asks those who knew him, including her mom, what Shinta was like. At the finals, Zenmai performs "The Stubborn Moxibustion "[n] first, receiving a total score of 75/100, which is the sum of three professional judges (two rakugoka and one critic), the in-person audience, and an on-line audience, each of which can award up to 20 points. | ||||||
8 | October 4, 2023[32] | 978-4-08-883691-1 | October 8, 2024[33] | 978-1-9747-4893-8 | ||
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Kaichi goes next, performing "Golden Bamboo "[o] by aiming to please the audience and drawing on his experience; backstage, Akane hears echoes of Shinta's motivations in Kaichi, who scores 91 points. Before she goes on, Hikaru tells Akane she became a rakugoka to beat her. Hikaru performs "The Hanami Revenge "[p] in the heretical "Eight Blind Men" style, using distinct voices for each character. She earns 93 points, including a perfect 20 from the streaming audience. Akane closes out the set with "Changing Time"; during her low-key performance, she realizes she was charmed by the vulnerability in Shinta's art, which she uses to deliver the in-person audience into the story. At his wife's insistence, Tohru is watching Akane online while traveling for work; he protests rhetorically about the blurry video quality, through his tears. | ||||||
9 | December 4, 2023[34] | 978-4-08-883791-8 | December 10, 2024[35] | 978-1-9747-4939-3 | ||
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Akane places second with 92 points; her first defeat leaves her feeling sad. Although she received better marks from every in-person voter, the streaming audience provided the winning margin. At a local festival held jointly by the Shiguma school and his neighborhood, Shiguma's apprentices operate competing booths; Akane encounters Master Shiguma, who advises her to "tighten the loincloth (fundoshi) of her heart" and enjoy herself before she helps Guriko at a yakitori stand. During the festival rakugo performance, she opens for Guriko, whose "The Careless Nail "[q] is received well; he later vows to stay ahead of her as a role model and asks Maikeru for help. At a corporate anniversary event, Karashi recites the company's history in the kōdan style before reuniting with Asagao, Akane, and Un'un at Yasaka-tei to celebrate Asagao's futatsume promotion plans. Akane, who has been strategizing how to secure a recommendation from one of the Arakawa Arch Four, is given an old flyer by Asagao, which advertised a event held jointly by his master Chocho Konjakutei with Shinta and Taizen Arakawa. Akane and Karashi are invited to watch Chocho perform, who is the youngest ever to reach ookanban. Hassho helps Chocho sneak into the venue and tells Akane she reminds him of Chocho. | ||||||
10 | March 4, 2024[36] | 978-4-08-883822-9 | February 11, 2025[37] | 978-1-9747-5176-1 | ||
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Based on a roll of the dice backstage, Chocho performs "One for Show "[r] and Hassho wryly notes he is "a born gambler". At a celebratory afterparty, Asagao announces his plans to hold a zenza study event monthly and invites Akane and Karashi to participate. Chocho gambles with the zenza over a rigged game of chō-han for a chance to learn a story. Separately, Guriko asks permission from Shiguma to continue his studies in Osaka. Asagao is challenged to sell all 50 seats at the Rakugo Cafe for his study events, but only four show up at the debut. Taizen refuses to meet with Chocho, who asks if Taizen still believes Shinta's expulsion was Taizen's fault. Akane draws a young audience to the study events by performing "Tanuki Money" (狸の札, Tanuki no Satsu)[s] in a tanuki costume. Asago tells Rokuru he is using the study events to select an opener. At the "Arakawa New Breeze" futatsume event featuring Hikari, Yuzen, Koguma, and Kaisei, Koguma revives "Giboshi" (擬宝珠),[t] a story whose oral tradition had died out. | ||||||
11 | May 2, 2024[39] | 978-4-08-884023-9 | — | — | ||
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At the fourth study event, Asagao performs "The Backward Rickshaw "[u] and invites Akane to open his futatsume debut event, which will include the ookanban Chocho and Taizen. Chocho asks if Taizen will give Akane a futatsume recommendation which Taizen, who apprenticed under Zensho, has never done and Zensho, who has a grudge against Shiguma, forbids him from doing so. For the event, Chocho teaches "Tanuki Dice" (狸賽, Tanuki Sai)[v] to Akane but asks that she refrain from using Edo dialect for training. Over drinks, Chocho asks Shiguma (VI) about the art of Shiguma's and Issho's master, also named Shiguma (V), which Shinta was pursuing. The upcoming debut event, which Kimihisa notes is the first to include members of the Rakugo Federation and Arakawa School since the mass expulsion, is highly anticipated and the "National Treasure", rakugoka Miroku Kashiwaya, attends. To avoid disobeying his master, Taizen calls to say he will be late enough to miss Akane's performance, but Tohru convinces him to show up on time instead. Akane's "Tanuki Dice" draws on her own personality, rather than just the structures of rakugo, for the first time. | ||||||
12 | July 4, 2024[40] | 978-4-08-884114-4 | — | — | ||
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Akane plays with the structure and plot of "Tanuki Dice", winning a warm reaction from the crowd before Taizen performs "The Golden Daikoku" (黄金の大黒, Kogane no Daikoku)[w] to rapturous applause. Backstage, Akane speaks with Taizen; as Zensho interrupts to remind Taizen of his order, Taizen announces he will give Akane a futatsume recommendation and Shiguma orders Zensho to leave. Outside, Zensho's tantrum is interrupted by Maikeru, who tells him his shin'uchi promotion test has been set to take place in a month. Akane confesses she is having fun with rakugo to Tohru. In a private meeting, Miroku calls Shiguma by his student name, Rokuen Kashiwaya, noting that Issho (Kisoba) and Kyoji (Kyoichi) also were brought up in the Kashiwaya School; Miroku also draws similarities between Akane and Kiroku Kashiwaya, the former Shiguma (V). | ||||||
13 | September 4, 2024[41] | 978-4-08-884165-6 | — | — | ||
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Tagging along at his request, Akane and Maikeru perform everything but rakugo as he prepares for his shin'uchi test, the first to be held by the Arakawa School since the expulsion. Zensho privately predicts failure and poisons the crowd's mood by reminding everyone about the prior disaster during the opening remarks. During the test, Maikeru chooses to perform "Time's Up",[x] making an initial light, joking impression, but he pivots to a tone befitting the tragic, emotional ninjo-banashi, which reflects his journey as the senior apprentice after Shinta left; his performance leaves most of the audience, including Zensho, in tears. Maikeru is promoted on a 3–1 vote, with Issho dissenting because some members of the audience were left unmoved. | ||||||
14 | November 1, 2024[42] | 978-4-08-884284-4 | — | — | ||
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Standards to become an Arakawa shin'uchi have risen to the point where the performance must be worthy of an ookanban, following an incident involving Master Issho. While researching Issho's master Shiguma Arakawa (V) (Kiroku Kashiwaya), Rokuro discovers Shiguma (V) had performed an unfinished story later named "Shiguma's Art", which had been passed down within Kashiwaya exclusively until Kiroku/Shiguma (V) broke away to form the Arakawa School. Four months later, as Akane prepares for her own futatsume event, Shiguma (VI) asks her to open for his upcoming solo event. Karashi, Hikaru, and Akane renew their now-friendly rivalry. At the solo event, Akane performs "First Tenjin "[y] in gratitude for Shiguma VI's life lessons before he goes on with his specialty "God of Death". | ||||||
15 | February 4, 2025[43] | 978-4-08-884431-2 | — | — |
Chapters not yet in tankōbon format
[edit]These chapters have yet to be published in a tankōbon volume. They were serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump.
- "Afterparty" (打ち上げ, Uchiage)
- "Impossible Task" (ムチャブリ, Muchaburi)
- "Time at Last" (いよいよ, Iyoiyo)
- "Is This Rakugo?" (落語ですか?, Rakugo desu ka?)
- "It's All A Mess" (ぐちゃぐちゃ, Guchagucha)
- "Dismantled" (解体, Kaitai)
- "Thinking Back" (思い出す, Omoidasu)
- "There's Always Tomorrow" (明日がある, Ashitagāru)
- "There Is Everything" (何でもある, Nani Demo aru)
- "Apprenticing" (弟子入り, Deshiiri)
- "Still Alive" (死んでない, Shin Denai)
- "To Hell With It" (しゃあねえか, Sha anē ka)
- "Chance to Shine" (晴れ舞台, Hare Butai)
- "Raise the Flag" (旗上げ, Hata Age)
Other media
[edit]The first chapter of Akane-banashi received a motion comic adaptation, where voice actors, music and sound effects are heard as the manga images appear on screen. It was uploaded to Jump Comics' official YouTube channel in two parts on June 4 and 5, 2022.[16][44] Akane and her father are voiced by Akane and Kappei Yamaguchi. In addition to being actual daughter and father, the Yamaguchis are also both rakugoka.[16]
Reception
[edit]By September 2022, the collected volumes of Akane-banashi had over 200,000 copies in circulation and volume one had been reprinted four times.[45] With the release of volume 10 in March 2024, the manga had 1.5 million copies in circulation.[46] The series has been recommended by Eiichiro Oda and Hideaki Anno.[47] It was nominated for the 2022 Next Manga Award in the print manga category and ranked third out of 50 nominees.[48][49] The series ranked fourth in the 2023 edition of Takarajimasha's Kono Manga ga Sugoi! list of best manga for male readers.[50] It ranked third in the Nationwide Bookstore Employees Recommended Comics of 2023.[51] Akane-banashi ranked second in the 16th Manga Taishō, losing to Kore Kaite Shine by two points.[52] It was also nominated for the 47th Kodansha Manga Award in the shōnen category in 2023.[53] The New York Public Library included Akane-banashi on its 2023 list of the Best Books for Teens.[54] Anime News Network's Richard Eisenbeis chose it as the Best New Manga of 2023,[55] while Brigid Alverson of School Library Journal included it as one of the Top 10 Manga of 2023.[56] The Young Adult Library Services Association included the first volume of Akane-banashi on its 2024 list of Great Graphic Novels for Teens.[57] In 2024, Stephen Paul's English translation of the series for Viz Media was nominated for Best Translation at the inaugural American Manga Awards, which is co-organized by Anime NYC and Japan Society.[58]
Steven Blackburn of Screen Rant praised the first chapter of Akane-banashi. He wrote that the sudden shift in protagonists from Shinta, "a stereotypical hero who embodies everything that makes a successful shonen [manga]", to Akane, an unconventional hero who is essentially a wunderkind, already makes the latter character compelling. "That's a difficult dynamic to achieve, but Akane-banashi has somehow succeeded before it's even begun".[59] In a review for Multiversity Comics, Zach Wilkerson gave the "immensely charming and well crafted" first chapter an 8.5 rating, with particular praise for Moue's art.[60] Robbie Pleasant of the same website strongly praised the series and its art for successfully conveying how a performer's demeanor and voice changes as they perform different characters, despite manga being a static and soundless medium.[61]
In May 2022, Kota Mukaihara of Real Sound wrote that Akane-banashi was poised to be a breakout hit. He felt that although Akane's progress in rakugo seemed to be going unusually fast and smooth, with her not yet being confronted by a tough challenge or failing at something, this allows readers to follow her growth without unnecessary stress. Mukaihara speculated that, while this could simply be because the manga was still new and needed to develop quickly in order to gain momentum, it emphasizes Akane's cleverness and the depth of her determination and is a testament to the charm of the characters and the skill with which the story is written. He also wrote that while Akane's outgoing personality and unprecedented skill make her seem like a maverick, her positivity and down-to-earth nature make her a likable character.[1] Blackburn's colleague Ben Sockol praised later chapters of the series for "subverting the classic tournament arc trope", writing that Akane-banashi feels fresh and different from anything else in Weekly Shōnen Jump and is one of the most exciting manga currently running in the magazine as of June 2022.[62]
Notes
[edit]- ^ In "Scared of Manju", a man tricks his roommates into feeding him delicious manjū by convincing them it is the one thing in the world that scares him the most. After he devours the manjū they realize their error and ask what he is really afraid of, to which he replies "a hot cup of tea".
- ^ In "Praising Children", a man who demands free sake without providing appropriate flattery is given a brief lesson in etiquette; in his subsequent confusion, he makes inappropriate age-related compliments.
- ^ Originally titled "Model" in English when released on Manga Plus.
- ^ In "Three Men Lose One Ryo", two prideful men argue over a lost wallet containing three ryō; neither the finder nor loser want to accept it, as spending money was seen as a virtue. To resolve the dispute, a judge adds one ryō to the wallet and splits the total, giving each man two.
- ^ In "Tenshiki", a doctor asks a senior priest if he has "tenshiki"; feigning knowledge to save face, the priest says no, then tasks a junior priest to learn what it is. Eventually, the junior priest learns it means flatulence, but deliberately misleads his senior into thinking it is a sake cup.
- ^ In "Shibahama", a drunkard goes on a binge fueled by found money; the next morning, hungover and unable to pay his debts after he has lost the wallet, he turns his life around and goes sober. After several industrious years, his wife confesses she turned the wallet over to the authorities that night; rather than anger, he is grateful for her help, as their lives have improved.
- ^ "Sango-Jigo" is a word play story which relies on the observation that temples have both a mountain name (山号, sango) and a temple name (寺号, jigo); one character, motivated by money, points out mountain and temple names in everyday life.
- ^ In "Hirabayashi", an apprentice is asked to deliver a letter, but since he cannot read the address, he seeks help from a series of people who confidently state incorrect answers, leaving him hopelessly confused.
- ^ In "Fetching Tea", an oiran screams in shock at first seeing a patron because he resembles her lost love, for whom she sold herself to the brothel; she proposes marriage once her contract ends next spring, but he leaves after he realizes she is lying to win his favor. Hearing the story, another man visits her, claiming she resembles his lost love; by the reversal of the story, her deception is uncovered, but she agrees to keep seeing him and fetches more tea.
- ^ In "The Carpenter's Inquiry", a landlord seizes a carpenter's tools after he falls behind on rent; the carpenter's boss admonishes the landlord for his predatory nature. [In a second part, not related in the manga, the dispute is elevated to the courts, where the magistrate fines the landlord for not having a pawnbroker's license.]
- ^ In "The Death of Toyoshiga", the eponymous Toyoshiga, a master of the shamisen, falls in love with her apprentice Shinkichi, but grows jealous of his relationship with fellow student Ohisa, who is closer to his age. She dies by suicide, cursing Shinkichi.
- ^ In "The Miller's Torment", Tokubei, a rice miller, visits Maruyama, an oiran, but runs out of money. He decides to earn more by ringing a bell, damning him to eternal torment after death; when the sum is less than expected, he rationalizes it as the milling fee.
- ^ In "Changing Time", a drunken husband and suffering wife engage in gentle banter after he returns following a night of drinking; he demands food but she has eaten it all, so she offers to purchase oden for him. Thinking she has left, he verbalizes how grateful he is for her, but is chagrined to realize she overheard him when she re-enters almost immediately. While she is buying the meal, he accidentally starts a chaotic party at home.
- ^ In "The Stubborn Moxibustion", one man brags about his tolerance for moxibustion but his friend is dismissive, lighting a large moxa on his own arm, comparing the feat to Ishikawa Goemon, who was boiled alive. However, the friend is unable to tolerate it and mutters that Goemon must have felt quite hot.
- ^ In "Golden Bamboo", the stock character Yotaro is placed in charge of his uncle's store, where he follows directions too literally and is confused by indecipherable instructions from a fast-talking man with a strong Kamigata accent; Yotaro refuses to buy the merchandise using a homonym which literally means frog.
- ^ In "The Hanami Revenge", four men stage a production for a flower viewing party (hanami); two, playing brothers, will fight a third, their father's murderer, until the fourth, a traveling pilgrim, calms the tensions and starts a celebration. The first three start their needlessly realistic battle while awaiting the pilgrim, who was waylaid; when a passing samurai offers to join their righteous revenge, the trio are frightened and run away together, astonishing onlookers.
- ^ In "The Careless Nail", after a couple move into a new home, she asks her husband to put in a nail to hang up her broom; fearing the too-long nail could have affected their neighbors, she admonishes him. The absent-minded husband visits the neighbors; seeing the tip of the nail above the head of a Buddha altar, he asks if they also use a broom here.
- ^ In "One For Show", a retired gambler takes over as dealer for choboichi , in which bettors guess the value of a rolled die hidden beneath a cup. Apparently unnoticed by the dealer, the die has escaped the cup, showing one pip, and the bettors eagerly bid on one; after collecting the bets, the dealer archly notes the visible die was "one for show" and gathers it, preparing for the actual roll.
- ^ In "Tanuki Money", Hachigoro rescues a tanuki who offers to repay his debts by shapeshifting into money. Despite some preliminary transformation glitches, the debt is settled; the tanuki returns to Hachigoro later with more money after escaping from the debt collector's purse.[38]: 77
- ^ In "Giboshi", a young man confesses his love of licking metal to a family retainer, saying his dream is to lick the giboshi finial of Sensō-ji. Revealing the secret to the man's parents, the retainer is shocked to learn it is a family trait. In the end, the father puts up a ladder at the temple for his son, ruefully noting "he's got me licked."
- ^ In "The Backward Rickshaw", a man seeking a ride at night to Ueno boards a rickshaw whose driver is elderly and slow but insists he will reach Ueno Station before the first train leaves; the passenger jumps off, disgusted. He then asks another driver if he is fast; the driver takes off running before the man can board; after catching the ride, they end up in Sendai but the driver says he will be in Ueno before the first train.
- ^ In "Tanuki Dice", a tanuki tries to repay a debt by transforming into a loaded die to help a man cheat at choboichi. After the man bets on five, he prays out loud for an appearance from Tenjin, a spirit whose crest features the five-petal plum blossom, as a hint to the tanuki; when the cup is lifted, the animal literally has transformed into a miniature Tenjin.[38]: 78
- ^ In "The Golden Daikoku", a landlord calls together his tenants, who fear he will ask for unpaid rent; however, he invites them to celebrate the discovery of a buried golden Daikoku statue. They attend one at a time, sharing the same crested haori jacket. During the party, the landlord notices Daikoku preparing to leave and asked if they were being too noisy; the deity instead was inviting more friends to join the fun, including Ebisu.
- ^ In "Time's Up", traditionally, an incense stick is used to measure the time for a geisha visit. A besotted man spends lavishly to meet one named Koito, embezzling from his family business. As an intervention, he is locked in a storeroom for 100 days; Koito writes daily, but the letters abruptly stop after 80 days. Upon his release, he returns to her okiya where he learns she died of lovesickness; he prays at her memorial and hears his favorite song playing from a shamisen, which stops as the altar incense burns out.
- ^ In "First Tenjin", a man takes his son to the first Tenjin festival of the year (January 25), and the son's repeated requests are denied by the father until he buys first candy, then a kite. On the way home, the man stops to fly the kite but refuses to let his son take over; the boy mutters that if he had known this was going to happen at the festival, he wouldn't have taken his father.
References
[edit]- ^ a b 少年ジャンプの落語漫画『あかね噺』はなぜ面白い? スピーディな展開から読み解く“考える主人公”の強み. Real Sound (in Japanese). May 11, 2022. Archived from the original on October 11, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
...落語の世界に魅せられた女子高生・朱音の成長物語だ。
- ^ "The Official Website for Akane-banashi". Viz Media. Archived from the original on December 19, 2023. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
- ^ a b c d 「噺の稽古をつけてほしいと言われるのは、あなたの人間性が好きです、人間をくださいと言われてるようなものなんです」月亭方正×漫画『あかね噺』作者特別鼎談. Shueisha (in Japanese). February 19, 2023. Archived from the original on February 20, 2023. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
- ^ a b ジャンプで異彩 落語漫画・あかね噺の粋 バトルの王道×噺家の芸道. The Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese). January 31, 2024. Archived from the original on April 4, 2024. Retrieved April 7, 2024.
- ^ "Mangaka Musings 2/27/2022". Viz Media. February 27, 2022. Archived from the original on May 30, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
- ^ a b ジャンプで始まった落語漫画『あかね噺』、そのスゴさと作品背景を「徹底分析」する…!. Gendai Business (in Japanese). March 5, 2022. Archived from the original on May 30, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
- ^ 女性落語家の活躍、マンガの世界でも 末永裕樹・馬上鷹将「あかね噺」(第134回). Good Life with Books (in Japanese). The Asahi Shimbun Company. November 3, 2022. Archived from the original on February 20, 2023. Retrieved February 20, 2023.
- ^ Keiki Hayashiya [@jackcoke21] (October 2, 2022). ジャンプ今週号から始まった #あかね噺 前座修行編 ひとまず修行の舞台となるは、新宿末廣亭をモデルとした"弥栄亭" 落語心中の雨竹亭も高座は末廣亭がモデルですが 外観は旧ニ業見番組合事務所という別の建物 読者の皆さん ぜひ聖地巡礼に遊びにいらして下さいな (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved April 24, 2023 – via Twitter.
- ^ Keiki Hayashiya [@jackcoke21] (April 16, 2023). 前座錬成会が行われてる江戸橋亭のモデル地 『お江戸日本橋亭』 (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved April 25, 2023 – via Twitter.
- ^ "Mangaka Musings 9/11/2022". Viz Media. September 11, 2022. Archived from the original on September 20, 2022. Retrieved September 17, 2022.
- ^ Yuki Suenaga [@scenesevent] (August 30, 2023). 今連載で描いている志ぐま一門のお祭り:志喜彩祭のモデルにしたお祭り、謝楽祭が9月3日に湯島天神にて催されます!芸人出店もありますよ!興味のある方は是非足を運んでみて下さいー! (Tweet) (in Japanese). Retrieved April 7, 2024 – via Twitter.
- ^ "Mangaka Musings 11/19/2023". Viz Media. November 19, 2023. Archived from the original on December 6, 2023. Retrieved April 7, 2024.
- ^ "極小かつ究極のエンタメ"落語を題材に描く新連載がジャンプで始動. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. February 14, 2022. Archived from the original on September 13, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
- ^ a b "Viz Media, Manga Plus Publish Akane-banashi Manga in English". Anime News Network. February 14, 2022. Archived from the original on May 30, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
- ^ ジャンプ落語漫画『あかね噺』1巻発売記念 山口勝平&茜親子の父娘共演ボイスコミック公開. Oricon (in Japanese). June 3, 2022. Archived from the original on June 13, 2022. Retrieved June 8, 2022.
- ^ a b c 尾田栄一郎も推薦「あかね噺」1巻発売、山口勝平・茜親子が出演するボイスコミックも. Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. June 3, 2022. Retrieved June 5, 2022.
- ^ "Viz Publishes Chainsaw Man: Buddy Stories, Heart Gear, Dark Gathering, Wolf Girl & Black Prince, More". Anime News Network. December 7, 2022. Archived from the original on October 7, 2022. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
- ^ あかね噺 1 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on June 30, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2022.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 1". Viz Media. Retrieved April 28, 2023.
- ^ あかね噺 2 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on August 11, 2022. Retrieved June 18, 2022.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 2". Viz Media. Archived from the original on June 25, 2023. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
- ^ あかね噺 3 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on October 10, 2022. Retrieved August 13, 2022.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 3". Viz Media. Archived from the original on July 3, 2024. Retrieved August 31, 2023.
- ^ あかね噺 4 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on December 1, 2022. Retrieved October 23, 2022.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 4". Viz Media. Archived from the original on November 13, 2023. Retrieved October 19, 2023.
- ^ あかね噺 5 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on March 14, 2023. Retrieved January 21, 2023.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 5". Viz Media. Archived from the original on March 5, 2024. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
- ^ あかね噺 6 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on June 1, 2023. Retrieved April 22, 2023.
- ^ "Akane-banashi, Vol. 6". Viz Media. Archived from the original on March 5, 2024. Retrieved February 28, 2024.
- ^ あかね噺 7 (in Japanese). Shueisha. Archived from the original on June 26, 2023. Retrieved June 26, 2023.
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External links
[edit]- Akane-banashi on the official Weekly Shōnen Jump website (in Japanese)
- Akane-banashi on Manga Plus
- Akane-banashi on the official Viz Media website
- Akane-banashi Voice Comic (part 1) on YouTube (in Japanese)
- Akane-banashi Voice Comic (part 2) on YouTube (in Japanese)
- Akane-banashi at Anime News Network's encyclopedia