Shrine of the Morning Mist

Shrine of the Morning Mist
Shrine of the Morning Mist
Shrine of the Morning Mist Vol 1.jpg
First English edition of Shrine of the Morning Mist, published by Tokyopop
Zisterzienserabtei Marienstatt
(Zisterzienserabtei Marienstatt)
Genre Comedy, Magical girl, Slice of life story
Manga
Written by Hiroki Ugawa
Published by Shōnen Gahōsha
English publisher Australia New Zealand Madman Entertainment
Canada United States Tokyopop
Demographic Seinen
Magazine Young King OURs
Original run March 2000August 2007
Volumes 5
TV anime
Directed by Yuji Moriyama
Studio Chaos Project
Gansis
Licensed by Canada United States Media Blasters
Network TV Tokyo, AT-X
Original run July 4, 2002December 26, 2002
Episodes 26
Anime and Manga Portal

Shrine of the Morning Mist (Zisterzienserabtei Marienstatt Zisterzienserabtei Marienstatt?) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Hiroki Ugawa. The manga was serialized in Shōnen Gahōsha's Young King Ours. The manga is licensed in North America by Tokyopop and in Australia and New Zealand by Madman Entertainment. The manga was adapted into an anime series, directed by Yuji Moriyama. The anime was licensed in North America by Media Blasters.

It tells the story of Yuzu Hieda, a high school freshman and one of three sisters, all of whom are miko at the local Shinto shrine. When her childhood love returns, it is discovered that dark gods have a great interest in him and Yuzu is recruited to gather fellow female students into a "Miko Council" to fight off a full-scale mystic assault. The priestesses have talismans which focus their powers and are used when attacking the dark kami.

Contents

Characters

The Miko Council

In the dubbed version, the Miko Council is referred to as the "Priestess Club".

Yuzu Hieda (稗田 柚子 Hieda Yuzu?)
  • Voiced by: Ai Shimizu (Japanese), Zoe Martin (English)
The protagonist of the series, is the middle sister of the Hieda clan, all of whom have trained to be Shinto priestesses. She is a powerful mystic, but naive. She is fixated on her childhood friend Tadahiro, believing they are destined to be together. Her talisman item is a ceremonial dagger.
Seiko Rikiishi (力石 征子 Rikiishi Seiko?)
Yuzu's best friend and first recruit to the Miko Council. She is enthusiastic but unlucky with boys, and pretends to be more worldly than Yuzu when in reality she is just as naive. Her talisman item is a spear.
Chika Yurikasa (百合草 千佳 Yurikusa Chika?)
  • Voiced by: Nanae Katou (Japanese), Bella Hudson (English)
Although she is the same age as the other girls, has a body that resembles that of a ten-year-old. She also has a cutting, nasty streak and never hesitates to speak her mind. Her talisman item is a tamagushi, a ritual wand made of a branch with leaves.
Izumi Sakibara (岬原 いずみ Sakibara Izumi?)
  • Voiced by: Rie Kanda (Japanese), Alissa Brodsky (English)
A bespectacled girl who is obsessed with UFOs and aliens, and convinced there is a connection between UFOs and the demon invasion. She thinks Chika is extremely cute and loses no opportunity to glomp her, much to Chika's disgust. Her talisman item is a set of ofuda.
Shizuka Midoh (御堂 志津歌 Midō Shizuka?)
A quiet, demure and extremely wealthy girl who hero-worships Yuzu. She tries very hard to be the epitome of Japanese femininity. Her talisman item is a ceremonial fan.

The Hieda Clan

Kurako Hieda (稗田 倉子 Hieda Kurako?)
The Asagiri Shrine's head priestess, the Miko Council's mentor, and Yuzu's homeroom teacher and older sister. She is extremely knowledgeable and intensely disciplined, and puts the Council (including her sister, who is already a priestess) through continual, rigorous training that borders on the sadistic. Her talisman items are a bow (she is a skilled archer) and a large ring that can encircle foes.
Tama Hieda (稗田 珠 Hieda Tama?)
The youngest Hieda sister and a priestess-in-training. She takes a perverse glee in teasing her sister about Tadahiro, but is basically kind and loving. Her talisman items are a pair of hand chimes.
Naonori Hieda (稗田 直範 Hieda Naonori?)
The father of the Hieda sisters. He lives at the shrine but does not appear to be a priest; his job is unknown but apparently exhausting. His principal problems are a distrust of Tadahiro's intentions towards Yuzu and the tendency of the rest of the family to almost completely ignore him.
Tadahiro Amatsu (天津 忠尋 Amatsu Tadahiro?)
The cousin of the Hieda sisters. A boy Yuzu's age, he is her childhood friend and they have been carrying a torch for each other for five years. Tadahiro has the power to see the spirit world through his left eye, which is a different color from the right, and is a target of the demons in consequence.
Koma (こま?)
  • Voiced by: Yui Horie (Japanese), Vibe Jones (English)
A bakeneko or "demon cat" who protected Tadahiro's grandfather. She normally appears as an ordinary-looking black cat, but can take human and cat-woman forms to fight. She has an alarming fondness for cake.

Yagarena

Michimune Ayatachi (乱裁 道宗 Ayatachi Michimune?)
An ancient sorcerer who serves Yagarena, a dark god who wishes to return to the Earth and plunge Japan into darkness. He has the power to summon demons from just about anything, which he uses to menace Tadahiro and Yuzu.
The Twilight Priestesses (黄昏の巫女 Tasogare no Miko?)
Are three "dark miko" recruited by Michimune to fight the Miko Council. Their spiritual powers are roughly equal to those of the Miko Council, but their skill is greater.
Kukuri Shirayama (白山 菊里 Shirayama Kukuri?)
Mizuho Hamaji (浜路 瑞穂 Hamaji Mizuho?)
  • Voiced by: Mayumi Asano (Japanese), Mollie Weaver (English)
Yukie Uranami (浦波 雪絵 Uranami Yukie?)
Masashi Kusugi (楠木 正志 Kusugi Masashi?)
A handsome student in Yuzu and Tadahiro's class. Although popular, he is arrogant and cutting and does everything in his power to hamper and humiliate Yuzu. Chika took some pictures that led her to believe he was having a romance with Tadahiro. In reality, Kusugi is a disguise used by Michimune to infiltrate the school and hamper his enemies.

Setting

The real-life city of Miyoshi, Hiroshima was used as the basis for the location of the anime.[1] The real Miyoshi also has an abundance of mist in the morning (hence the series' title), and the folktales recorded in Inō Mononoke scroll (which inspired much of the anime's story) took place on a mountain near Miyoshi City. The mountain in question also appears prominently in Shrine of the Morning Mist.

Manga

Shrine of the Morning Mist is written and illustrated by Hiroki Ugawa. Shōnen Gahōsha released the manga's five tankōbon volumes between January 2001 and December 27, 2007.[2][3] The manga is licensed in North America by Tokyopop,[4] which released the manga's first four tankōbon volumes between May 9, 2006 and May 1, 2007 as of July 2009.[5][6] The series is licensed in France as Asagiri - Les prêtresses de l'aube by Editions Ki-oon.[7]

Volume listing

No. Japanese English
Release date ISBN Release date ISBN
1 January 2001[2] ISBN 978-4-785-92060-9 May 9, 2006[5] ISBN 978-1-598-16343-8
  • Chapter 1 - Homecoming
  • Chapter 2 - Mist
Part 1
Part 2
  • Chapter 3 - Freeloader
  • Chapter 4 - Pre-Eminent Strangeness
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
  • Chapter 5 - Before the Grave
Part 1
Part 2
2 September 2001[8] ISBN 978-4-785-92122-4 September 5, 2006[9] ISBN 978-1-598-16344-5
3 July 31, 2002[10] ISBN 978-4-785-92206-1 January 2, 2007[11] ISBN 978-1-598-16345-2
4 January 16, 2004[12] ISBN 978-4-785-92389-1 May 1, 2007[6] ISBN 978-1-598-16346-9
5 December 27, 2007[3] ISBN 978-4-785-92896-4

Reception

IGN's A.E. Sparrow criticises the manga for making Tadahiro "possibly the most boring character written in the history of manga. He looks and behaves with all the emotional range of a Ken doll, despite being the core character around which the action revolves".[13]

Them Anime Review's Jeremy A Beard comments that comedy of the anime "employs a lot of silly school life misunderstandings and visual gags that reminded me of something like Azumanga Daioh".[14] Anime News Network's Sean Broestl commends the anime for its "great character design, catchy opening [and the] comedy isn't overdone" but he criticises the episodes for feeling "rushed" and its "mediocre plot".[15] Mania.com's Chris Beveridge comments on the anime's "half-length episodes" due to it being aired on TV Tokyo as the second half of Nekketsu Denpa Club, saying, "the show makes decent use of the format and the pacing is certainly much better than a lot of shows that were trying out this format a few years ago, but there's still something slightly off about how it plays out and roughly half of the episodes feel like they're either a bit rushed or they don't end in what you'd consider an appropriate place."[16]

References

  1. ^ Ugawa, Hiroki (May 9, 2006). "Chapter 1 - Homecoming". Shrine of the Morning Mist Vol.1. Tokyopop. pp. 5. ISBN 978-1-598-16343-8. 
  2. ^ a b "朝霧の巫女 1 (ヤングキングコミックス)" (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4785920602/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  3. ^ a b "朝霧の巫女 5 (ヤングキングコミックス)" (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4785928964/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  4. ^ "Tokyopop May Releases". Anime News Network. 2005-11-11. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2005-11-11/tokyopop-may-releases. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  5. ^ a b "Shrine of the Morning Mist Volume 1 (v. 1)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598163434/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  6. ^ a b "Shrine of the Morning Mist Volume 4 (v. 4)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598163469/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  7. ^ "Asagiri - Les prêtresses de l'aube" (in French). Editions Ki-oon. http://www.ki-oon.com/?what=serie&id_serie=28. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  8. ^ "朝霧の巫女 2 (ヤングキングコミックス)" (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4785921226/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  9. ^ "Shrine of the Morning Mist Volume 2 (v. 2)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598163442/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  10. ^ "朝霧の巫女 3 (ヤングキングコミックス)" (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/4785922060/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  11. ^ "Shrine of the Morning Mist Volume 3 (v. 3)". Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1598163450/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  12. ^ "朝霧の巫女 4 (ヤングキングコミックス)" (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. http://www.amazon.co.jp/dp/478592389X/. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  13. ^ Sparrow, A.E. (April 19, 2006). "Shrine of the Morning Mist Vol. 1 Review". IGN. http://au.comics.ign.com/articles/702/702369p1.html. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  14. ^ A Beard, Jeremy. "Shrine of the Morning Mist". Them Anime Reviews. http://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=613. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  15. ^ Broestl, Sean (August 11, 2005). "Shrine of the Morning Mist DVD 1: Asagiri No Miko". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/shrine-of-the-morning-mist/dvd-1. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  16. ^ Beveridge, Chris (January 11, 2005). "Shrine of the Morning Mist Vol. #1". Mania.com. http://www.mania.com/shrine-morning-mist-vol-1_article_76530.html. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 

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