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AnoHana – Jinta Yadomi is peacefully living as a recluse, spending his days away from school and playing video games at home instead. One hot summer day, his childhood friend, Meiko “Menma” Honma, appears and pesters him to grant a forgotten wish. He pays her no mind, which annoys her, but he doesn’t really care. After all, Menma already died years ago. At first, Jinta thinks that he is merely hallucinating due to the summer heat, but he is later on convinced that what he sees truly is the ghost of Menma.
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Jinta and his group of childhood friends grew apart after her untimely death, but they are drawn together once more as they try to lay Menma’s spirit to rest. Re-living their pain and guilt, will they be able to find the strength to help not only Menma move on—but themselves as well?
Released August 31, 2013 Manga Written by Mari Okada Illustrated by Mitsu Izumi Published by Demographic Magazine Published September 4, 2013 Live-action television film Directed by Masaki Nishiura Written by Yoshihiro Izumi Released September 21, 2015 Anohana: The Flower We Saw That Day ( あの日見た花の名前を僕達はまだ知らない。, Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai., lit. 'We Still Don't Know the Name of the Flower We Saw That Day.'
) is an 11-episode 2011 Japanese produced by and directed. The anime aired in 's block between April and June 2011. The anime is licensed in North America.
An anime film was released in Japanese theaters on August 31, 2013. A novelization by was serialized in 's Da Vinci magazine from March to July 2011. A adaptation illustrated by Mitsu Izumi began serialization in the May 2012 issue of 's magazine. A adaptation for the was released by in August 2012. A also premiered in September 2015 on Fuji TV.
Contents. Plot A group of six sixth-grade-age childhood friends drift apart after one of them, Meiko 'Menma' Honma, dies in an accident. Years after the incident, the leader of the group, Jinta Yadomi, has withdrawn from society, does not attend high school, and lives as a. One summer day, the ghost of an older-looking Menma appears beside him and asks to have a wish granted, reasoning that she cannot pass on into the afterlife until it is fulfilled.
At first, he only tries to help her minimally because he thinks he is hallucinating. But since Menma does not remember what her wish is, Jinta gathers his estranged friends together once again, believing that they are the key to resolving this problem.
All of the group joins him, though most of them do so reluctantly. However, things grow increasingly complicated when his friends accuse him of not being able to get over the death of Menma, for Jinta is the only one who can see Menma's ghost and his friends think he is seeing things. But as matters progress, it is realized that Jinta is not the only person in the group who is having trouble letting go of the past and later then Menma shows her presence to the group to prove that she is indeed real. It is revealed that all of the group members blame themselves for Menma's death and long-hidden feelings are rekindled. The group struggles as they grow from trying to help Menma move on and help each other move on as well. Characters Jinta 'Jintan' Yadomi ( 宿海 仁太, Yadomi Jinta) Child Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Adult Voiced by: (Japanese); Griffin Burns (English) Live-action actor: Nijiro Murakami / Ryoka Minamide (childhood) Jinta is a childhood friend of Naruko, Atsumu, Chiriko, Meiko and Tetsudo. As a child, Jinta was the leader of the self-proclaimed Super Peace Busters.
Jinta was energetic and outgoing during his childhood, but became withdrawn and isolated after the deaths of Meiko and his mother. After Meiko's death the Super Peace Busters drifted apart and Jinta eventually became a, refusing to go to school and confining himself to his home.
As a child, he had a crush on Meiko but refused to admit it when asked. This started the chain of events that led to her accidental death. He initially believes that the Meiko that appears to him is not a ghost, but rather a manifestation of his stress, calling her 'the beast of summer'. He eventually becomes hesitant to grant her wish out of fear that she will vanish again. Nonetheless, Meiko's appearance encourages him to venture outside and reconnect with the members of the Super Peace Busters. He is a natural leader with his friends always following him.
Meiko 'Menma' Honma ( 本間 芽衣子, Honma Meiko) Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Live-action actor: / Meiko was a girl of mixed Russian and Japanese ancestry who died in an accident as a child, but appears before Jinta one summer day years later as a ghost. Although she is aware of her death, Meiko is talkative and lively. She greatly values the childhood memories and friendship she once shared with the others, and recalls her memories of her friends and family, including that she had once requested something from Jinta.
When she appears to Jinta, she has aged somewhat, but still retains childlike speech patterns and tendencies. She is also clothed in the dress she was wearing the day that she died and always goes barefoot ever since losing her shoes in the accident that took her life. Because it isn't material to the story, she is shown only once dressed in anything but her white dress, and the only non-childish memory she recalls is that it must have been hard to have found a photo of her when she didn't flash a 'V' sign with her fingers, for the shrine to her memory at her home.
Though only Jinta has the ability to see or hear her, Meiko appears to be able to interact with the world around her: opening doors, cooking food, eating, and even playing video games, with many of these activities shown in scenes without Jinta present. Characters that she embraces feel that the air around her has become heavier (Anaru), or wonder why he has gotten goosebumps (Poppo), or noting a faint scent he hasn't smelled in a while (her brother Satoshi). The others call her by her childhood nickname 'Menma', and she similarly refers to the Super Peace Busters by their childhood nicknames. Jinta has stated that she is selfless, only crying when others are hurt. Meiko does not hold a grudge towards her friends for the accident but hopes to pass on so that she can be and once more be in the same world as her friends. She held Jinta in special regard when she was alive and still cares for him and is worried about his current state.
In the last episode, he reads her letter to him that says her kind of 'like' was the like where she wanted to be his bride. Naruko 'Anaru' Anjō ( 安城 鳴子, Anjō Naruko) Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Live-action actor: / Chinami Yoshioka (childhood) A childhood friend of Jinta, Atsumu, Chiriko, Tetsudo and Meiko.
Naruko displays a cold attitude towards Jinta, especially while in front of her friends, but is secretly worried about his wellbeing. Naruko is described as a person easily influenced by others, hanging out with and playing along with the actions of other girls around her even when she doesn't agree with them. She had admired Meiko, and strove to be like her when they were children, though she was simultaneously envious of her relationship with Jinta.
She attends the same high school as Jinta and is closest to him at the start of the series, even dropping off homework for him while he refuses to attend class. She tells him that she is disappointed by his current lifestyle, but still shows lingering feelings, even painting her nails before she goes to see him. She doubts Meiko's return, but remains jealous of the fact that Jinta still looks only at her. She also feels guilty for asking the question that led to Meiko drowning.
Atsumu states that both of them were left behind and are trapped by their unrequited feelings for Jinta and Meiko. Atsumu 'Yukiatsu' Matsuyuki ( 松雪 集, Matsuyuki Atsumu) Child Atsumu Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Adult Atsumu Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Live-action actor: / Ruiki Sato (childhood) A childhood friend of Jinta, Naruko, Chiriko, Tetsudo and Meiko. In the present, Atsumu holds a condescending and hateful attitude towards Jinta. He becomes agitated whenever Meiko is mentioned and tries to hide that he is still distraught over her death. He and Chiriko attend the same elite high school, which Jinta was unable to enter having failed the entrance exams. Atsumu is handsome, athletic, and popular, but still trapped by the memory of Meiko.
He keeps a white sundress similar to hers in his closet. He claims that he can also see Meiko's spirit, and even spoke on her behalf, but this 'ghost' turned out to be Atsumu himself, who sometimes wanders the forests at night dressed in a wig and the white sundress.
He feels like he is to blame for Meiko's death, because he'd confessed his feelings for Meiko to her on the day of her accident, only she then told him 'later,' and she has to hurry after Jintan, and he believes that he is the one that should be haunted by Meiko's ghost because of it. Although he stops crossdressing after he is caught, he is still tormented by the idea of Meiko's spirit appearing only to Jinta. Atsumu tells Naruko that they were both left behind the others by their unrequited feelings for Jinta and Meiko, saying that they are kindred spirits. Atsumu has a dark, manipulative side driven by both his affection for Meiko and his inferiority complex from childhood with mild feelings of jealousy towards Jinta. Chiriko 'Tsuruko' Tsurumi ( 鶴見 知利子, Tsurumi Chiriko) Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Live-action actor: / Karen Ichihara (childhood) A childhood friend of Jinta, Naruko, Atsumu, Tetsudo and Meiko.
Chiriko is the quiet observer of the group and has an extremely serious and logical personality. She can be critical of others, and in particular scolds Naruko for her habit of following others. She and Atsumu are the only two of the Super Peace Busters who remained close friends as the years passed.
The two are seen together so often that they are mistaken for lovers by their classmates and a shopkeeper. She has feelings for Atsumu, but shows contempt for him whenever she sees that he has not gotten over Meiko's death. She retrieved the hairpin that Atsumu threw away after being rejected by Meiko, and even wears it when she is alone. At times, she plays the voice of reason for Atsumu as well as the role of a guardian. She knows of his feelings of guilt over Meiko's death and suspected that he was crossdressing as a means of coping. She often sketches while idle, even doodling Atsumu wearing Meiko's sundress. Chiriko feels indifferent over Meiko's return, doubting her intentions or if she has truly forgiven everyone.
However, like all the other characters, she loves her and was deeply saddened by her death as a child, because they were good friends. She admits to Naruko that she is in love with Atsumu, but believes that he will never return her love because she cannot win against Meiko. Chiriko feels that he is irreplaceable to her, thus she aids the effort to have Meiko achieve nirvana. It is revealed that she secretly felt guilty for Menma's death for spoiling the question Naruko was going to ask as she believed it influenced her behavior. In the series finale, after everyone finds out that each of them had secret selfish reasons for helping Meiko pass on, she, like everyone else, decides to help Meiko only because she loves her. Tetsudō 'Poppo' Hisakawa ( 久川 鉄道, Hisakawa Tetsudō) Child Tetsudō Voiced by: (Japanese); Abby Trott (English) Adult Tetsudō Voiced by: (Japanese); (English) Live-action actor: Yuta Takahata / Santa Takahashi (childhood) A childhood friend of Jinta, Naruko, Atsumu, Chiriko and Meiko. During their childhood, he greatly admired Jinta and frequently called him 'amazing' or 'cool'.
He admits that he was always grateful to the group for including him as he was an awkward child. Although he has dropped out of school, he is a world traveler who earns money by taking various part-time jobs and lives in their old secret base when not abroad. Tetsudo is worldly and mellow. He is eager to see the Super Peace Busters get back together, immediately believing that Jinta could see and talk to Meiko.
He is the first of the group to tell Meiko that he will fulfill her wish and help her spirit pass on. When the group fights, he is often the one who takes the initiative to smooth things out.
However, it is later revealed that Tetsudo hides feelings of guilt for his role in Meiko's accident beneath his happy-go-lucky personality. Having witnessed her fall into the river, he blames himself for seeing all of it, from the top of the slope that Menma tumbled down, and seeing her drift further and further away down the river.
Media Printed media A novel adaptation of the anime written by was serialized in 's Da Vinci magazine between the March and July 2011 issues. The first of two volumes were published under Media Factory's MF Bunko Da Vinci on July 25, 2011. A adaptation illustrated by Mitsu Izumi began serialization in the May 2012 issue of 's magazine from April 4, 2012 and ended in March 2013, compiled in three volumes. The novel and manga abbreviate the story a bit. For example, Menma in print 'shows' herself to her friends at the barbecue corresponding to anime episode 4, by lighting and waving a sparkler, earlier than the anime's episode 8. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
At the 4:46 and 5:00 minute mark of the anime film, devoted to when Menma joined the Super Peace Busters, kanji taught in the 6th grade is on their class chalkboard. The novel, chapter 2 page 17, states that five years have passed since Menma's accident. The anime film at 18:38 Jinta states that he had been a shut in for five years. Anime episode 6 states that Naruko Anjou attends year 1 class 3. Anohana: The Flower We Saw That Day (volume 1) (in Japanese).
Retrieved May 10, 2012. February 29, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2012. Anime News Network. December 9, 2010.
Retrieved February 24, 2011. March 29, 2012. Retrieved March 30, 2012. April 15, 2017. Retrieved April 15, 2017. March 25, 2013.
Retrieved March 25, 2013. May 30, 2013. Retrieved June 3, 2013. August 5, 2012. Retrieved August 5, 2012. May 24, 2014. Retrieved May 25, 2014.
^ (in Japanese). From the original on May 3, 2011.
Retrieved March 10, 2011. ^ (in Japanese).
From the original on May 10, 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2011.
^ (in Japanese). Archived from on June 10, 2011.
Retrieved June 10, 2011. March 26, 2012.
Retrieved March 30, 2012. April 10, 2012. Retrieved April 11, 2012. Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai. (in Japanese). Archived from on August 24, 2015.
Retrieved August 24, 2015. (PDF) (in Japanese). Fuji Media Holdings. Retrieved January 19, 2018. May 16, 2014. Archived from on May 17, 2014. Retrieved May 17, 2014.
Anohana Gogoanime
External links. (in Japanese). (in Japanese). (in Japanese). (anime) at 's encyclopedia.