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Perfect World 1

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A live-action film adaptation was announced in the July 2017 issue of Kiss. [32] It was directed by Kenji Shibayama and its scripts were done by Keiko Kanome. Takanori Iwata and Hana Sugisaki played the leads. [33] It released in Japanese theaters starting on October 8, 2018. [34] E-girls performed the film's main theme. [35] I have a lot of thoughts about the representation of Ayukawa's disability (but I'm not disabled myself, so please take these thoughts with a grain of salt):

In February 2018, Kodansha USA announced they licensed the series digitally. [6] At Anime Expo 2019, they announced a print release for the series. [7] The series is also licensed by M&C! in Indonesia. [8] Volume list [ edit ] No. Hong Kong-based film distributor Infinity was originally set to release the movie in the region in October 2018, [36] however, Hong Kong-based film distributor Neofilms released it instead. It opened in theaters there on November 1, 2018. [37] TV Drama [ edit ] I am not disabled, so I cannot speak on behalf of the main character, Ayukawa, or those who have gone through a similar experience. However, I can relate to him in other aspects. There was this one time I was at university and this blind student was tapping his cane listlessly and looked really lost. He turned to ask people for directions to a building but they mostly walked away, hoping he wouldn't realise they were there. (I understand this - in our world we're not told how to deal with situations like this; I blame no one). I asked him if he needed help. He said he needed to get to the law building. I didn't know where the building was, so he explained to me and I guided him. You could say it was a case of the blind leading the blind. We had a really nice conversation about the subjects we shared and he talked about his dogs, and I talked about mine.I guarantee you'd feel irritated and itch to drop it around the middle, where the forced drama is the worst. Highly suggest you persist through that, the latter chapters are very slice of life and more mature. Demelza (September 5, 2020). "Perfect World Volume 2 Review". Anime UK News . Retrieved May 15, 2021. Sherman, Jennifer (June 11, 2017). "Live-Action Perfect World Film Reveals Cast, Staff, 2018 Premiere". Anime News Network . Retrieved May 15, 2021. From age 5 to age 11, I lived with my grandmother whose body was 96% immobile. From Monday to Friday, she'd take care of me (alone, my grandpa was dead by that time). During the weekend, I'd be with my parents.

Further on in the story, Kawana helps him with Getting over the girl he dumped when he lost his ability to walk. Kawana drags his ass to the girl's wedding and he becomes relieved to see that she has found her way in life. I like Kawana's determination to be a part of Ayukawa's life. It makes me happy. It gives me hope in this world. My main complaint is the female lead--it's like she's a 15-year-old trapped in a 26-year-old's body. I'm hoping the story will develop so we learn why she's like this, because if we don't, it's really a disservice to the readers. I really expect a woman who's coming out of her mid-20s and running into her late-20s to have a level head. The misunderstandings between the couple are also the misunderstandings of teenagers. I give the lead male a pass because I'm certain that suddenly facing a disability makes you think differently than your normally would and also because he's in his 20s and in my experience (as a much older reader of manga), men really don't emotionally mature until their 30s. I generally like the story. I am not disabled, nor do I intimately know many people in wheelchairs, but I think the author does a great job of pointing out the difficulties people in wheelchairs face on a daily basis.Cerita : 5 bintang...❤❤❤ direkomendasikan untuk para penggemar Isyarat Mieko , Happy! , dan The Shape of Voice . Slightly jarring time skips - realistically, the manga goes through A LOT of years. I'm not fully sure, but it covers a 5-6 year span or so through its entirety. Pineda, Rafael Antonio (July 6, 2019). "Kodansha Licenses 6 New Manga, Acquires Saiyuki, Chobits, Clover". Anime News Network . Retrieved May 15, 2021.

Enough personal stories: let's see why the manga is a solid 7.5/10 to me. Here are 5 bad and 5 good things about it:Lo primero que queiro decir es que al pirncipio me daba miedo leer un libro de una manera diferente a la que estoy acostumbrada. Pero ¿en serio me voy a perder la oportunidad de leer grandes historias, solo porque estas se narran de una manera en la que no estoy acostumbrada? Exacto. No. Al menos eso creo yo, así que se empieza una nueva era de leer manga de romance. ¿Qué esperaban que iba a empezar a leer de terror, misterio o aventuras? I mean... puede ser que sí, siempre y cuando tenga romance yeiiii. Nuestra protagonista (si antes me costaba acordarme de los nombres, ahora es tarea imposible... de momento al menos, hasta que me acostumbre), tenpia un crush con este chico pero l odeja estar proque él se hace novio de alguien más. Pasan los años y se reencuentran por cosas del trabajo y del destino y ella se da cuenta que él, uno de los mejores jugadores de basketball de su escuela, está en silla de ruedas. I have more thoughts, but these are the only ones that I can really articulate coherently. Overall, I was surprised at how the representation seemed realistic and sensitive. However, I again want to stress that I am not myself disabled and so I could be 100% wrong on this assessment. In the opening chapter (titled Acts throughout the series) of the first volume, Kawana finds her worldview challenged in several ways: that her new coworker, the boy she had a crush on in high school, now uses a wheelchair; that his experiences at restaurants and coffee shops are dramatically different from her own; and that his SCI makes him more prone to specific types of medical issues than she is. Act 1 presents a lot of information and feels slightly rushed, though the author explains at the end of the first volume that Act 1 was initially a one-shot and only with publication was she able to continue fleshing out Kawana’s and Ayukawa’s story.

Ayukawa is simply a great character. Later on, Kawana becomes a fleshed-out counterbalance to her earlier persona. Perfect World by Aruga Rie is a josei (women’s/older teen) manga, complete in 12 volumes as of January 2021. At a work function, designer Kawana Tsugumi runs into her high school crush, Ayukawa Itsuki, and is surprised to see him using a wheelchair due to a spinal cord injury (SCI) he sustained during college. As her high-school feelings return all at once, she and Ayukawa navigate entering a romantic relationship. This review is for the first three volumes of the series. Of course it isn't an easy road. Itsuki is not doing well, despite just continuing with everything. While I was impressed that he never gave up and I could also understand that he wanted to continue as he is getting great chances at the firm... at times I wanted to shake him a bit to tell him that it is OK to take a break at times, you don't need to go until your body collapses, until everything shuts down. Es el primer manga que leo en toda mi vida así que primero les voy a contar mi experiencia leyéndolo. Al principio me costaba porque mi propia vista me traicionaba a la hora de leerlo. Porque pues quiera o no estoy acostumbrada a leer de la manera occidental y hacerlo de manera inversa en todos los aspectos me costó acostumbrarme aproximadamente 15 minutos. Pero en esos minutos tuve que releer varias cosas porque mi cerebro captaba que lo estaba leyendo mal, y así estuve hasta que lo logré.

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There was a moment I really liked where Kawana apologizes to Ayukawa for suggesting he speak to a teen who had recently had an accident and needed to use a wheelchair. She assumed that he would be an inspiration to the teen because she also made assumptions about how Ayukawa viewed and felt about his disability. After apologizing, she asks Ayukawa questions and makes a conscience effort to listen to him to better understand his experience, rather than assume. Reducing the above drama a little and instead focusing a bit more on the architecture/industry details and its interaction with barrier-free projects would have been amazing. The middle volumes were filled with too much drama which sometimes almost reached 'Domestic Girlfriend' levels of forced character confrontations/plot 'progression'. This review is spoiler free!] TL;DR: It's a dark shoujo disguised as a josei with a disabled male lead.

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