Miracle Girls
Miracle Girls (Japanese: ミラクル★ガールズ, Hepburn: Mirakuru Gāruzu) is a Japanese manga written and illustrated by Nami Akimoto, with the first book being released on July 6th, 1991. It was Akimoto's third (and most prolific) work, during her career as a manga creator. It was a commercial hit and would see the creation of 12 more manga books. Naoko Takeuchi of Sailor Moon fame worked on early publications of the Miracle Girls manga (seemingly the artwork), before moving on to make Sailor Moon. The manga is about two twins with opposite interests and talents, but combined ESP abilities (telepathy and teleportation) when they linked their pinkies together. It falls under the Magical girl genre, and has some comedic elements. It was adapted into an anime series by Japan Taps in 1993, starting in January and finishing in December of that year. Tokyopop licensed the manga for English release in North America in the year 2000. This is not to be confused with Miracle Girl Limit-chan (an anime about a cyborg, made in 1973) or Miracle Girls Festival (a Japanese exclusive rhythm game for the PlayStation Vita, made in 2015). It is sometimes referred to as its Italian name of È un po magia per Terry e Maggie (or Terry e Maggie for short) to differentiate itself by its fans. PlotManga Book 1: Tomomi and Mikage Matsunaga are identical twins with special powers. Together, they are able to teleport and communicate telepathically. The athletically challenged Mikage begs Tomomi to switch identities with her for her school's sports day track meet, where she and Tomomi are teamed with Mikage's arch enemy Yuya Noda, in the relay race. Tomomi, however, finds herself drawn to Yuya. Tomomi's success in the relay causes the captain of the track team, Hideaki Kurashige, to try to recruit Mikage. So, once again, the sisters switch identities. However, the science teacher, Shinichiro Kageura, finds out about their psychic powers, and begins to stalk Tomomi. Sensing that Mikage (who was really Tomomi) has been behaving strangely, Yuya visits them at home. Anime Episode 1: Tomomi and Mikage are twin high school girls with powers hidden to everyone but themselves and their boyfriends: They can communicate with each other telepathically, and if they hold hands, they can teleport. Tomomi, the elder twin, is a tomboy with a knack for sports, and Mikage, the younger twin, is a brilliant academic and is in the chemistry club. One day, they receive big news: Mikage's boyfriend, Kurashige, is transferring to England to further his education; in addition, the ESP fanatic Kageura, the chemistry teacher, is getting married. Though she is initially heartbroken, Mikage recovers and wishes Kurashige well. At Kageura's wedding reception, Kurashige gives her a pocketwatch as a going-away gift. Meanwhile, four flowers, two in England outside of a castle and two in Japan outside of the twins' house, suddenly begin to shine and bloom. CharactersOriginal Japanese names/Names in Tokyopop's translation
Media
MangaDuring its original Japanese run, the manga was split in two main parts. The first part is what the anime takes from, but the manga continued on after the anime had finished. This makes the anime an unfinished adaptation of the series it is based upon. The Miracle Girls manga was licensed for English release by Tokyopop, who released the series from 2000-10-17 until 2003-05-13.[3] It was licensed by Editions Star Comics for Italian released, where it was serialized in Amici. The manga has been released in Spanish by Norma Editorial as Gemelas Milagrosas from December 2004 to June 2006.[4] AnimeIt was adapted into an anime series by Japan Taps in 1993. It received 51 episodes, starting from January 8, 1993, to Christmas Eve of that year. The anime was dubbed into Italian by DENEB Film where it was broadcast on Canale 5 from March 1996 and on Italia 1. It would be known as E un po magia per Terry e Maggie when translated into Italian (it means It's a Little Magic for Terry and Maggie when translated into English), and was a success in Italy. In the Philippines, where it was known as Magic Girls, the show was dubbed in Tagalog and broadcast by ABS-CBN. It is also available in Spanish and Korean. The series uses three pieces of theme music. The opening themes of the whole series are performed by GARDEN, with "KISU no Tochuu de Namida ga" as the opening for episodes 1-29, and "Koi no Mirai" as the opening for episodes 30–51. Dio performs the ending theme for all 51 episodes, "Futari ja Nakya Dame na no". The Italian dub used its own opening theme ("È un po' magia per Terry e Maggie" by Cristina D'Avena). The first two series of the book were not made into anime by any companies, but it started with the third book of Miracle Girls.[5] MerchandiseDuring the heyday of Miracle Girls, multiple releases of items based on Mikage, Tomomi, and other characters from the anime (as seen by the artwork on the material, although some were based on their manga appearance) were made. The generic pins, rulers, and shirts came out. Artbooks with the art from the show would also come out. There was a mini-fashion set made that is now rare. There were little toys the size and shape of Fisher-Price toys created. A doll line featuring Mikage and Tomomi hit store shelves. And when these would be promoted on TV, there would be a short animated segment from Miracle Girls (the one that started the commercial was new) and voice lines from the voice actors of Mikage and Tomomi (which were also new) would correlate with what was being promoted. Video gameA video game adaptation of Miracle Girls was developed by Now Production and released for the Super Famicom by Takara on October 22, 1993. The player can choose to play as either Mikage or Tomomi and use candies as weapons to stun enemies and use them as platforms which the gameplay is similar to Capcom's Little Nemo for the NES, and when the player clears a level, the player challenges the area boss to a mini-game. Some characters also appeared in the crossover Nakayoshi All-Stars: Mezase Gakuen Idol for the Nintendo DS. ReceptionAdam Arnold of Animefringe praised the manga series, particularly for the detailed an expressive eyes, and the story "light-hearted and fun to read".[6] A writer at The Anime Review said on the anime "Miracle Girls reminds me of plenty of other better shows".[7] On the website MyAnimeList, out of 1.6k rating, the Miracle Girls anime achieved a 7.5 out of 10.[8] A writer at the Video Game Den gave the game adaptation a 3/5 stars, stating "The game doesn't do anything wrong nor spectacular, but I recommend everyone to try it, so long as they can get past the boss battle minigames and the cutscenes".[9] Pop cultureIn the Italian TV show "Questo mondo non mi renderà cattivo" or "This World Can't Tear Me Down" in English, Miracle Girls (alongside Captain Tsubasa and Doraemon) are parodied by one of the businessmen in the show. References
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