Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The supporting characters also appear in some arcs, including the soon-to-be-retired detective Kuraudo Ooishi, freelance photographer Jiro Tomitake, female nurse and counter-intelligence force leader Miyo Takano, and the clinic's head doctor Kyosuke Irie. The manga characters also appear in the first adaptation.
Miyo's motive is to vindicate the work of Hifumi and force his work to be recognized after he was mocked and shamed by the government and scientific community for his thesis about the disease. After several hundred loops, Keiichi becomes either vividly or subconsciously aware of the previous realities, allowing him to avoid several critical ...
Satoko sadly assures Rika that she will not be having any nightmares anymore. Days pass and no tragedies occur: Rena and Keiichi do not become paranoid, Shion and Keiichi do not sneak off to the storehouse, and Teppei does not return to the village. While attending the festival, Rika finds Takano and Tomitake.
Thanks/you is a music album composed by Japanese dōjin music artist, dai, for use in the "answer" arcs to the visual novel Higurashi no Naku Koro ni. Unofficially, fans had originally referred to this as the original soundtrack, even though it does not have all the scores that were used in the game. [1] Track listing "Thanks" "Iru" "Kage" (陰 ...
Mai Takano (高野 舞, Takano Mai) is Ryuji Takayama's student and possibly girlfriend. Mai has a minor role in the first novel, finding his body after he dies of the ring virus. Mai has a minor role in the first novel, finding his body after he dies of the ring virus.
Kiyomi Takada (Japanese: 高田 清美, Hepburn: Takada Kiyomi) is a fictional character in the manga series Death Note, created by Tsugumi Ohba and Takeshi Obata.Takada is introduced in the series as a classmate of Light Yagami, with whom she briefly dates in college.
Warning: This contains spoilers for the ending of "Mea Culpa," a Netflix movie. Tyler Perry calls his new Netflix movie, "Mea Culpa," a "fun ride," all the way through to its twist conclusion.
The "Sasebo slashing" (Japanese: 佐世保小6女児同級生殺害事件, Hepburn: Sasebo shōroku joji dōkyūsei satsugai jiken), [1] also known as the Nevada-tan murder, was the murder of a 12-year-old Japanese schoolgirl, Satomi Mitarai (御手洗 怜美, Mitarai Satomi), by an 11-year-old female classmate referred to as "Girl A" (a common placeholder name used for female criminals in ...