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The album Metropolis: Suite I (The Chase) by Janelle Monáe (2007) follows the adventures of a female android named Cindi Mayweather and was inspired by the Metropolis 1927 film. [70] Several of Monáe's albums follow up on this theme. [2] [71] The music video for "The Ghost Inside" by Broken Bells features a female android played by Christina ...
Mahoromatic (Japanese: まほろまてぃっく, Hepburn: Mahoromatikku) is a Japanese manga series written by Bunjūrō Nakayama and illustrated by Bow Ditama.The series follows Mahoro, a female android former soldier who, driven by guilt from her actions during her combat days, decides to dedicate the rest of her life to serving the son of her late commander as a maid.
"Maschinenmensch" from the 1927 film Metropolis. Statue in Babelsberg, Germany. This list of fictional robots and androids is chronological, and categorised by medium. It includes all depictions of robots, androids and gynoids in literature, television, and cinema; however, robots that have appeared in more than one form of media are not necessarily listed in each of those media.
Rina is a female-form android bodyguard who has been illegally modified by her former master, an unidentified VIP, to be capable of sexual activity. Her right leg was damaged during an assassination attempt on her master, at which point he abandoned her. Her leg malfunctions periodically, threatening to reveal her identity as an android.
The first anime aired in 1973 and is considered a magical girl series in retrospect. In addition, the theme song of the series has become one of the most famous theme songs in the history of anime, and is widely known in Japan, even to those unfamiliar with the series. [ 5 ]
The term gynoid was first used by Isaac Asimov in a 1979 editorial, as a theoretical female equivalent of the word android. [4] Other possible names for feminine robots exist. The portmanteau "fembot" (feminine robot) was used as far back as 1959, in Fritz Leiber's The Silver Eggheads, applying specifically to non-sentient female sexbots. [5]
The music of New Cutie Honey has been released on several soundtracks, and some of the music has since been re-released on compilation albums.The first soundtrack, New Super Android Cutey Honey: Music Collection Vol. 1 (COCC-11513), was released on February 21, 1994 by Nippon Columbia Co. Ltd. (now Columbia Music Entertainment). [69]
Yuria is a Yuria Type 100 (ユリア100式, Yuria 100 Shiki) female android designed with the sole purpose of being a highly interactive sex doll.Not wanting to engage in sex with her inventor, she escapes and meets Kubo Shunsuke, who gives her a place to stay.