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Bunny Drop (うさぎドロップ, Usagi Doroppu), also known as Usagi Drop, is a 2011 Japanese drama film based on the manga of the same name by Yumi Unita. [2] The film is directed by Sabu, and the screenplay was done by both Sabu and scriptwriter Tamio Hayashi. [2]
Bunny Drop (Japanese: うさぎドロップ, Hepburn: Usagi Doroppu) is a Japanese manga series by Yumi Unita. The plot follows thirty-year-old Daikichi as he becomes the guardian of Rin, the illegitimate six-year-old daughter of his grandfather.
A live-action film was also made and premiered in Japan on August 20, 2011. A spin-off series, also by Unita, entitled Usagi Drop: Bangaihen was serialized in Feel Young from July to December 2011 and collected in one volume. The series has been licensed in English by Yen Press, with the tenth and final volume released on April 22, 2014. [1]
Behind the Pink Curtain: The Complete History of Japanese Sex Cinema. Guildford: FAB Press. ISBN 978-1-903254-54-7. Weisser, Thomas; Yuko Mihara Weisser (1998). Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films. Miami: Vital Books : Asian Cult Cinema Publications. ISBN 1-889288-52-7. "Japanese Cinema Database" (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs
The film was released theatrically in Japan in June 1984 [2] and published as a DVD in Japan on June 28, 2002 by Uplink (アップリンク). [5] It had earlier (May 2000) been released in Video CD format with Chinese and English subtitles by Asia Video Publishing Company. [6]
Usagi Tsukino (月野 うさぎ, Tsukino Usagi, renamed Serena in the DiC and Cloverway English adaptations and Bunny in the Mixx/Tokyopop adaptation), better known as Sailor Moon (セーラームーン, Sērā Mūn), is a Japanese superheroine and the protagonist of the Sailor Moon franchise created by Naoko Takeuchi.
(Japanese: うさぎちゃんで CUE!!, Hepburn: Usagi-chan de Kyū!!, lit. Bunny in Cue!!) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Takashi Sano. It was serialized in Shōnen Gahosha 's seinen manga magazine Young King OURs from 1998 to 2000, with its chapters collected in two tankōbon volumes.
Japanese erotic films include: 1) live action pink films made by independent studios (e.g. Wakamatsu, OP Eiga) for release to adult theatres, . 2) live action films distributed by major studios for wide release.