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Cardcaptor Sakura

Cardcaptor Sakura (Japanese: カードキャプターさくら, Hepburn: Kādokyaputā Sakura), abbreviated as CCS, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by the manga group Clamp. Serialized monthly in the shōjo manga magazine Nakayoshi from May 1996 to June 2000, it was also published in 12 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha between November 1996 and July 2000. The story centers on Sakura Kinomoto, an elementary school student who discovers magical powers after accidentally freeing a set of magical cards into the world; she must retrieve the cards to prevent catastrophe. Each of these cards grants different magical powers, and can only be activated by someone with inherent magical abilities. A sequel by Clamp, Cardcaptor Sakura: Clear Card, focusing on Sakura in junior high school, began serialization in Nakayoshi in 2016.

Cardcaptor Sakura
The first volume of Cardcaptor Sakura featuring Sakura Kinomoto
カードキャプターさくら
(Kādokyaputā Sakura)
Genre
Manga
Written byClamp
Published byKodansha
English publisher
Kodansha (bilingual)
MagazineNakayoshi
DemographicShōjo
Original runMay 1996June 2000
Volumes12 (List of volumes)
Anime television series
Directed byMorio Asaka
Produced byEizo Kondo
Written byNanase Ohkawa
Music byTakayuki Negishi
StudioMadhouse
Licensed by
Original networkNHK BS2
English network
Original run April 7, 1998 March 21, 2000
Episodes70 (List of episodes)
Other
 Anime and manga portal

The manga was adapted into a 70-episode anime television series by Madhouse that aired on Japan's satellite television channel NHK BS2 from April 1998 to March 2000. Additional media include two anime films, video games, art books, picture books, and film comics. Tokyopop released the manga in English in North America from March 2000 to August 2003. After Tokyopop's license expired, Dark Horse Manga released the series in omnibus editions from October 2010 to September 2012. The anime was dubbed in English by Hong Kong's Omni Productions, and was aired in Southeast Asia and South Asia on the channel Animax Asia.

Nelvana licensed the TV series and first film for North America under the English title Cardcaptors, which first aired on Kids' WB from June 2000 to December 2001. All 70 episodes were dubbed; while other English-speaking territories received the full run, the version aired on American television was heavily edited into 39 episodes. Cardcaptors also aired on Cartoon Network (Toonami), Teletoon, Nickelodeon, Network Ten, and RTÉ2. The TV series and films were sub-licensed by Geneon, which released them unedited with English subtitles. The TV series was also released by Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand.

Cardcaptor Sakura was critically well received. Critics praised the manga for its creativity and described it as a quintessential shōjo manga, as well as a critical work for manga in general. The manga series was awarded the Seiun Award for Best Manga in 2001. The television series was praised for transcending its target audience of young children and being enjoyable to older viewers, and for its artwork, humor, and animation; it won the Animage Grand Prix award for Best Anime in 1999. The American edit of Cardcaptors, however, was criticized for removing elements essential to the plot.

Plot

Cardcaptor Sakura takes place in the fictional town of Tomoeda, which is located somewhere near the Japanese capital of Tokyo. Ten-year-old Sakura Kinomoto accidentally releases a set of magical cards known as Clow Cards from a book in her basement created by and named after the sorcerer Clow Reed. Each card has its own unique ability and can assume an alternate form when activated. The guardian of the cards, Cerberus (nicknamed Kero), emerges from the book and explains that only a person with magical powers could open the seal of the book, revealing that Sakura can do magic. Kero chooses Sakura to retrieve the missing cards. As she finds each card, she battles its magical personification and defeats it by sealing it away. Cerberus acts as her guide, while her best friend and second cousin, Tomoyo Daidouji films her exploits and provides her with both battle costumes and moral support. Sakura's older brother Toya Kinomoto watches over her, while pretending that he is unaware of what is going on.

Syaoran Li, a boy Sakura's age and a descendant of Clow Reed, arrives from Hong Kong to recapture the cards himself. While initially antagonistic, he comes to respect Sakura and begins aiding her in capturing the cards. Once Sakura captures all of the cards, she is tested by Yue, the cards' second guardian, to determine if she is worthy of becoming the cards' true master; Yue is also the true form of Yukito Tsukishiro, Toya's best friend who Sakura has a crush on. Aided by her school teacher Kaho Mizuki, Sakura passes the test and becomes the new master of the Clow Cards.

Afterwards, Eriol Hiiragizawa, a transfer student from England and later confirmed as the reincarnation of Clow Reed, arrives in Tomoeda and begins causing disturbances with two guardian-like creatures, Spinel Sun and Ruby Moon. Sakura is suddenly unable to use the Clow Cards and transforms her wand, beginning the process of evolving the cards into Sakura Cards as Eriol causes strange occurrences that forces her to use and thus transform certain cards. Once all the cards have been transformed, Eriol tells Sakura that he aided her in converting the cards so they would not lose their magic powers. Syaoran later confesses his love to Sakura, who comes to realize she also loves him. Cardcaptor Sakura concludes with Syaoran returning to Hong Kong with a promise to return. Two years later, Syaoran moves back to Tomoeda permanently.

The plot of the anime series is extended, featuring 52 Clow Cards from the manga's original 19, and certain scenes are stretched and delayed, such as Cerberus' true form not being revealed until just before Yue's appearance.[3] Sakura creates a 53rd card, Hope, a talent she is not shown to have in the manga. Some of the circumstances around the capturing of the cards is changed, such as Syaoran capturing several cards himself and being tested by Yue in the Final Judgment. Syaoran's cousin and fiancée Meiling Li is introduced in the anime, who positions herself as a jealous and romantic rival for Sakura later in the series and also a friend until she returns to Hong Kong. The TV series leaves the relationship between Sakura and Syaoran unresolved, but Sakura confesses her love to Syaoran at the end of the second anime film. In the OVA that bridges the stories of the original series and the Clear Card anime, Syaoran returns to Tomoeda two years later, just like in the manga.[4]

Production

Cardcaptor Sakura was first conceived shortly before the conclusion of Clamp's Magic Knight Rayearth, which was serialized in Nakayoshi.[5] Clamp's head editor Yamonouchi asked them to do another series in Nakayoshi, and Clamp decided to make a "Nakayoshi-esque" series, as opposed to Rayearth, which Clamp described as unlike anything they had done before. Head Clamp writer Nanase Ohkawa's first impulse was to create a magical girl series, despite not being well-versed in the genre. Ohkawa wanted the heroine Sakura to be in the same age group as the majority of Nakayoshi's readers so that fans could relate to her. Due to it being different from how Clamp normally conceived characters, Ohkawa designed the other characters such as Tomoyo and Cerberus to be more like Clamp's previous creations. Once Ohkawa had enough information on the characters, she had the three artists in Clamp—Mokona, Tsubaki Nekoi and Satsuki Igarashi—design them based on her descriptions. When designing Cerberus, Ohkawa wanted a mascot-type companion for Sakura, but Nekoi tried various forms, including dogs and squirrels, before designing the final version. Syaoran and Toya were conceived to be a common type of character featured in Clamp's works.[5]

Various other titles were suggested for the series such as Cardcaster Sakura and Card Character Sakura before Nekoi suggested Cardcaptor Sakura.[5] While Ohkawa planned out Cardcaptor Sakura from beginning to end, she never consulted the plot with the other members, instead giving them the script one chapter at a time. Mokona initially drew Tomoyo so it would look like she was in love with Toya, which led to her surprise when she received the script for the chapter which reveals Tomoyo loves Sakura. The story was planned to have the theme of "if you try your best, it'll work out", but Ohkawa did not start out with Sakura's "It'll definitely be okay" mindset. Ohkawa addressed the relationships featured in the series by using Tomoyo and Sakura as an example. She explained that the reason Tomoyo and Sakura did not end up together was because Tomoyo is a girl, so Sakura did not love Tomoyo in a romantic way.[5]

The central theme of Cardcaptor Sakura is love and human relationships. Throughout the series, many forms of love are showcased, including "sibling love, childhood crushes, unrequited love, [and] true love."[2] At times, Clamp even ignores the Clow Cards for several chapters to focus more on the relationships of Sakura and those around her. Each of these relationships are presented as is, with Clamp carefully avoiding passing judgment on the correctness of the relationships. In particular, the romantic relationship between elementary student Rika Sasaki and her teacher Yoshiyuki Terada is presented in such a way that it can be seen as a sweet and innocent tale of "wish fulfillment", or if examined more seriously, as a mildly disturbing story of pedophilic love.[2]

The artists, especially Mokona, were told by Ohkawa to use thin lines and to try to express things through curved lines as opposed to straight lines.[5] The style of artwork was decided at the beginning to unify the world view of Cardcaptor Sakura. Ohkawa wanted the series to have a "soft, cute-like" feel, so she asked the artists to not use a lot of ink and to make the pages light. For the multitude of flower imagery used in the manga, Nekoi looked through various books to find appropriate flowers, and tried to avoid using the same flower more than once in one chapter. Igarashi remarked that they "never had to draw so many flowers for one series," but they made a point to not use roses.[5] Clamp wanted to incorporate transformation scenes into Cardcaptor Sakura, but because many magical girl manga have the girls wearing the same outfit, they wanted Sakura to wear different costumes. They felt that "it's pretty sad for a girl to wear the same outfit all the time."[6]

Media

Manga

Cardcaptor Sakura began as a manga series written and illustrated by the manga artist group Clamp. It was serialized in the monthly shōjo (aimed at young girls) manga magazine Nakayoshi from the May 1996 to June 2000 issue.[3] The individual chapters were collected and published in 12 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha from November 1996 to July 2000.[7][8] Kodansha released the first six volumes in bilingual editions that included both Japanese and English from May 2000 to July 2001.[9][10] The bilingual volumes were part of an experimental line for helping Japanese children learn English. Kodansha stopped releasing the bilingual editions after the series was licensed in English for distribution in North America by Tokyopop.[3][11]

Tokyopop released the volumes of Cardcaptor Sakura from March 2000 to August 2003.[12][13] Tokyopop initially released the first six volumes with the book "flipped" from the original Japanese orientation, in which the book is read from right-to-left, to the Western format with text oriented from left-to-right. These volumes were later re-released with the original orientation in two box sets, each containing three volumes.[14][15] Volumes seven through twelve were released in the original orientation with the subtitle Master of the Clow. Madman Entertainment used Tokyopop's English translation to release the series in Australia and New Zealand.[16] Dark Horse Manga published an English edition of the series in four omnibus volumes containing three of the original volumes each from October 2010 and September 2012.[17][18] After Dark Horse Comics' license expired, Kodansha Comics licensed it and began releasing the series in hardcover Collector's Edition volumes in 2019.[19] The manga series is licensed for additional regional language releases by Pika Édition in France,[20] Star Comics in Italy,[21] Egmont Manga & Anime in Germany,[22] Editora JBC in Brazil,[23] Ever Glory Publishing in Taiwan,[24] Ediciones Glénat in Spain,[25] Editorial Ivrea in Argentina,[26] and Editorial Toukan and later Editorial Kamite in Mexico.[27][28]

Anime

 
Logo of Cardcaptor Sakura

A 70-episode anime television series adaptation produced by the animation studio Madhouse aired in Japan on the NHK television network spread over three seasons.[29][30] The first season, consisting of 35 episodes, aired between April 7 and December 29, 1998.[31][32][33] The second season, with 11 episodes, aired between April 6 and June 22, 1999.[33][34] The third season, containing 24 episodes, aired between September 7, 1999 and March 21, 2000.[35][36] Directed by Morio Asaka, Clamp was fully involved in the project, with head writer Nanase Ohkawa writing and composing the screenplay and Mokona overseeing the costumes and card designs.[30] The series was later released by Bandai Visual to 18 VHS, LD and DVD compilation volumes from September 1998 to May 2000.[37][38][39][40] Two Blu-ray Disc box set volumes were released by Geneon in 2009.[41][42] An upgraded 4K remaster was released in December 2017 as an 11-disc set in both DVD and Blu-ray Disc box sets.[43]

Nelvana licensed Cardcaptor Sakura in North America, dubbed the series into English with Ocean Studios featuring Carly McKillip as Sakura, and released it under the name Cardcaptors.[44][45] This version was heavily edited from the original Japanese version, and Nelvana spent roughly $100,000 on each episode to incorporate new music, scripts, and vocal tracks.[46] The initial version of the dub covered all 70 episodes, although character names were changed, some Japanese text was changed to English, and subjects considered controversial at the time, such as same-sex relationships, were edited out. One of the censored themes was that of homosexual characters, including Tomoyo, who was changed from having a crush to being just a friend, and the gay relationship between Toya and Yukito, which was also portrayed as just friends.[47] The musical score was completely replaced with new music and some of the sound effects were replaced when they could not be separated into separate tracks, although the original opening and ending themes were dubbed into English. This version aired in Australia on Network Ten and Cartoon Network, in Ireland on RTÉ2,[48] in the UK on CiTV and Fox Kids, and in Canada on Teletoon (which also aired the episodes with a French dub). An alternative English dub of the series was produced by Omni Productions in Hong Kong to air on Animax Asia and it has been shown entirely unedited and uncut making it very faithfully closer to the original Japanese version, which it broadcast on its English-language networks in Southeast Asia and South Asia.

Cardcaptors first aired in the United States on Kids' WB between June 17, 2000 and December 14, 2001.[49][50] The version that aired on Kids' WB was an alternate version of the Nelvana dub that was heavily edited even further with episodes re-ordered and some left out completely.[51] The editing to the original Nelvana dub was done to refocus the series to be more action oriented for the appeal of male viewers, as they were seen as the largest audience of animation at the time.[3] The first episode aired in Kids' WB's version was "Sakura's Rival", the eighth episode of the series, having removed episodes focusing on Sakura and to have the show start with Syaoran's arrival.[3][52] The series ran for 39 episodes, changing the original episode order but finishing with the show's actual final episode. Rather than using the English versions of the original opening and ending themes like in Australia, the North American runs of the series used a new opening theme produced for the dub.

Pioneer Entertainment released the first 27 US Cardcaptors episodes to nine VHS and DVD compilation volumes from November 2000 to July 2002;[53][54][55][56] a planned tenth volume was cancelled in June 2002.[57] They also released the unedited Cardcaptor Sakura series with the original Japanese audio tracks and English subtitles,[3][51] to 18 DVDs from November 2000 to November 2003;[58][59] the first 11 volumes were also released in VHS.[60][61] The Cardcaptor Sakura TV series DVDs went out-of-print at the end of 2006 when the license expired. NIS America has licensed the Cardcaptor Sakura TV series and re-released the entire series with Japanese and an unedited English audio track (Animax Asia's dub) on DVD and Blu-ray on August 5, 2014.[62]

Madman Entertainment licensed the original Cardcaptor Sakura episodes in its uncut form with Japanese audio and English subtitles in Australia and New Zealand,[63] and later released the series in two DVD box collections, one consisting of season one and the other consisting of seasons two and three. Each DVD box set contained the textless openings and endings of the series; the second DVD box set also contained an exclusive interview with Sakura Tange, Sakura Kinomoto's Japanese voice actress. The first DVD box collection was released in September 2012,[64] and the second DVD box collection was released in November 2012.[65]

Anime Limited licensed Cardcaptor Sakura in its original, uncut form in the United Kingdom and Ireland, and made the first season of the series available on Channel 4 via All 4.[66] Pre-orders for a Blu-ray release of the series became available in December 2021. The collection includes all 70 episodes across 10 discs, uses the 2017 remaster of the series in 4K resolution, the Pioneer subtitles, and a 16-page collector's booklet. It does not use the Cardcaptors dub.[67] As of November 2022, the series now streams on ITV Hub, and also does so on its successor platform, ITVX.[68]

Films

Madhouse produced two, 82-minute anime films as an extension to the anime television series. The first, Cardcaptor Sakura: The Movie, was released on August 21, 1999.[69] Set between the first and second seasons of the TV series, the film shows Sakura and her friends going to Hong Kong, where they encounter a vengeful spirit who was hurt by Clow Reed in the past. It was released to VHS, LD and DVD in Japan by Bandai Visual in February 2000.[70][71] Nelvana released an English dubbed version of the film, retaining the same name and story changes as its main Cardcaptors dub, although it was dubbed with no visual edits and was released in cut and uncut versions. As with the TV series, Pioneer Entertainment also released the film with the original Japanese audio and English subtitles, and also released a bilingual DVD containing both audio tracks. Both the edited and unedited versions were released on VHS and DVD in March 2002.[72][73] Discotek Media released the first film on Blu-ray Disc and DVD on September 30, 2014, in North America.[74]

The second film, Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2: The Sealed Card, was released in Japan on July 15, 2000.[75] It provided a conclusion to the TV series, in which Syaoran returns to Tokyo in hopes of getting Sakura's answer to his love confession, but her own confession is interrupted by the appearance of a 53rd Clow Card. It was released to LD (as a limited edition) and DVD in January 2001, and to VHS in July 2001.[76][77] It was released in North America to DVD by Pioneer in November 2003 and featured an English dub by Bang Zoom! Entertainment instead of Nelvana and Ocean Studios, now with Kari Wahlgren as Sakura, and this time retaining the original character names and the content unedited and uncut.[78][79] The films as released by Pioneer (later renamed Geneon) remained in print in North America until late 2007.[80] A bonus short film titled Leave it to Kero! was played with the theatrical screening of the second film.[81]

Audio CDs

As a preview to the anime series, Kodansha released a tankōbon-sized CD volume titled CD Comic Cardcaptor Sakura in August 1997 containing two character songs sung by the voice actors of Sakura and Tomoyo and drama tracks.[82] Two drama CDs were released for the series. The first, Sakura to Okaa-san no Organ, was released in July 1998 featuring a script written by Clamp author Nanase Ohkawa.[83] It depicts Sakura having a dream about her mother playing an organ and choosing to write about her the following day for a school project. The second CD, Sweet Valentine Stories, was released in February 1999 and depicts a single day in the life of the girls in Sakura's class, including Sakura herself.[84] Four original soundtrack CD albums were released for the anime television series from July 1998 to March 2000.[85][86] The soundtracks included instrumental background music and the vocal theme songs. Two soundtracks were produced for the films: the first film's soundtrack was released in August 1999, followed by the second film's soundtrack in August 2000.[87][88]

Nine singles were released; six for its television series and three for its films. Opening themes include "Catch You Catch Me" by Gumi in April 1998, "Tobira o Akete" by Anza in April 1999, and "Platinum" by Maaya Sakamoto in October 1999.[89][90][91] Ending themes included "Groovy!" by Kohmi Hirose in September 1998, "Honey" by Chihiro in May 1999, and "Fruits Candy" by Megumi Kojima in November 1999.[92][93][94] Two of the ending themes for its films include "Tōi Kono Machi de" by Naomi Kaitani in August 1999 for the first film, and "Ashita e no Melody" by Chaka in July 2000 for the second film.[95][96] The theme song for its short film Leave It To Kero! shown with the second film, "Okashi no Uta", was released in July 2000.[97]

Six character song singles sung by the voice actors of Sakura, Toya, Cerberus, Tomoyo, Yukito and Syaoran released in June 1998; each single also contained a short drama track.[98][99][100][101][102][103] A character song album titled Cardcaptor Sakura Character Songbook was released in January 1999 containing tracks from the previously released character song singles as well as new tracks sung by the various voice actors.[104] An album titled Tomoeda Elementary Choir Club Christmas Concert, released in December 1999, contains seven tracks by a children's choir, including five where they are joined by Junko Iwao, the voice actress for Tomoyo.[105] A four-CD compilation set, Complete Vocal Collection, was released in February 2001 compiling the series' theme songs, tracks from the character song singles, remixes of previously released songs, and new music.[106] An album containing music from the entire series and films titled Cardcaptor Sakura Theme Song Collection was released in December 2001.[107] Victor Entertainment released the albums and singles for Cardcaptor Sakura. For Western releases, there is an original soundtrack for Cardcaptors titled Cardcaptors: Songs from the Hit TV Series that was released in September 2001 by Rhino Entertainment.[108]

Video games

Ten video games have been produced based on the series and released on a variety of video game and handheld consoles. They feature various genres, such as adventure and role-playing video games.

Title Release date Producer(s) Platform
Cardcaptor Sakura: Itsumo Sakura-chan to Issho! (カードキャプターさくら ~いつもさくらちゃんといっしょ~, Cardcaptor Sakura: Forever with Sakura-chan)
Published by MTO Game Boy Color
Animetic Story Game 1: Cardcaptor Sakura (アニメチックストーリーゲーム (1) カードキャプターさくら)
Published and developed by Arika PlayStation
Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura to Fushigi na Clow Cards (カードキャプターさくら ~さくらとふしぎなクロウカード~, Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura and the Mysterious Clow Card)
Published by Bandai and developed by Sims WonderSwan
Cardcaptor Sakura: Tomoyo no Video Daisakusen (カードキャプターさくら 知世のビデオ大作戦, Cardcaptor Sakura: Tomoyo's Video Battle)
Published by Sega and developed by Sega Rosso Dreamcast
Cardcaptor Sakura: Clow Card Magic (カードキャプターさくら クロウカードマジック)
Published and developed by Arika PlayStation
Tetris with Cardcaptor Sakura: Eternal Heart (TETRiS with カードキャプターさくら エターナルハート)
Published and developed by Arika PlayStation
Cardcaptor Sakura: Tomoe Shōgakkō Daiundōkai (カードキャプターさくら ~友枝小学校大運動会~, Cardcaptor Sakura: Tomoe Elementary School Battle Athletes)
Published by MTO Game Boy Color
Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura Card de Mini-Game (カードキャプターさくら ~さくらカードdeミニゲーム~)
Published and developed by TDK Core Game Boy Advance
Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura Card-hen Sakura Card to Tomodachi (カードキャプターさくら <さくらカード編> ~さくらとカードとおともだち~, Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura Card Edition: Sakura Card and Friend)
Published by MTO Game Boy Advance
Cardcaptor Sakura: Sakura-chan to Asobo! (カードキャプターさくら 「さくらちゃんとあそぼ!」, Cardcaptor Sakura: Play with Sakura-chan)
Published by NHK Software PlayStation 2

Other media

Kodansha published three art books for the manga series and three art books from for the anime television series featuring art by character designer Kumiko Takahashi.[3] The three books for the manga titled Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection were released from July 1998 to December 2000.[118][119] The three for the TV series titled Cheerio! were released from April 1999 to September 2000.[120][121] A set of the 52 Clow Cards featured in the TV series was released in August 1999 and a Clow Card Fortune Book, which contains information on how to use the Clow Card replica set as tarot cards, was released in March 2000.[122][123]

A fan book for the manga titled Cardcaptor Sakura Memorial Book was published on February 27, 2001, containing various illustrations from the series, as well as information on branded merchandise based on the series and interviews.[124] Four fan books under the title Complete Book were released for the TV series and films. The first two for the TV series were labeled Clow Card-hen (クロウカード編, Clow Card Arc) and Sakura Card-hen (さくらカード編, Sakura Card Arc) and were released in July 1999 and June 2000, respectively.[125][126] The latter two for the films were released in October 1999 and October 2000, respectively.[127][128] A poster box containing several posters and a T-shirt was released on August 22, 2001.[129]

Ten volumes of a film comic sharing the same name as the manga and anime series were published from August 1998 to November 2000 covering the first two anime seasons, though some episodes were skipped.[130][131] Three more were published under the subtitle, Sakura Card-hen from March 2001 to February 2002 covering up to episode 59, though again some episodes were skipped.[132][133] Four picture books were released for the TV series from September 1998 to November 2000.[134][135] Four sticker books were released for the TV series from August 1999 to March 2004.[136][137]

Between February and July 2018, three Cardcaptor Sakura-themed cafés opened in Tokyo, Osaka and Sapporo. The restaurants featured decorations of artwork from the series, and served menu items connected to Cardcaptor Sakura characters or items.[138]

Reception

Manga

The manga has over 17 million copies in print as of April 2018.[139] Cardcaptor Sakura was popular with Japanese readers, ranking among the top five sellers during its release.[140] The manga series was awarded the Seiun Award for Best Manga in 2001.[141] Shaenon Garrity of The Comics Journal described the series as a quintessential shōjo manga, which is praised for its mature direction in the second half.[142] Cardcaptor Sakura has been described as a "critical work" of manga by Christopher Butcher of Comics212.[142] In a review by Lisa Anderson of Manga Life, the subplots in the series related to the interactions between characters were noted to be of special interest. Anderson praised how the manga, while at the onset begins with a costumed Sakura chasing after a Clow Card, takes a "rather big leap in another direction" when focusing on the characters. The manga is further lauded for its depth.[143] Anime News Network (ANN) reviewer Robert Nguyen felt Cardcaptor Sakura is an "atypical shōjo" manga, which puts an "emphasis on the emotions of the character."[144]

In Manga: The Complete Guide, Mason Templar states that the series is not "just one of the best kids' manga in translation, it's one of the very best manga available in English, period." He praises Clamp for their creativity and shrewd business sense, in being able to create a series that "clearly has merchandising in line" and an "utterly forgettable premise" into a story that is "brimming with warmth and joy and wonder" and is "much more than the sum of its parts."[2] The manga is cited as being cute by critics, and in some cases too cute;[144] however, Anderson stated that "much like Magic Knight Rayearth, even a cute story will have its depth and drama."[143] The artwork of the manga is praised for being detailed and having "beautifully drawn pictures of the Clow Cards themselves." The cards are described as having "an artful blend of magical fantasy and reality."[144]

Anime

The anime adaptation was popular with viewers in Japan, despite having a timeslot that normally has low viewership.[3] The Cardcaptor Sakura anime adaptation won the Animage Grand Prix award for best anime in 1999.[145] In May 2000, volumes 8 and 17 of the anime LD release were among the top selling titles, with volume 17 being in first place.[146] The 18th DVD volume was the eighth best selling anime DVD in Japan in June 2000.[147] Animerica contributor Kevin Lew felt the series had a "sophisticated design sense" that allowed the series to transcend its target audience of young children and be enjoyable to older viewers as well.[3] Fellow contributor Takashi Oshiguichi found the character Sakura to be appealing and praised the series art work. He felt that while it was "very calculated" to attract male readers, the series was attractive to fans due to Clamp's "unique entertainment style" that incorporates "perfectly time[d] appearances of "fascinating villains" and the unusual element of having the main character change costume for every capture.[140] The magazine's Winnie Chow felt the series' animation was "far above average for a TV series", and compliments Sakura's magic-casting scenes for being nearly unique due to the regular costume changes.[148]

Zac Bertschy of ANN praised Cardcaptor Sakura for taking an "incredibly stale and repetitive" magical girl genre and "providing something fun, clever, beautifully animated, touching and exciting all at once;" Bertschy goes on to call the series "the best magical girl show ever produced."[1] The animation was described as being "incredibly fluid" with the character designs "maintain[ing] a consistent and impressive level of detail, even during action scenes."[1] The series has been described as formulaic, but this is not said to detract from the show's enjoyment.[149][150][151] While Cardcaptor Sakura is normally intended for an audience of young girls, the anime is lauded for containing "elements that can be enjoyed by anyone, regardless of age or gender, providing they are open-minded enough."[149] In 2001, the anime ranked 46th on Wizard's Anime Magazine's "Top 50 Anime released in North America" ranking.[152] Cat Dennis of ScreenRant praised Sakura for maintaining a "conventionally feminine persona" rather than adopting male characteristics, with her power stemming from her outfits, heart, and love, meaning that the show "explores the complexities of love, both platonic and romantic."[153] Hannah Collins of The Mary Sue called the series an anime "filled with genuine warmth, tenderness, and a strong, underlying message of acceptance,".[154]

The Kids' WB version of the Cardcaptors dub was panned by critics. Jake Godek of THEM Anime Reviews called it "the worst thing that has ever happened to anime that had a good Japanese name," with the dubbing being "one of the worst if not the worst dubbing done for a program." He also criticized the editing, saying that it had "demolished the plot" and noting that it cut out vital character backgrounds needed in order to understand the show.[155] Adam Arnold of Animefringe, reviewing the first Cardcaptors DVD, said it was "nothing more than an attempt to dilute a fan favorite anime," with the dubbed voices described as "not up-to-par with the originals." The ordering of the episodes on the DVD was also criticized, noting that starting with episode eight meant that the cast are "left without their backgrounds fleshed out." However, he also approved of the episode stories being left intact, and praised the voices of Carly McKillip as Sakura Avalon and Rhys Huber as Syaoran Li, stating that they were the "only voices that really shine above the rest."[52]

In January 2002, the restaurant chain Taco Bell began a month-long promotion in which four Cardcaptors toys were available in their kids' meals and the company expected to distribute up to 7 million of the toys during the month.[156] The "conservative Christian political orientation" American Family Association complained about the promotion as the organization felt the Clow Cards in the series were too similar to tarot cards and Eastern mythology. However, the organization's complaints did not begin until the promotion was already scheduled to end, so it is unclear whether the complaints had any actual effect.[157]

References

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Further reading

  • Considine, J. D. (January 20, 2002). "Television/Radio: Making Anime A Little Safer For Americans". The New York Times. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
  • Thompson, Jason (March 31, 2011). "Card Captor Sakura". House of 1000 Manga. Anime News Network. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
  • West, Mark; Ellis, Bill (October 2008). "Folklore and Gender Inversion in Cardcaptor Sakura". The Japanification of Children's Popular Culture: From Godzilla to Miyazaki. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp. 249–266. ISBN 978-0-8108-5121-4 – via Google Books.

External links

  • Official website (in Japanese)
  • at NHK (in Japanese)
  • Cardcaptor Sakura (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
  • Cardcaptor Sakura at IMDb

cardcaptor, sakura, japanese, カードキャプターさくら, hepburn, kādokyaputā, sakura, abbreviated, japanese, manga, series, written, illustrated, manga, group, clamp, serialized, monthly, shōjo, manga, magazine, nakayoshi, from, 1996, june, 2000, also, published, tankōbon,. Cardcaptor Sakura Japanese カードキャプターさくら Hepburn Kadokyaputa Sakura abbreviated as CCS is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by the manga group Clamp Serialized monthly in the shōjo manga magazine Nakayoshi from May 1996 to June 2000 it was also published in 12 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha between November 1996 and July 2000 The story centers on Sakura Kinomoto an elementary school student who discovers magical powers after accidentally freeing a set of magical cards into the world she must retrieve the cards to prevent catastrophe Each of these cards grants different magical powers and can only be activated by someone with inherent magical abilities A sequel by Clamp Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card focusing on Sakura in junior high school began serialization in Nakayoshi in 2016 Cardcaptor SakuraThe first volume of Cardcaptor Sakura featuring Sakura Kinomotoカードキャプターさくら Kadokyaputa Sakura GenreMagical girl 1 romance 2 MangaWritten byClampPublished byKodanshaEnglish publisherAUS Madman EntertainmentJP Kodansha bilingual NA Kodansha ComicsMagazineNakayoshiDemographicShōjoOriginal runMay 1996 June 2000Volumes12 List of volumes Anime television seriesDirected byMorio AsakaProduced byEizo KondoWritten byNanase OhkawaMusic byTakayuki NegishiStudioMadhouseLicensed byAUS Madman EntertainmentBI Anime LimitedCA NelvanaNA NIS AmericaSEA MedialinkOriginal networkNHK BS2English networkAU Network Ten ToonamiCA TeletoonSEA Animax AsiaUK Nicktoons CITVUS Kids WB Cartoon Network Toonami Original runApril 7 1998 March 21 2000Episodes70 List of episodes OtherCardcaptor Sakura The Movie Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card Cardcaptor Sakura Clear Card Anime and manga portalThe manga was adapted into a 70 episode anime television series by Madhouse that aired on Japan s satellite television channel NHK BS2 from April 1998 to March 2000 Additional media include two anime films video games art books picture books and film comics Tokyopop released the manga in English in North America from March 2000 to August 2003 After Tokyopop s license expired Dark Horse Manga released the series in omnibus editions from October 2010 to September 2012 The anime was dubbed in English by Hong Kong s Omni Productions and was aired in Southeast Asia and South Asia on the channel Animax Asia Nelvana licensed the TV series and first film for North America under the English title Cardcaptors which first aired on Kids WB from June 2000 to December 2001 All 70 episodes were dubbed while other English speaking territories received the full run the version aired on American television was heavily edited into 39 episodes Cardcaptors also aired on Cartoon Network Toonami Teletoon Nickelodeon Network Ten and RTE2 The TV series and films were sub licensed by Geneon which released them unedited with English subtitles The TV series was also released by Madman Entertainment in Australia and New Zealand Cardcaptor Sakura was critically well received Critics praised the manga for its creativity and described it as a quintessential shōjo manga as well as a critical work for manga in general The manga series was awarded the Seiun Award for Best Manga in 2001 The television series was praised for transcending its target audience of young children and being enjoyable to older viewers and for its artwork humor and animation it won the Animage Grand Prix award for Best Anime in 1999 The American edit of Cardcaptors however was criticized for removing elements essential to the plot Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 3 Media 3 1 Manga 3 2 Anime 3 3 Films 3 4 Audio CDs 3 5 Video games 3 6 Other media 4 Reception 4 1 Manga 4 2 Anime 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksPlot EditSee also List of Cardcaptor Sakura characters Cardcaptor Sakura takes place in the fictional town of Tomoeda which is located somewhere near the Japanese capital of Tokyo Ten year old Sakura Kinomoto accidentally releases a set of magical cards known as Clow Cards from a book in her basement created by and named after the sorcerer Clow Reed Each card has its own unique ability and can assume an alternate form when activated The guardian of the cards Cerberus nicknamed Kero emerges from the book and explains that only a person with magical powers could open the seal of the book revealing that Sakura can do magic Kero chooses Sakura to retrieve the missing cards As she finds each card she battles its magical personification and defeats it by sealing it away Cerberus acts as her guide while her best friend and second cousin Tomoyo Daidouji films her exploits and provides her with both battle costumes and moral support Sakura s older brother Toya Kinomoto watches over her while pretending that he is unaware of what is going on Syaoran Li a boy Sakura s age and a descendant of Clow Reed arrives from Hong Kong to recapture the cards himself While initially antagonistic he comes to respect Sakura and begins aiding her in capturing the cards Once Sakura captures all of the cards she is tested by Yue the cards second guardian to determine if she is worthy of becoming the cards true master Yue is also the true form of Yukito Tsukishiro Toya s best friend who Sakura has a crush on Aided by her school teacher Kaho Mizuki Sakura passes the test and becomes the new master of the Clow Cards Afterwards Eriol Hiiragizawa a transfer student from England and later confirmed as the reincarnation of Clow Reed arrives in Tomoeda and begins causing disturbances with two guardian like creatures Spinel Sun and Ruby Moon Sakura is suddenly unable to use the Clow Cards and transforms her wand beginning the process of evolving the cards into Sakura Cards as Eriol causes strange occurrences that forces her to use and thus transform certain cards Once all the cards have been transformed Eriol tells Sakura that he aided her in converting the cards so they would not lose their magic powers Syaoran later confesses his love to Sakura who comes to realize she also loves him Cardcaptor Sakura concludes with Syaoran returning to Hong Kong with a promise to return Two years later Syaoran moves back to Tomoeda permanently The plot of the anime series is extended featuring 52 Clow Cards from the manga s original 19 and certain scenes are stretched and delayed such as Cerberus true form not being revealed until just before Yue s appearance 3 Sakura creates a 53rd card Hope a talent she is not shown to have in the manga Some of the circumstances around the capturing of the cards is changed such as Syaoran capturing several cards himself and being tested by Yue in the Final Judgment Syaoran s cousin and fiancee Meiling Li is introduced in the anime who positions herself as a jealous and romantic rival for Sakura later in the series and also a friend until she returns to Hong Kong The TV series leaves the relationship between Sakura and Syaoran unresolved but Sakura confesses her love to Syaoran at the end of the second anime film In the OVA that bridges the stories of the original series and the Clear Card anime Syaoran returns to Tomoeda two years later just like in the manga 4 Production EditCardcaptor Sakura was first conceived shortly before the conclusion of Clamp s Magic Knight Rayearth which was serialized in Nakayoshi 5 Clamp s head editor Yamonouchi asked them to do another series in Nakayoshi and Clamp decided to make a Nakayoshi esque series as opposed to Rayearth which Clamp described as unlike anything they had done before Head Clamp writer Nanase Ohkawa s first impulse was to create a magical girl series despite not being well versed in the genre Ohkawa wanted the heroine Sakura to be in the same age group as the majority of Nakayoshi s readers so that fans could relate to her Due to it being different from how Clamp normally conceived characters Ohkawa designed the other characters such as Tomoyo and Cerberus to be more like Clamp s previous creations Once Ohkawa had enough information on the characters she had the three artists in Clamp Mokona Tsubaki Nekoi and Satsuki Igarashi design them based on her descriptions When designing Cerberus Ohkawa wanted a mascot type companion for Sakura but Nekoi tried various forms including dogs and squirrels before designing the final version Syaoran and Toya were conceived to be a common type of character featured in Clamp s works 5 Various other titles were suggested for the series such as Cardcaster Sakura and Card Character Sakura before Nekoi suggested Cardcaptor Sakura 5 While Ohkawa planned out Cardcaptor Sakura from beginning to end she never consulted the plot with the other members instead giving them the script one chapter at a time Mokona initially drew Tomoyo so it would look like she was in love with Toya which led to her surprise when she received the script for the chapter which reveals Tomoyo loves Sakura The story was planned to have the theme of if you try your best it ll work out but Ohkawa did not start out with Sakura s It ll definitely be okay mindset Ohkawa addressed the relationships featured in the series by using Tomoyo and Sakura as an example She explained that the reason Tomoyo and Sakura did not end up together was because Tomoyo is a girl so Sakura did not love Tomoyo in a romantic way 5 The central theme of Cardcaptor Sakura is love and human relationships Throughout the series many forms of love are showcased including sibling love childhood crushes unrequited love and true love 2 At times Clamp even ignores the Clow Cards for several chapters to focus more on the relationships of Sakura and those around her Each of these relationships are presented as is with Clamp carefully avoiding passing judgment on the correctness of the relationships In particular the romantic relationship between elementary student Rika Sasaki and her teacher Yoshiyuki Terada is presented in such a way that it can be seen as a sweet and innocent tale of wish fulfillment or if examined more seriously as a mildly disturbing story of pedophilic love 2 The artists especially Mokona were told by Ohkawa to use thin lines and to try to express things through curved lines as opposed to straight lines 5 The style of artwork was decided at the beginning to unify the world view of Cardcaptor Sakura Ohkawa wanted the series to have a soft cute like feel so she asked the artists to not use a lot of ink and to make the pages light For the multitude of flower imagery used in the manga Nekoi looked through various books to find appropriate flowers and tried to avoid using the same flower more than once in one chapter Igarashi remarked that they never had to draw so many flowers for one series but they made a point to not use roses 5 Clamp wanted to incorporate transformation scenes into Cardcaptor Sakura but because many magical girl manga have the girls wearing the same outfit they wanted Sakura to wear different costumes They felt that it s pretty sad for a girl to wear the same outfit all the time 6 Media EditManga Edit See also List of Cardcaptor Sakura chapters Cardcaptor Sakura began as a manga series written and illustrated by the manga artist group Clamp It was serialized in the monthly shōjo aimed at young girls manga magazine Nakayoshi from the May 1996 to June 2000 issue 3 The individual chapters were collected and published in 12 tankōbon volumes by Kodansha from November 1996 to July 2000 7 8 Kodansha released the first six volumes in bilingual editions that included both Japanese and English from May 2000 to July 2001 9 10 The bilingual volumes were part of an experimental line for helping Japanese children learn English Kodansha stopped releasing the bilingual editions after the series was licensed in English for distribution in North America by Tokyopop 3 11 Tokyopop released the volumes of Cardcaptor Sakura from March 2000 to August 2003 12 13 Tokyopop initially released the first six volumes with the book flipped from the original Japanese orientation in which the book is read from right to left to the Western format with text oriented from left to right These volumes were later re released with the original orientation in two box sets each containing three volumes 14 15 Volumes seven through twelve were released in the original orientation with the subtitle Master of the Clow Madman Entertainment used Tokyopop s English translation to release the series in Australia and New Zealand 16 Dark Horse Manga published an English edition of the series in four omnibus volumes containing three of the original volumes each from October 2010 and September 2012 17 18 After Dark Horse Comics license expired Kodansha Comics licensed it and began releasing the series in hardcover Collector s Edition volumes in 2019 19 The manga series is licensed for additional regional language releases by Pika Edition in France 20 Star Comics in Italy 21 Egmont Manga amp Anime in Germany 22 Editora JBC in Brazil 23 Ever Glory Publishing in Taiwan 24 Ediciones Glenat in Spain 25 Editorial Ivrea in Argentina 26 and Editorial Toukan and later Editorial Kamite in Mexico 27 28 Anime Edit See also List of Cardcaptor Sakura episodes Logo of Cardcaptor Sakura A 70 episode anime television series adaptation produced by the animation studio Madhouse aired in Japan on the NHK television network spread over three seasons 29 30 The first season consisting of 35 episodes aired between April 7 and December 29 1998 31 32 33 The second season with 11 episodes aired between April 6 and June 22 1999 33 34 The third season containing 24 episodes aired between September 7 1999 and March 21 2000 35 36 Directed by Morio Asaka Clamp was fully involved in the project with head writer Nanase Ohkawa writing and composing the screenplay and Mokona overseeing the costumes and card designs 30 The series was later released by Bandai Visual to 18 VHS LD and DVD compilation volumes from September 1998 to May 2000 37 38 39 40 Two Blu ray Disc box set volumes were released by Geneon in 2009 41 42 An upgraded 4K remaster was released in December 2017 as an 11 disc set in both DVD and Blu ray Disc box sets 43 Nelvana licensed Cardcaptor Sakura in North America dubbed the series into English with Ocean Studios featuring Carly McKillip as Sakura and released it under the name Cardcaptors 44 45 This version was heavily edited from the original Japanese version and Nelvana spent roughly 100 000 on each episode to incorporate new music scripts and vocal tracks 46 The initial version of the dub covered all 70 episodes although character names were changed some Japanese text was changed to English and subjects considered controversial at the time such as same sex relationships were edited out One of the censored themes was that of homosexual characters including Tomoyo who was changed from having a crush to being just a friend and the gay relationship between Toya and Yukito which was also portrayed as just friends 47 The musical score was completely replaced with new music and some of the sound effects were replaced when they could not be separated into separate tracks although the original opening and ending themes were dubbed into English This version aired in Australia on Network Ten and Cartoon Network in Ireland on RTE2 48 in the UK on CiTV and Fox Kids and in Canada on Teletoon which also aired the episodes with a French dub An alternative English dub of the series was produced by Omni Productions in Hong Kong to air on Animax Asia and it has been shown entirely unedited and uncut making it very faithfully closer to the original Japanese version which it broadcast on its English language networks in Southeast Asia and South Asia Cardcaptors first aired in the United States on Kids WB between June 17 2000 and December 14 2001 49 50 The version that aired on Kids WB was an alternate version of the Nelvana dub that was heavily edited even further with episodes re ordered and some left out completely 51 The editing to the original Nelvana dub was done to refocus the series to be more action oriented for the appeal of male viewers as they were seen as the largest audience of animation at the time 3 The first episode aired in Kids WB s version was Sakura s Rival the eighth episode of the series having removed episodes focusing on Sakura and to have the show start with Syaoran s arrival 3 52 The series ran for 39 episodes changing the original episode order but finishing with the show s actual final episode Rather than using the English versions of the original opening and ending themes like in Australia the North American runs of the series used a new opening theme produced for the dub Pioneer Entertainment released the first 27 US Cardcaptors episodes to nine VHS and DVD compilation volumes from November 2000 to July 2002 53 54 55 56 a planned tenth volume was cancelled in June 2002 57 They also released the unedited Cardcaptor Sakura series with the original Japanese audio tracks and English subtitles 3 51 to 18 DVDs from November 2000 to November 2003 58 59 the first 11 volumes were also released in VHS 60 61 The Cardcaptor Sakura TV series DVDs went out of print at the end of 2006 when the license expired NIS America has licensed the Cardcaptor Sakura TV series and re released the entire series with Japanese and an unedited English audio track Animax Asia s dub on DVD and Blu ray on August 5 2014 62 Madman Entertainment licensed the original Cardcaptor Sakura episodes in its uncut form with Japanese audio and English subtitles in Australia and New Zealand 63 and later released the series in two DVD box collections one consisting of season one and the other consisting of seasons two and three Each DVD box set contained the textless openings and endings of the series the second DVD box set also contained an exclusive interview with Sakura Tange Sakura Kinomoto s Japanese voice actress The first DVD box collection was released in September 2012 64 and the second DVD box collection was released in November 2012 65 Anime Limited licensed Cardcaptor Sakura in its original uncut form in the United Kingdom and Ireland and made the first season of the series available on Channel 4 via All 4 66 Pre orders for a Blu ray release of the series became available in December 2021 The collection includes all 70 episodes across 10 discs uses the 2017 remaster of the series in 4K resolution the Pioneer subtitles and a 16 page collector s booklet It does not use the Cardcaptors dub 67 As of November 2022 the series now streams on ITV Hub and also does so on its successor platform ITVX 68 Films Edit Main articles Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie and Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card Madhouse produced two 82 minute anime films as an extension to the anime television series The first Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie was released on August 21 1999 69 Set between the first and second seasons of the TV series the film shows Sakura and her friends going to Hong Kong where they encounter a vengeful spirit who was hurt by Clow Reed in the past It was released to VHS LD and DVD in Japan by Bandai Visual in February 2000 70 71 Nelvana released an English dubbed version of the film retaining the same name and story changes as its main Cardcaptors dub although it was dubbed with no visual edits and was released in cut and uncut versions As with the TV series Pioneer Entertainment also released the film with the original Japanese audio and English subtitles and also released a bilingual DVD containing both audio tracks Both the edited and unedited versions were released on VHS and DVD in March 2002 72 73 Discotek Media released the first film on Blu ray Disc and DVD on September 30 2014 in North America 74 The second film Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card was released in Japan on July 15 2000 75 It provided a conclusion to the TV series in which Syaoran returns to Tokyo in hopes of getting Sakura s answer to his love confession but her own confession is interrupted by the appearance of a 53rd Clow Card It was released to LD as a limited edition and DVD in January 2001 and to VHS in July 2001 76 77 It was released in North America to DVD by Pioneer in November 2003 and featured an English dub by Bang Zoom Entertainment instead of Nelvana and Ocean Studios now with Kari Wahlgren as Sakura and this time retaining the original character names and the content unedited and uncut 78 79 The films as released by Pioneer later renamed Geneon remained in print in North America until late 2007 80 A bonus short film titled Leave it to Kero was played with the theatrical screening of the second film 81 Audio CDs Edit As a preview to the anime series Kodansha released a tankōbon sized CD volume titled CD Comic Cardcaptor Sakura in August 1997 containing two character songs sung by the voice actors of Sakura and Tomoyo and drama tracks 82 Two drama CDs were released for the series The first Sakura to Okaa san no Organ was released in July 1998 featuring a script written by Clamp author Nanase Ohkawa 83 It depicts Sakura having a dream about her mother playing an organ and choosing to write about her the following day for a school project The second CD Sweet Valentine Stories was released in February 1999 and depicts a single day in the life of the girls in Sakura s class including Sakura herself 84 Four original soundtrack CD albums were released for the anime television series from July 1998 to March 2000 85 86 The soundtracks included instrumental background music and the vocal theme songs Two soundtracks were produced for the films the first film s soundtrack was released in August 1999 followed by the second film s soundtrack in August 2000 87 88 Nine singles were released six for its television series and three for its films Opening themes include Catch You Catch Me by Gumi in April 1998 Tobira o Akete by Anza in April 1999 and Platinum by Maaya Sakamoto in October 1999 89 90 91 Ending themes included Groovy by Kohmi Hirose in September 1998 Honey by Chihiro in May 1999 and Fruits Candy by Megumi Kojima in November 1999 92 93 94 Two of the ending themes for its films include Tōi Kono Machi de by Naomi Kaitani in August 1999 for the first film and Ashita e no Melody by Chaka in July 2000 for the second film 95 96 The theme song for its short film Leave It To Kero shown with the second film Okashi no Uta was released in July 2000 97 Six character song singles sung by the voice actors of Sakura Toya Cerberus Tomoyo Yukito and Syaoran released in June 1998 each single also contained a short drama track 98 99 100 101 102 103 A character song album titled Cardcaptor Sakura Character Songbook was released in January 1999 containing tracks from the previously released character song singles as well as new tracks sung by the various voice actors 104 An album titled Tomoeda Elementary Choir Club Christmas Concert released in December 1999 contains seven tracks by a children s choir including five where they are joined by Junko Iwao the voice actress for Tomoyo 105 A four CD compilation set Complete Vocal Collection was released in February 2001 compiling the series theme songs tracks from the character song singles remixes of previously released songs and new music 106 An album containing music from the entire series and films titled Cardcaptor Sakura Theme Song Collection was released in December 2001 107 Victor Entertainment released the albums and singles for Cardcaptor Sakura For Western releases there is an original soundtrack for Cardcaptors titled Cardcaptors Songs from the Hit TV Series that was released in September 2001 by Rhino Entertainment 108 Video games Edit Ten video games have been produced based on the series and released on a variety of video game and handheld consoles They feature various genres such as adventure and role playing video games Title Release date Producer s PlatformCardcaptor Sakura Itsumo Sakura chan to Issho カードキャプターさくら いつもさくらちゃんといっしょ Cardcaptor Sakura Forever with Sakura chan JP May 15 1999 109 Published by MTO Game Boy ColorAnimetic Story Game 1 Cardcaptor Sakura アニメチックストーリーゲーム 1 カードキャプターさくら JP August 5 1999 110 Published and developed by Arika PlayStationCardcaptor Sakura Sakura to Fushigi na Clow Cards カードキャプターさくら さくらとふしぎなクロウカード Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura and the Mysterious Clow Card JP December 2 1999 111 Published by Bandai and developed by Sims WonderSwanCardcaptor Sakura Tomoyo no Video Daisakusen カードキャプターさくら 知世のビデオ大作戦 Cardcaptor Sakura Tomoyo s Video Battle JP December 28 2000 112 Published by Sega and developed by Sega Rosso DreamcastCardcaptor Sakura Clow Card Magic カードキャプターさくら クロウカードマジック JP January 27 2000 113 Published and developed by Arika PlayStationTetris with Cardcaptor Sakura Eternal Heart TETRiS with カードキャプターさくら エターナルハート JP August 10 2000 114 Published and developed by Arika PlayStationCardcaptor Sakura Tomoe Shōgakkō Daiundōkai カードキャプターさくら 友枝小学校大運動会 Cardcaptor Sakura Tomoe Elementary School Battle Athletes JP October 6 2000 109 Published by MTO Game Boy ColorCardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card de Mini Game カードキャプターさくら さくらカードdeミニゲーム JP December 12 2003 115 Published and developed by TDK Core Game Boy AdvanceCardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card hen Sakura Card to Tomodachi カードキャプターさくら lt さくらカード編 gt さくらとカードとおともだち Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card Edition Sakura Card and Friend JP April 23 2004 116 Published by MTO Game Boy AdvanceCardcaptor Sakura Sakura chan to Asobo カードキャプターさくら さくらちゃんとあそぼ Cardcaptor Sakura Play with Sakura chan JP December 2 2004 117 Published by NHK Software PlayStation 2Other media Edit Kodansha published three art books for the manga series and three art books from for the anime television series featuring art by character designer Kumiko Takahashi 3 The three books for the manga titled Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection were released from July 1998 to December 2000 118 119 The three for the TV series titled Cheerio were released from April 1999 to September 2000 120 121 A set of the 52 Clow Cards featured in the TV series was released in August 1999 and a Clow Card Fortune Book which contains information on how to use the Clow Card replica set as tarot cards was released in March 2000 122 123 A fan book for the manga titled Cardcaptor Sakura Memorial Book was published on February 27 2001 containing various illustrations from the series as well as information on branded merchandise based on the series and interviews 124 Four fan books under the title Complete Book were released for the TV series and films The first two for the TV series were labeled Clow Card hen クロウカード編 Clow Card Arc and Sakura Card hen さくらカード編 Sakura Card Arc and were released in July 1999 and June 2000 respectively 125 126 The latter two for the films were released in October 1999 and October 2000 respectively 127 128 A poster box containing several posters and a T shirt was released on August 22 2001 129 Ten volumes of a film comic sharing the same name as the manga and anime series were published from August 1998 to November 2000 covering the first two anime seasons though some episodes were skipped 130 131 Three more were published under the subtitle Sakura Card hen from March 2001 to February 2002 covering up to episode 59 though again some episodes were skipped 132 133 Four picture books were released for the TV series from September 1998 to November 2000 134 135 Four sticker books were released for the TV series from August 1999 to March 2004 136 137 Between February and July 2018 three Cardcaptor Sakura themed cafes opened in Tokyo Osaka and Sapporo The restaurants featured decorations of artwork from the series and served menu items connected to Cardcaptor Sakura characters or items 138 Reception EditManga Edit The manga has over 17 million copies in print as of April 2018 139 Cardcaptor Sakura was popular with Japanese readers ranking among the top five sellers during its release 140 The manga series was awarded the Seiun Award for Best Manga in 2001 141 Shaenon Garrity of The Comics Journal described the series as a quintessential shōjo manga which is praised for its mature direction in the second half 142 Cardcaptor Sakura has been described as a critical work of manga by Christopher Butcher of Comics212 142 In a review by Lisa Anderson of Manga Life the subplots in the series related to the interactions between characters were noted to be of special interest Anderson praised how the manga while at the onset begins with a costumed Sakura chasing after a Clow Card takes a rather big leap in another direction when focusing on the characters The manga is further lauded for its depth 143 Anime News Network ANN reviewer Robert Nguyen felt Cardcaptor Sakura is an atypical shōjo manga which puts an emphasis on the emotions of the character 144 In Manga The Complete Guide Mason Templar states that the series is not just one of the best kids manga in translation it s one of the very best manga available in English period He praises Clamp for their creativity and shrewd business sense in being able to create a series that clearly has merchandising in line and an utterly forgettable premise into a story that is brimming with warmth and joy and wonder and is much more than the sum of its parts 2 The manga is cited as being cute by critics and in some cases too cute 144 however Anderson stated that much like Magic Knight Rayearth even a cute story will have its depth and drama 143 The artwork of the manga is praised for being detailed and having beautifully drawn pictures of the Clow Cards themselves The cards are described as having an artful blend of magical fantasy and reality 144 Anime Edit The anime adaptation was popular with viewers in Japan despite having a timeslot that normally has low viewership 3 The Cardcaptor Sakura anime adaptation won the Animage Grand Prix award for best anime in 1999 145 In May 2000 volumes 8 and 17 of the anime LD release were among the top selling titles with volume 17 being in first place 146 The 18th DVD volume was the eighth best selling anime DVD in Japan in June 2000 147 Animerica contributor Kevin Lew felt the series had a sophisticated design sense that allowed the series to transcend its target audience of young children and be enjoyable to older viewers as well 3 Fellow contributor Takashi Oshiguichi found the character Sakura to be appealing and praised the series art work He felt that while it was very calculated to attract male readers the series was attractive to fans due to Clamp s unique entertainment style that incorporates perfectly time d appearances of fascinating villains and the unusual element of having the main character change costume for every capture 140 The magazine s Winnie Chow felt the series animation was far above average for a TV series and compliments Sakura s magic casting scenes for being nearly unique due to the regular costume changes 148 Zac Bertschy of ANN praised Cardcaptor Sakura for taking an incredibly stale and repetitive magical girl genre and providing something fun clever beautifully animated touching and exciting all at once Bertschy goes on to call the series the best magical girl show ever produced 1 The animation was described as being incredibly fluid with the character designs maintain ing a consistent and impressive level of detail even during action scenes 1 The series has been described as formulaic but this is not said to detract from the show s enjoyment 149 150 151 While Cardcaptor Sakura is normally intended for an audience of young girls the anime is lauded for containing elements that can be enjoyed by anyone regardless of age or gender providing they are open minded enough 149 In 2001 the anime ranked 46th on Wizard s Anime Magazine s Top 50 Anime released in North America ranking 152 Cat Dennis of ScreenRant praised Sakura for maintaining a conventionally feminine persona rather than adopting male characteristics with her power stemming from her outfits heart and love meaning that the show explores the complexities of love both platonic and romantic 153 Hannah Collins of The Mary Sue called the series an anime filled with genuine warmth tenderness and a strong underlying message of acceptance 154 The Kids WB version of the Cardcaptors dub was panned by critics Jake Godek of THEM Anime Reviews called it the worst thing that has ever happened to anime that had a good Japanese name with the dubbing being one of the worst if not the worst dubbing done for a program He also criticized the editing saying that it had demolished the plot and noting that it cut out vital character backgrounds needed in order to understand the show 155 Adam Arnold of Animefringe reviewing the first Cardcaptors DVD said it was nothing more than an attempt to dilute a fan favorite anime with the dubbed voices described as not up to par with the originals The ordering of the episodes on the DVD was also criticized noting that starting with episode eight meant that the cast are left without their backgrounds fleshed out However he also approved of the episode stories being left intact and praised the voices of Carly McKillip as Sakura Avalon and Rhys Huber as Syaoran Li stating that they were the only voices that really shine above the rest 52 In January 2002 the restaurant chain Taco Bell began a month long promotion in which four Cardcaptors toys were available in their kids meals and the company expected to distribute up to 7 million of the toys during the month 156 The conservative Christian political orientation American Family Association complained about the promotion as the organization felt the Clow Cards in the series were too similar to tarot cards and Eastern mythology However the organization s complaints did not begin until the promotion was already scheduled to end so it is unclear whether the complaints had any actual effect 157 References Edit a b c Cardcaptor Sakura DVD 18 Revelations Anime News Network January 21 2004 Archived from the original on March 31 2019 Retrieved September 27 2010 a b c d Thompson Jason October 9 2007 Manga The Complete Guide New York New York Del Rey Books pp 43 44 ISBN 978 0 345 48590 8 OCLC 85833345 a b c d e f g h i Lew Kevin Carlos Ovalle Winnie Chow December 2000 Animerica Spotlight Cardcaptor Sakura Animerica San Francisco California Viz Media 8 11 15 ISSN 1067 0831 OCLC 27130932 New Cardcaptor Sakura Manga Is Sequel Launching in June Anime News Network April 26 2016 Archived from the original on April 26 2016 Retrieved April 26 2016 a b c d e f Cardcaptor Sakura Memorial Book in Japanese Kodansha February 2001 ISBN 978 4 06 324535 6 Solomon Charles November 28 2006 Four Mothers of Manga Gain American Fans With Expertise in a Variety of Visual Styles The New York Times Archived from the original on June 7 2022 Retrieved September 26 2010 カードキャプターさくら 1 Cardcaptor Sakura 1 in Japanese Kodansha Archived from the original on January 4 2018 Retrieved November 26 2014 カードキャプターさくら 12 Cardcaptor Sakura 12 in Japanese Kodansha Archived from the original on January 15 2018 Retrieved November 26 2014 カードキャプターさくら バイリンガル版 1 Cardcaptor Sakura Bilingual Edition 1 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4770026446 カードキャプターさくら バイリンガル版 6 Cardcaptor Sakura Bilingual Edition 6 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2001 ISBN 978 4770028822 Kodansha to Publish Sell Manga in U S in September Anime News Network July 1 2008 Archived from the original on April 11 2019 Retrieved May 24 2009 Cardcaptor Sakura 1 Amazon com 2000 ISBN 978 1892213365 Cardcaptor Sakura Master of the Clow Book 6 Amazon com ISBN 978 1892213808 Cardcaptor Sakura Boxed Set Collection 1 Amazon com 7 October 2003 ISBN 978 1591825890 Cardcaptor Sakura Boxed Set Volumes 4 6 Special Collector s Edition Amazon com ISBN 978 1892213808 Cardcaptor Sakura Master of the Clow Manga Madman Entertainment Archived from the original on March 3 2016 Retrieved September 13 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Omnibus Vol 1 TPB Dark Horse Comics Archived from the original on April 11 2012 Retrieved November 5 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Book 4 TPB Dark Horse Comics Archived from the original on May 7 2012 Retrieved May 8 2012 Kodansha USA Licenses Cardcaptor Sakura Tales of Berseria Fate Grand Order Manga Anime News Network November 17 2018 Archived from the original on November 8 2020 Retrieved March 28 2020 Card Captor Sakura in French Pika Edition Archived from the original on July 3 2010 Retrieved September 13 2010 Card Captor Sakura 1 in Italian Star Comics Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved September 13 2010 Card Captor Sakura in German Egmont Manga amp Anime Archived from the original on May 26 2013 Retrieved September 13 2010 Sakura Card Captors in Portuguese Editora JBC Archived from the original on August 26 2010 Retrieved September 13 2010 01 Clamp in Chinese Ever Glory Publishing Archived from the original on June 29 2011 Retrieved September 13 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura in Spanish Glenat Espana Archived from the original on November 29 2010 Retrieved September 13 2010 Sakura card captor in Spanish Librosar Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved September 13 2010 Sakura Card Captors in Spanish Animexis Archived from the original on July 7 2011 Retrieved September 13 2010 Kamite anuncia manga Cardcaptor Sakura Cine Premiere Cine Premiere in Spanish December 26 2017 Archived from the original on February 1 2018 Retrieved January 31 2018 これまでのストーリー The Story So Far in Japanese Madhouse Archived from the original on April 5 2010 Retrieved October 2 2010 a b スタッフ amp キャスト Staff amp Cast in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on September 21 2010 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら lt 新 gt さくらと不思議な魔法の本 Cardcaptor Sakura New Sakura and the Mysterious Magic Book in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved October 21 2014 カードキャプターさくら lt 終 gt さくらのすてきなクリスマス Cardcaptor Sakura End Sakura s Wonderful Christmas in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved October 21 2014 a b 第2回 最長のTVシリーズ作品は Round 2 What Are Your Longest TV Series in Japanese Madhouse Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved December 10 2010 カードキャプターさくら さくらと最後の審判 Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura and the Final Judgment in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved October 21 2014 カードキャプターさくら さくらと不思議な転校生 Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura and the Mysterious Transfer Student in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved October 21 2014 カードキャプターさくら lt 終 gt さくらと本当の想い Cardcaptor Sakura End Sakura and Her True Feelings in Japanese NHK Archived from the original on August 11 2011 Retrieved October 21 2014 カードキャプターさくら Vol 1 VHS Cardcaptor Sakura Vol 1 VHS in Japanese Amazon co jp 25 September 1998 Archived from the original on December 22 2011 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら18 Cardcaptor Sakura 18 in Japanese Tsutaya Archived from the original on March 10 2012 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら Vol 1 DVD Cardcaptor Sakura Vol 1 DVD in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on June 23 2012 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら Vol 18 DVD Cardcaptor Sakura Vol 18 DVD in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら クロウカード編 BOX 期間限定生産 Blu ray Cardcaptor Sakura Clow Card Arc BOX limited production Blu ray in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved September 23 2010 カードキャプターさくら さくらカード編 BOX 期間限定生産 Blu ray Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card Arc BOX limited production Blu ray in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on November 3 2015 Retrieved September 23 2010 See How Cardcaptor Sakura Anime Visuals are Upgraded in 4K Scan Remastered Edition Crunchyroll October 28 2017 Archived from the original on February 16 2018 Retrieved February 15 2018 Considine J D January 20 2002 Television Radio Making Anime A Little Safer For Americans The New York Times Archived from the original on December 22 2011 Retrieved September 23 2010 Poitras Gilles 2001 Anime Essentials Every Thing a Fan Needs to Know Stone Bridge Press p 27 ISBN 978 1 880656 53 2 Lowry Brian June 16 2000 A Firm From the Great White North Takes Off Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Retrieved December 24 2021 Anime Censorship in the 90s and Early 2000s Comic Book Legal Defense Fund Archived from the original on December 4 2019 Retrieved December 8 2019 RTE Guide TV Schedules RTE2 Archived from the original on September 2 2002 Retrieved May 27 2017 Cardcaptors MSN TV Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved October 2 2010 Cardcaptors Revelations Episode Info MSN TV Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved October 2 2010 a b Sailor Moon Explained Plus Fushigi Yugi Cardcaptors More Pioneer Has Loads of Shojo ICv2 August 12 2001 Archived from the original on August 12 2012 Retrieved May 24 2009 a b Arnold Adam Cardcaptors Vol 1 Tests of Courage Animefringe Archived from the original on August 6 2012 Retrieved September 26 2010 Cardcaptors Tests of Courage Vol 1 VHS Amazon Archived from the original on December 22 2011 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptors Tests of Courage Vol 1 2000 Amazon Archived from the original on October 14 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptors Star Power Vol 9 VHS Amazon Archived from the original on December 22 2011 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptors V 9 Star Power ep 25 27 Amazon Archived from the original on February 11 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptors vol 10 canceled Anime News Network June 29 2002 Retrieved January 25 2022 Cardcaptor Sakura The Clow Vol 1 Amazon Archived from the original on May 28 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Revelations Vol 18 Amazon Archived from the original on May 16 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura The Clow Volume 1 VHS Amazon Archived from the original on April 21 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Trust Vol 11 VHS Amazon Archived from the original on December 22 2011 Retrieved September 24 2010 NIS America Licenses Cardcaptor Sakura TV Anime Anime News Network April 30 2014 Archived from the original on July 24 2017 Retrieved April 30 2014 Madman to Release Cardcaptor Sakura and Rozen Maiden Overture Anime News Network Archived from the original on 2014 04 10 Retrieved June 9 2013 Cardcaptor Sakura Collection 1 Moved to September Madman Entertainment Archived from the original on August 27 2012 Retrieved June 19 2013 Cardcaptor Sakura Uncut Collection 2 eps 36 70 Madman Entertainment Archived from the original on December 1 2012 Retrieved June 19 2013 Anime Limited Acquires Cardcaptor Sakura and InuYasha Anime Reveals B The Beginning Ultimate Edition Anime UK News October 25 2019 Archived from the original on October 25 2019 Retrieved October 25 2019 NormanicGrav November 16 2021 Anime Limited Reveals 12 Days of Christmas 2021 Early Bird Line up with Belladonna of Sadness 4K Ultra HD Cardcaptor Sakura El Hazard My HiME amp More Anime UK News Archived from the original on November 16 2021 Retrieved November 16 2021 Anime Now Streaming on ITV Hub Anime UK News Anime UK News 2022 11 09 Retrieved 2022 11 27 劇場版カードキャプターさくら Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie in Japanese Madhouse Archived from the original on February 29 2012 Retrieved October 2 2010 カードキャプターさくら 劇場版 VHS Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie VHS in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 カードキャプターさくら 劇場版 DVD Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie DVD in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on September 2 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 Cardcaptors The Movie VHS 2000 Amazon Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 23 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie 1999 Amazon Archived from the original on April 4 2012 Retrieved September 23 2010 Discotek Adds Devilman TV Cardcaptor Sakura Film Jin Roh Dallos Anime News Network July 16 2013 Archived from the original on July 20 2013 Retrieved July 17 2013 劇場版カードキャプターさくら 封印されたカード Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card in Japanese Madhouse Archived from the original on February 29 2012 Retrieved October 2 2010 劇場版 カードキャプターさくら 封印されたカード DVD Cardcaptor Sakura Move 2 The Sealed Card DVD in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 劇場版カードキャプターさくら 封印されたカード ばっちしV VHS Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card Batchishi V VHS in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie 2 The Sealed Card Special Edition Amazon Archived from the original on April 4 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 Licensed New Dub Cast Anime News Network June 18 2003 Archived from the original on December 21 2016 Retrieved May 24 2009 Geneon USA to Cancel DVD Sales Distribution by Friday Anime News Network September 26 2007 Archived from the original on June 23 2011 Retrieved September 27 2010 Card Capture Sakura News Anime News Network April 17 2000 Archived from the original on January 9 2017 Retrieved February 5 2011 CDコミックカードキャプターさくら CD Comic Cardcaptor Sakura in Japanese Amazon co jp ISBN 978 4062088770 さくらとお母さんのオルガン Sakura to Okaa san no Orgen in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Sweet Valentine Stories in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 オリジナルサウンドトラック Original Soundtrack in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 オリジナル サウンドトラック4 Original Soundtrack 4 in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 オリジナル サウンドトラック Original Soundtrack in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 オリジナル サウンドトラック Original Soundtrack in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 Catch You Catch Me in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved September 27 2010 扉をあけて Tobira o Akete in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on September 6 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 プラチナ Platinum in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 17 2009 Retrieved September 27 2010 Groovy in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on October 5 2012 Retrieved September 27 2010 Honey in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on March 12 2008 Retrieved September 27 2010 Fruits Candy in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 16 2008 Retrieved September 27 2010 遠いこの街で Tōi Kono Machi de in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on November 16 2011 Retrieved September 27 2010 明日へのメロディー Ashita e no Melody in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 おかしのうた Okashi no Uta in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on March 9 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Sakura in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Touya in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Kero in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on December 6 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Tomoyo in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Yukito in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on December 1 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Single Syaoran in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on April 27 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 Character Songbook in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on November 22 2005 Retrieved September 27 2010 カードキャプターさくら 友枝小学校コーラス部クリスマスコンサート Cardcaptor Sakura Tomoeda Elementary Choir Club Christmas Concert in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 26 2010 カードキャプターさくら コンプリート ボーカル コレクション Cardcaptor Sakura Complete Vocal Collection in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved September 26 2010 主題歌コレクション Theme Song Collection in Japanese Victor Entertainment Archived from the original on October 10 2011 Retrieved September 27 2010 Cardcaptors Songs from the Hit TV Series Amazon Archived from the original on January 22 2013 Retrieved September 26 2010 a b ゲームカタログ エム ティー オー株式会社 Game Catalog MTO Co Ltd in Japanese MTO Archived from the original on May 24 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 アニメチックストーリーゲーム 1 カードキャプターさくら Animetic Story Game 1 Cardcaptor Sakura in Japanese Arika Archived from the original on May 18 2011 Retrieved September 24 2010 カードキャプターさくら WS Cardcaptor Sakura WS in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on December 2 2020 Retrieved March 9 2014 Card Captor Sakura Tomoyo no Video Daisakusen for Dreamcast GameSpot Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 カードキャプターさくら クロウカードマジック Cardcaptor Sakura Clow Card Magic in Japanese Arika Archived from the original on December 15 2010 Retrieved September 24 2010 TETRiS with カードキャプターさくら エターナルハート Tetris with Cardcaptor Sakura Eternal Heart in Japanese Arika Archived from the original on December 15 2010 Retrieved September 24 2010 Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card de Mini Game IGN Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 どんなゲーム カードキャプターさくら What Kind of Game Cardcaptor Sakura in Japanese MTO Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved September 24 2010 カードキャプターさくら さくらちゃんとあそぼ Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura chan to Asobo in Japanese Amazon co jp Archived from the original on May 31 2012 Retrieved December 10 2010 カードキャプターさくら イラスト集 Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection in Japanese Kodansha Retrieved November 26 2014 カードキャプターさくら イラスト集 3 Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection 3 in Japanese Kodansha Archived from the original on June 19 2017 Retrieved November 26 2014 アニメーション カードキャプターさくら イラストコレクション チェリオ Animation Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection Cheerio in Japanese Amazon co jp 12 April 1999 ISBN 978 4063245264 アニメーション カードキャプターさくら イラストコレクション チェリオ 3 Animation Cardcaptor Sakura Illustration Collection Cheerio 3 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4063245301 カードキャプターさくらクロウカードセット Cardcaptor Sakura Clow Card Set in Japanese Amazon co jp ISBN 978 4063363081 クロウカードフォーチュンブック カードキャプターさくら Clow Card Fortune Book Cardcaptor Sakura in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4063342987 カードキャプターさくら メモリアルブック Cardcaptor Sakura Memorial Book in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4063342987 テレビアニメーションカードキャプターさくら コンプリートブック クロウカード編 TV Animation Cardcaptor Sakura Complete Book Clow Card Arc in Japanese Amazon co jp 1999 ISBN 978 4063245271 テレビアニメーションカードキャプターさくら コンプリートブック 2 さくらカード編 TV Animation Cardcaptor Sakura Complete Book 2 Sakura Card Arc in Japanese Kodansha Archived from the original on February 28 2014 Retrieved February 27 2014 劇場版カードキャプターさくら コンプリートブック Cardcaptor Sakura The Movie Complete Book in Japanese Amazon co jp 29 October 1999 ISBN 978 4063245288 劇場版カードキャプターさくら封印されたカード コンプリートブック Cardcaptor Sakura Movie 2 The Sealed Card Complete Book in Japanese Amazon co jp 27 October 2000 ISBN 978 4063245332 カードキャプターさくらポスターBOX Cardcaptor Sakura Poster Box in Japanese Amazon co jp ISBN 978 4063451948 アニメブックス カードキャプターさくら 1 Anime Books Cardcaptor Sakura 1 in Japanese Amazon co jp 1998 ISBN 978 4063246513 アニメブックス カードキャプターさくら 10 Anime Books Cardcaptor Sakura 10 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4063246605 アニメブックス カードキャプターさくら さくらカード編 1 Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card Arc 1 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2001 ISBN 978 4063246612 カードキャプターさくら さくらカード編 3 Cardcaptor Sakura Sakura Card Arc 3 in Japanese Amazon co jp 2002 ISBN 978 4063246643 カードキャプターさくら 1 わたしのひみつをおしえてあげるね Cardcaptor Sakura 1 I ll Tell You My Secret in Japanese Amazon co jp 1998 ISBN 978 4063440287 カードキャプターさくら 4 さくらカードたんじょう Cardcaptor Sakura 4 Sakura Birthday Card in Japanese Amazon co jp 2000 ISBN 978 4063441475 カードキャプターさくらシールあそびえほん Cardcaptor Sakura Seal Asobi Ehon in Japanese Amazon co jp 1999 ISBN 978 4061774780 カードキャプターさくらシールあそびえほん 2004 さくらカードがいっぱい Cardcaptor Sakura Seal Asobi Ehon 2004 Sakura Card ga Ippai in Japanese Amazon co jp 2004 ISBN 978 4061781207 New Cardcaptor Sakura Cafe opens in Tokyo two other cities with themed food drinks and art SoraNews24 February 5 2018 Archived from the original on February 16 2018 Retrieved February 15 2018 Cardcaptor Sakura Gets New Exhibition in Tokyo in October Anime News Network April 1 2018 Archived from the original on April 13 2018 Retrieved April 12 2018 a b Oshiguichi Takashi December 2008 Anime Focus On Cardcaptor Sakura Animerica San Francisco California Viz Media 8 11 70 ISSN 1067 0831 OCLC 27130932 星雲賞リスト Seiun Award List in Japanese Federation of the Science Fiction Fan Groups of Japan Archived from the original on October 13 2010 Retrieved September 26 2010 a b Aoki Deb 2010 Comic Con Best and Worst Manga Panel About com Archived from the original on August 29 2010 Retrieved November 26 2014 a b Anderson Lisa Cardcaptor Sakura v1 Manga Life Silver Bullet Comics Archived from the original on February 19 2006 Retrieved September 26 2010 a b c Nguyen Robert Cardcaptor Sakura Manga Vol 1 Anime News Network Archived from the original on November 15 2016 Retrieved September 26 2010 第22回アニメグランプリ 2000年6月号 22nd Animage Grand Prix June 2000 issue in Japanese Animage Archived from the original on April 10 2015 Retrieved May 24 2009 Japan s Top 10 Bestselling Anime Viz Media Archived from the original on July 6 2001 Anime Radar News Animerica San Francisco California Viz Media 8 10 32 November 2000 ISSN 1067 0831 OCLC 27130932 Chow Winnie March 2001 Anime Radar News Animerica San Francisco California Viz Media 9 2 75 ISSN 1067 0831 OCLC 27130932 a b Shepard Chris Cardcaptor Sakura DVD 1 The Clow Anime News Network Archived from the original on December 24 2019 Retrieved September 27 2010 Dong Bamboo January 1 2003 Cardcaptor Sakura DVD 11 Trust Anime News Network Archived from the original on January 1 2017 Retrieved September 27 2010 Beveridge Chris February 9 2002 Cardcaptor Sakura Vol 01 Mania Archived from the original on January 15 2010 Retrieved September 27 2010 Wizard lists Top 50 Anime Anime News Network July 6 2001 Archived from the original on April 2 2014 Retrieved February 2 2014 Dennis Cat September 22 2019 15 Ways Cardcaptor Sakura Had To Be Censored In America Screen Rant Archived from the original on May 5 2020 Retrieved July 14 2020 Collins Hannah January 17 2018 Cardcaptor Sakura Is Back Just When We Need Her Most The Mary Sue Archived from the original on July 17 2019 Retrieved July 14 2020 Godek Jake L CardCaptors THEM Anime Reviews Archived from the original on April 2 2012 Retrieved September 26 2010 Taco Bell s Cardcaptor Promotion Runs through January 30 ICv2 January 8 2002 Archived from the original on December 7 2014 Retrieved May 25 2009 Was Cardcaptors Promo Pulled Due to Occult Complaints Or Did It End on Schedule ICv2 February 5 2002 Archived from the original on December 7 2014 Retrieved May 25 2009 Further reading EditConsidine J D January 20 2002 Television Radio Making Anime A Little Safer For Americans The New York Times Retrieved April 1 2011 Thompson Jason March 31 2011 Card Captor Sakura House of 1000 Manga Anime News Network Retrieved April 1 2011 West Mark Ellis Bill October 2008 Folklore and Gender Inversion in Cardcaptor Sakura The Japanification of Children s Popular Culture From Godzilla to Miyazaki Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press pp 249 266 ISBN 978 0 8108 5121 4 via Google Books External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cardcaptor Sakura Wikiquote has quotations related to Cardcaptor Sakura Official website in Japanese Cardcaptor Sakura at NHK in Japanese Cardcaptor Sakura manga at Anime News Network s encyclopedia Cardcaptor Sakura at IMDb Portals Japan Television Film LGBT 1990s Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cardcaptor Sakura amp oldid 1141969309 Video games, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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