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Project A-ko

Project A-ko (プロジェクトA子, Purojekuto Ēko) is a 1986 Japanese action comedy science fiction[1] anime film that had several sequels and a spin-off.[2] This film focuses on a happy-go-lucky 16-year-old red-haired, sailor-suited teenage schoolgirl, A-ko Magami, who goes on her magical adventure from high school to outer space as she struggles to finish her homework, rescue her friend C-ko, and save the Earth from an evil alien invasion. This series references a number of other works of anime from the 1970s and 1980s, such as Macross, Fist of the North Star and Gundam.

Project A-ko
Original Japanese film poster
Japanese name
KanjiプロジェクトA子
Transcriptions
Revised HepburnPurojekuto Ēko
Directed byKatsuhiko Nishijima
Written byKatsuhiko Nishijima
Tomoko Kawasaki
Yuji Moriyama
Story byKatsuhiko Nishijima
Kazumi Shirasaka
Produced byKazufumi Nomura
StarringMiki Itō
Michie Tomizawa
Emi Shinohara
Asami Mukaidono
Music byRichie Zito
Joey Carbone
Toru Akasaka
Production
companies
A.P.P.P.
Soeishinsha
Distributed byShochiku
Release date
  • June 21, 1986 (1986-06-21)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Plot

An alien space craft crashes into Graviton City, wiping out the entire population and leaving a massive crater where the city is rebuilt. Students A-ko Magami, a perky, fun-loving red-haired, sailor-suited teenage girl, and her best friend C-ko Kotobuki, a bubbly, carefree optimist, enter a new year of school as transfer students at the all-girls Graviton High School. Although A-ko possesses superhuman speed and strength, she considers herself an average teenager. She mostly worries about getting to school on time, due to her habit of chronically oversleeping her alarm clock each morning. The pair catch the unwanted attention of B-ko Daitokuji, a rich, snobbish, spoiled, and brilliant fellow student.

B-ko develops an obsession in regards to C-ko, and is determined to win her over. B-ko's attempts to win C-ko over fail, however, and remembering that she was A-ko's rival back in kindergarten, B-ko creates a series of mecha piloted by her team of female followers to attack A-ko each morning. After losing each new and more powerful mecha, she eventually creates and dons the "Akagiyama 23," a powered suit that looks like a bikini. B-ko quickly escalates the fight across the school with no restraint.

Trench-coated spy "D" has been monitoring A-ko and C-ko each morning and reporting back to a large spacecraft as it approaches Earth. The aliens' conclusion is that they have located a lost princess whom they have been looking for. The aliens finally reach Earth and begin an all-out attack against the Graviton military, which is outmatched by the alien technology. A-ko and B-ko's own fight continues across the big city even as the military and aliens do battle. C-ko is abducted in the middle of this confrontation by "D," who is revealed to be a member of the Lepton Kingdom of Alpha Cygni, an all-female race of aliens. C-ko is their princess.

Witnessing the abduction, A-ko and B-ko set aside their differences. Infiltrating the spaceship, A-ko confronts D and the ship's alcoholic Captain Napolipolita, while B-ko rescues C-ko. B-ko then reneges on the truce and opens fire on A-ko, D, and the Captain, destroying the ship's navigation system. The vessel lands, precariously perched on top of the city's Military Command Tower (actually the remains of the previously crashed ship).

A-ko happily awakens the next morning, sore from the previous day's adventures, and walks with C-ko to school in their new uniforms. The girls pass by a disheveled D and the Captain begging for donations to repair their ship. The film ends with B-ko, ready for yet another fight, smiling as A-ko appears on the horizon.

Cast

Character Japanese voice actor English dubbing actor
Eiko "A-ko" Magami Miki Itō Stacey Gregg
Biko "B-ko" Daitokuji Emi Shinohara Denica Fairman
Shiko "C-ko" Kotobuki Michie Tomizawa Julia Brahms
Miss Ayumi Asami Mukaidono Liza Ross
Captain Napolipolita Shūichi Ikeda Jay Benedict
Spy D Tesshō Genda Marc Smith
Mari Daisuke Gōri (male voice)
Sayuri Ikemoto (female voice)
Anne Marie Zola (female voice)
Asa Yōko Ogai Toni Barry
Ine Yoshino Takamori Anne Marie Zola
Ume Megumi Hayashibara Liza Ross

Production and release

The film was directed by Katsuhiko Nishijima who would later go on to direct Agent Aika and Labyrinth of Flames.[3] Production of the film included several artists who would later create other popular works, including Kia Asamiya and Atsuko Nakajima. Also noted is the western source of the soundtrack, credited to Joey Carbone and Richie Zito.

The title itself is a reference to the 1983 Jackie Chan movie Project A, although the film bears no resemblance to Project A; the working title ended up sticking.[4]

In Japanese, "-ko" is a common suffix for girls' names, like Hanako, Rumiko, and Yuriko, or indeed Eiko, which sounds just like A-ko. The literal meaning is "child", so A-ko is a generic "Child A", a common way to reference peripheral characters in Japanese contemporary drama. In the making-of documentary for the film, it is stated that "A-ko", "B-ko", and "C-ko" were intended as generic "Jane Doe"-type names.

Project A-ko was initially planned to be part of the Cream Lemon series of pornographic OVAs, but during the production of the series, it was decided to make it into a more mainstream title.[5] The only sequence animated during its Cream Lemon days left in the revised production is B-ko's private bath scene. In a nod to Project A-ko's origins as a Cream Lemon episode, the owner and several working girls from the brothel in the Cream Lemon episode "Pop Chaser" - where director Katsuhiko Nishijima was one of the animators - can be seen in one of the classrooms A-ko and B-ko crash through during a fight sequence in the film.

Nishijima states (possibly in jest) that he took on this project because he was missing some teeth at the time and needed the funding from this film to buy new ones.[6]

Release

The film was released to theaters by Shochiku-Fuji on June 21, 1986, alongside a shorter film titled Going on a Journey: Ami Final Chapter. Pony Video distributed the film via VHS and LaserDisc later in the year.

Project A-Ko was Central Park Media's first video release in 1991 alongside Dominion Tank Police and MD Geist.[7] They later released a dubbed version produced by Manga Entertainment to VHS in 1992. The English dub for the rest of the franchise was produced with Ocean Studios instead.

After releasing Project A-ko on DVD in its original widescreen video format, Central Park Media later released a "Collector's Series" version in 2002, which features remastered video and coloring, a large number of A-ko related extras, commentary and interviews by many of the Project A-ko staff, and a free Project A-ko soundtrack CD.

On May 17, 2011, Eastern Star released a newly remastered R1 Project A-ko DVD. It contains many of the extras of the original CPM release, minus the soundtrack CD.[8] In September 2020, it was announced Discotek Media will release the film on Blu-ray. The footage for the film was to be sourced from the laserdisc release using the Domesday Duplicator to capture the footage at a higher quality than previous releases,[9] with a technology called AstroRes being used to upscale the footage and restore it to a higher quality.[5] In March 2021, Discotek announced that the film will instead be sourced from the original 35mm film negatives, which were previously thought lost.[10] The 35mm film negatives had been stored in a film laboratory but a clerical error had resulted in confusion as to where it was.[5]

Critical reception

The film has largely been praised reviewers who consider it a classic for fans of Japanese anime.[11][12] The film's humor was praised, with Hyper magazine saying the film "had me in stitches with its fast hitting cheesy humour."[12]

Reviewer Joe Bob Briggs praised the film, citing the more adult subject matter compared to Saturday morning cartoons and crazy action, giving it four out of four stars. He placed the film alongside others such as Gunbuster and Dominion: Tank Police which feature scantily clad women in science fiction adventures causing a lot of mayhem.[13]

GameFan writer Shidoshi considers the film a "must see" film for any serious anime fan, saying it rises above being a mere parody and stands on its own as a work. He also says that it is the best film in the series, with the sequels being the sort of work that the film set out to mock.[11]

However, some reviewers found the story confusing and hard to follow, with GameZone magazine saying "Confused? You better believe it. The plot's got more twists than a bag of noodles".[14]

Sequels

Central Park Media has released the three theatrical sequels (often erroneously cited in U.S. anime references as OVAs) in a single-disc DVD collection, 'Project A-ko: Love and Robots':

After this original series, a spin-off entitled A-ko the Vs (1990) was created and released in the OVA format. In this two-part series (a "Grey side" and "Blue side"), A-ko and B-ko are partners hunting monsters in an extraterrestrial environment, with no relationship to the previous series. Central Park Media released it as Project A-ko: Uncivil Wars.[15]

References

  1. ^ "Project A-Ko DVD". Right Stuf Inc. from the original on January 21, 2018. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  2. ^ Crandol, Mike. "Project A-Ko DVD". Anime News Network. from the original on 2016-04-06. Retrieved 2016-02-14.
  3. ^ Haverson, Dave (February 2002). "Anime - Labyrinth of Flames". Play. United States of America. p. 85.
  4. ^ Ledoux, Trish; Ranney, Doug (December 1995). "Anime Genres". The Complete Anime Guide (First ed.). Issaquah, WA: Tiger Mountain Press. p. 62. ISBN 0-9649542-3-0. LCCN 95062359.
  5. ^ a b c Chapman, Paul (May 4, 2021). "The Fantastic True Story of How Project A-ko Was Lost and Found". Crunchyroll News. from the original on September 21, 2021. Retrieved January 21, 2022.
  6. ^ 2002 Collectors series DVD behind the scenes footage
  7. ^ "They made it through another year!". Animation Magazine. January 2006. p. 31.
  8. ^ Douglass, Todd Jr. (June 20, 2011). "Project A-Ko". DVDTalk.com. Internet Brands. from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2016-02-14.
  9. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (2020-09-14). "Discotek Licenses Rose of Versailles, Hajime no Ippo, Project A-Ko Anime". Anime News Network. from the original on 2021-04-27. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  10. ^ Pineda, Rafael Antonio (March 8, 2021). "Discotek Licenses Dear Brother, Sgt. Frog, Kashimashi, Nyanbo! Anime". Anime News Network. from the original on March 9, 2021. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  11. ^ a b Shidoshi (May 1998). "Anime Fan "Oldies but Goodies"". GameFan. p. 86.
  12. ^ a b Autohead, Max (December 1995). "Anime - Project A-Ko". Hyper. Australia. p. 19.
  13. ^ Briggs, Joe Bob (March 27, 1992). "'Annie Mae' cartoons: Saturday Mornings was never like this". The Orlando Sentinel. from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
  14. ^ "Zone 7: Intergalactic Punk Rock Hip Hop". GameZone. October 1992. pp. 94–95.
  15. ^ See, Raphael. "Project A-ko: Versus". T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews. from the original on 2015-05-15. Retrieved 2015-06-03.

External links

project, convention, プロジェクトa子, purojekuto, Ēko, 1986, japanese, action, comedy, science, fiction, anime, film, that, several, sequels, spin, this, film, focuses, happy, lucky, year, haired, sailor, suited, teenage, schoolgirl, magami, goes, magical, adventure,. For the convention see A Kon Project A ko プロジェクトA子 Purojekuto Eko is a 1986 Japanese action comedy science fiction 1 anime film that had several sequels and a spin off 2 This film focuses on a happy go lucky 16 year old red haired sailor suited teenage schoolgirl A ko Magami who goes on her magical adventure from high school to outer space as she struggles to finish her homework rescue her friend C ko and save the Earth from an evil alien invasion This series references a number of other works of anime from the 1970s and 1980s such as Macross Fist of the North Star and Gundam Project A koOriginal Japanese film posterJapanese nameKanjiプロジェクトA子TranscriptionsRevised HepburnPurojekuto EkoDirected byKatsuhiko NishijimaWritten byKatsuhiko NishijimaTomoko KawasakiYuji MoriyamaStory byKatsuhiko NishijimaKazumi ShirasakaProduced byKazufumi NomuraStarringMiki ItōMichie TomizawaEmi ShinoharaAsami MukaidonoMusic byRichie ZitoJoey CarboneToru AkasakaProductioncompaniesA P P P SoeishinshaDistributed byShochikuRelease dateJune 21 1986 1986 06 21 Running time84 minutesCountryJapanLanguageJapanese Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production and release 4 Release 5 Critical reception 6 Sequels 7 References 8 External linksPlot EditAn alien space craft crashes into Graviton City wiping out the entire population and leaving a massive crater where the city is rebuilt Students A ko Magami a perky fun loving red haired sailor suited teenage girl and her best friend C ko Kotobuki a bubbly carefree optimist enter a new year of school as transfer students at the all girls Graviton High School Although A ko possesses superhuman speed and strength she considers herself an average teenager She mostly worries about getting to school on time due to her habit of chronically oversleeping her alarm clock each morning The pair catch the unwanted attention of B ko Daitokuji a rich snobbish spoiled and brilliant fellow student B ko develops an obsession in regards to C ko and is determined to win her over B ko s attempts to win C ko over fail however and remembering that she was A ko s rival back in kindergarten B ko creates a series of mecha piloted by her team of female followers to attack A ko each morning After losing each new and more powerful mecha she eventually creates and dons the Akagiyama 23 a powered suit that looks like a bikini B ko quickly escalates the fight across the school with no restraint Trench coated spy D has been monitoring A ko and C ko each morning and reporting back to a large spacecraft as it approaches Earth The aliens conclusion is that they have located a lost princess whom they have been looking for The aliens finally reach Earth and begin an all out attack against the Graviton military which is outmatched by the alien technology A ko and B ko s own fight continues across the big city even as the military and aliens do battle C ko is abducted in the middle of this confrontation by D who is revealed to be a member of the Lepton Kingdom of Alpha Cygni an all female race of aliens C ko is their princess Witnessing the abduction A ko and B ko set aside their differences Infiltrating the spaceship A ko confronts D and the ship s alcoholic Captain Napolipolita while B ko rescues C ko B ko then reneges on the truce and opens fire on A ko D and the Captain destroying the ship s navigation system The vessel lands precariously perched on top of the city s Military Command Tower actually the remains of the previously crashed ship A ko happily awakens the next morning sore from the previous day s adventures and walks with C ko to school in their new uniforms The girls pass by a disheveled D and the Captain begging for donations to repair their ship The film ends with B ko ready for yet another fight smiling as A ko appears on the horizon Cast EditCharacter Japanese voice actor English dubbing actorEiko A ko Magami Miki Itō Stacey GreggBiko B ko Daitokuji Emi Shinohara Denica FairmanShiko C ko Kotobuki Michie Tomizawa Julia BrahmsMiss Ayumi Asami Mukaidono Liza RossCaptain Napolipolita Shuichi Ikeda Jay BenedictSpy D Tesshō Genda Marc SmithMari Daisuke Gōri male voice Sayuri Ikemoto female voice Anne Marie Zola female voice Asa Yōko Ogai Toni BarryIne Yoshino Takamori Anne Marie ZolaUme Megumi Hayashibara Liza RossProduction and release EditThe film was directed by Katsuhiko Nishijima who would later go on to direct Agent Aika and Labyrinth of Flames 3 Production of the film included several artists who would later create other popular works including Kia Asamiya and Atsuko Nakajima Also noted is the western source of the soundtrack credited to Joey Carbone and Richie Zito The title itself is a reference to the 1983 Jackie Chan movie Project A although the film bears no resemblance to Project A the working title ended up sticking 4 In Japanese ko is a common suffix for girls names like Hanako Rumiko and Yuriko or indeed Eiko which sounds just like A ko The literal meaning is child so A ko is a generic Child A a common way to reference peripheral characters in Japanese contemporary drama In the making of documentary for the film it is stated that A ko B ko and C ko were intended as generic Jane Doe type names Project A ko was initially planned to be part of the Cream Lemon series of pornographic OVAs but during the production of the series it was decided to make it into a more mainstream title 5 The only sequence animated during its Cream Lemon days left in the revised production is B ko s private bath scene In a nod to Project A ko s origins as a Cream Lemon episode the owner and several working girls from the brothel in the Cream Lemon episode Pop Chaser where director Katsuhiko Nishijima was one of the animators can be seen in one of the classrooms A ko and B ko crash through during a fight sequence in the film Nishijima states possibly in jest that he took on this project because he was missing some teeth at the time and needed the funding from this film to buy new ones 6 Release EditThe film was released to theaters by Shochiku Fuji on June 21 1986 alongside a shorter film titled Going on a Journey Ami Final Chapter Pony Video distributed the film via VHS and LaserDisc later in the year Project A Ko was Central Park Media s first video release in 1991 alongside Dominion Tank Police and MD Geist 7 They later released a dubbed version produced by Manga Entertainment to VHS in 1992 The English dub for the rest of the franchise was produced with Ocean Studios instead After releasing Project A ko on DVD in its original widescreen video format Central Park Media later released a Collector s Series version in 2002 which features remastered video and coloring a large number of A ko related extras commentary and interviews by many of the Project A ko staff and a free Project A ko soundtrack CD On May 17 2011 Eastern Star released a newly remastered R1 Project A ko DVD It contains many of the extras of the original CPM release minus the soundtrack CD 8 In September 2020 it was announced Discotek Media will release the film on Blu ray The footage for the film was to be sourced from the laserdisc release using the Domesday Duplicator to capture the footage at a higher quality than previous releases 9 with a technology called AstroRes being used to upscale the footage and restore it to a higher quality 5 In March 2021 Discotek announced that the film will instead be sourced from the original 35mm film negatives which were previously thought lost 10 The 35mm film negatives had been stored in a film laboratory but a clerical error had resulted in confusion as to where it was 5 Critical reception EditThe film has largely been praised reviewers who consider it a classic for fans of Japanese anime 11 12 The film s humor was praised with Hyper magazine saying the film had me in stitches with its fast hitting cheesy humour 12 Reviewer Joe Bob Briggs praised the film citing the more adult subject matter compared to Saturday morning cartoons and crazy action giving it four out of four stars He placed the film alongside others such as Gunbuster and Dominion Tank Police which feature scantily clad women in science fiction adventures causing a lot of mayhem 13 GameFan writer Shidoshi considers the film a must see film for any serious anime fan saying it rises above being a mere parody and stands on its own as a work He also says that it is the best film in the series with the sequels being the sort of work that the film set out to mock 11 However some reviewers found the story confusing and hard to follow with GameZone magazine saying Confused You better believe it The plot s got more twists than a bag of noodles 14 Sequels EditCentral Park Media has released the three theatrical sequels often erroneously cited in U S anime references as OVAs in a single disc DVD collection Project A ko Love and Robots Plot of the Daitokuji Financial Group 1987 Cinderella Rhapsody 1988 FINAL 1989 After this original series a spin off entitled A ko the Vs 1990 was created and released in the OVA format In this two part series a Grey side and Blue side A ko and B ko are partners hunting monsters in an extraterrestrial environment with no relationship to the previous series Central Park Media released it as Project A ko Uncivil Wars 15 References Edit Project A Ko DVD Right Stuf Inc Archived from the original on January 21 2018 Retrieved January 21 2018 Crandol Mike Project A Ko DVD Anime News Network Archived from the original on 2016 04 06 Retrieved 2016 02 14 Haverson Dave February 2002 Anime Labyrinth of Flames Play United States of America p 85 Ledoux Trish Ranney Doug December 1995 Anime Genres The Complete Anime Guide First ed Issaquah WA Tiger Mountain Press p 62 ISBN 0 9649542 3 0 LCCN 95062359 a b c Chapman Paul May 4 2021 The Fantastic True Story of How Project A ko Was Lost and Found Crunchyroll News Archived from the original on September 21 2021 Retrieved January 21 2022 2002 Collectors series DVD behind the scenes footage They made it through another year Animation Magazine January 2006 p 31 Douglass Todd Jr June 20 2011 Project A Ko DVDTalk com Internet Brands Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2016 02 14 Pineda Rafael Antonio 2020 09 14 Discotek Licenses Rose of Versailles Hajime no Ippo Project A Ko Anime Anime News Network Archived from the original on 2021 04 27 Retrieved 2020 10 27 Pineda Rafael Antonio March 8 2021 Discotek Licenses Dear Brother Sgt Frog Kashimashi Nyanbo Anime Anime News Network Archived from the original on March 9 2021 Retrieved March 8 2021 a b Shidoshi May 1998 Anime Fan Oldies but Goodies GameFan p 86 a b Autohead Max December 1995 Anime Project A Ko Hyper Australia p 19 Briggs Joe Bob March 27 1992 Annie Mae cartoons Saturday Mornings was never like this The Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on January 21 2022 Retrieved January 20 2022 Zone 7 Intergalactic Punk Rock Hip Hop GameZone October 1992 pp 94 95 See Raphael Project A ko Versus T H E M Anime Reviews Archived from the original on 2015 05 15 Retrieved 2015 06 03 External links Edit Anime and manga portal 1980s portal Film portalOfficial website Project A ko at IMDb Project A Ko anime at Anime News Network s encyclopedia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Project A ko amp oldid 1134954269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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