Weather Report Girl
Weather Report Girl | |
お天気お姉さん (Otenki Onēsan) | |
---|---|
Genre | Sex comedy,[1] yuri[2] |
Manga | |
Weather Woman | |
Written by | Tetsu Adachi |
Published by | Kodansha |
English publisher | |
Magazine | Weekly Young Magazine |
Demographic | Seinen |
Original run | 1992 – 1994 |
Volumes | 8 |
Original video animation | |
Directed by | Kunihiko Yuyama |
Written by | Kunihiko Yuyama |
Studio | Toho |
Licensed by | |
Released | August 12, 1994 |
Runtime | 45 minutes per episode |
Episodes | 2 |
Live-action film | |
Weather Woman | |
Directed by | Tomoaki Hosoyama |
Produced by | Atsuhito Kaji |
Written by | Tomoaki Hosoyama |
Studio | Bandai Visual/TFC |
Licensed by | |
Released | August 16, 1996 |
Runtime | 84 minutes |
Live-action film | |
Weather Woman Returns | |
Directed by | Tomoaki Hosoyama |
Written by | Tomoaki Hosoyama |
Music by | Kunihiko Ida |
Studio | Bandai Visual/TFC |
Licensed by | |
Released | 1996 |
Runtime | 84 minutes |
Weather Report Girl (Japanese: お天気お姉さん, Hepburn: Otenki Onēsan), also known as Weather Woman, is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Tetsu Adachi. It was serialized in Kodansha's Weekly Young Magazine from 1992 to 1994
It was adapted into a two-episode series originally released in Japan in August 1994 by Toho and released in the U.S. on VHS in September 1996 and DVD August 2005 by The Right Stuf International.
Plot[]
The story revolves around Keiko Nakadai, who in the beginning is an Office Lady working at the perpetually last-place ATV television network. However, she is chosen to fill in for weather reporter Michiko Kawai for one night, and Keiko takes full advantage of her opportunity by blatantly flashing her panties while on live television. The incident causes the evening news ratings to jump, and because of ATV's desperation to escape the ratings cellar, Keiko is subsequently promoted to full-time weather reporter, displacing Michiko in the process. The rest of the series focuses on her rivalries with co-workers jealous of and insulted by the nature of her success.
The humor in Weather Report Girl is full of sexually oriented sorority style humor, aimed primarily at young men. The protagonist, Keiko, is depicted as being exhibitionistic, first using her sex appeal to rise to the position of weather girl by flashing her bra and panties, and maintaining her position by frequently wearing lingerie while on the air. She is also very resourceful, always one step ahead of her rivals' various revenge schemes. Keiko is also extraordinarily vengeful, humiliating Michiko on the air by spiking her tea with laxatives after Michiko had attempted a similar tactic against her. Keiko proceeds to masturbate in her apartment while watching Michiko embarrass herself on television. Finally, she is sexually domineering, effectively enslaving Michiko—who due to the on-air incident would have been fired had she not agreed—by making her lick her lingerie and perform cunnilingus on Keiko.
The second episode introduces Kaori Shimamori, a reporter who uses her dad's position as a member of the Diet at Keiko's expense. Kaori conspires to have Keiko demoted after allotting her weather corner during a breaking news report. This effort fails after being flooded with viewer mail protests. Soon after, Keiko and Kaori agree to partner up on a marketing campaign for ATV, though still plotting revenge against Keiko by eavesdropping on her. She soon discovers Keiko's dominatrix relationship with Michiko and becomes friends with Keiko. The OVA ends with a stripping and humiliation of Michiko in which Kaori embraces Keiko's lifestyle and then proceeds to entice Michiko into having oral sex with her while Keiko, half asleep, listens with a smirk.
Media[]
The manga, which was serialized from 1992 to 1994, starred all three main characters with a simple plot where the women would try to fight for power and authority at the station by performing sexual acts and domination on each other.
The story was remade into a direct-to-video live-action film starring Kei Mizutani in 1995. The video developed a cult following, and it was released theatrically to popular and critical success in 1996.[3] Another movie called Weather Woman Returns was released in 1996 but was not a sequel to the first movie, rather a new story involving the character Keiko. Both movies were released in the US on VHS and DVD by Central Park Media, under their Asia Pulp Cinema label.
References[]
- ^ Ross, Carlos. "Weather Report Girl". THEM Anime Reviews. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
- ^ Friedman, Erica (July 10, 2009). "Weather Woman Anime and Manga [Review]". Okazu. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
- ^ Weisser, Thomas and Yuko Mihara Weisser. (1998). Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: The Sex Films. Vital Books : Asian Cult Cinema Publications. Miami. (ISBN 1-889288-52-7), p.492-493
External links[]
- Weather Woman (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Weather Report Girl at IMDb
- Weather Girl (live action) at IMDb
- Manga series
- 1992 manga
- 1994 anime OVAs
- 1996 films
- 1995 films
- Japanese direct-to-video films
- Japanese films
- Central Park Media
- CPM Press
- Yuri (genre) anime and manga
- Seinen manga
- Sex comedy anime and manga