Earth Maiden Arjuna
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Earth Maiden Arjuna | |
File:Arjuna Anime Legends DVD Cover.jpg | |
地球少女アルジュナ (Chikyū Arjuna) | |
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Genre | Science fantasy |
Anime | |
Directed by | Shoji Kawamori |
Studio | Satelight, Bandai Visual |
Released | January 9, 2001 – March 27, 2001 |
Earth Maiden Arjuna (地球少女アルジュナ, Chikyū Shōjo Arjuna, lit. "Earth Girl Arjuna") is a Japanese animated television series created by Shoji Kawamori. The series follows Juna Ariyoshi, a high school girl chosen to be the "Avatar of Time" and entrusted with saving the dying Earth.
"Arjuna" refers to the legendary archer Arjuna from the Hindu epic Mahābhārata, which explains why Juna's weapon against the Raaja is a bow.
Arjuna aired on TV Tokyo from January 9, 2001 to March 27, 2001, totaling 12 episodes. The DVD release ("Arjuna: Director's Cut") featured remastered video and sound, and a previously unbroadcast "Chapter 9". Subsequent re-runs of the series on Animax include the DVD-only episode.
Plot
The story opens with Juna telling her boyfriend Tokio she feels too cramped in the city, and deciding to take a trip to the Sea of Japan. On the drive, they get in an accident and Juna dies. As the spirit leaves her body, Juna sees the dying Earth. The planet's suffering is visualized by worm-like creatures, the Raaja. The Raaja vary in size, from microscopic bacteria to those entwining the planet. A young boy named Chris appears before Juna and offers to save her life if she will help the planet. She agrees and is resurrected.
Supported by SEED, an international organization that monitors the environment and confronts the Raaja, Chris hopes that Juna can save the world.
Characters
- Juna Ariyoshi (有吉 樹奈, Ariyoshi Juna)
Juna is a girl in the tenth grade, who is recognised by Chris to be the "Avatar of Time", to save the planet. Besides possessing powers due to her "Earth sympathy", she is an ordinary teenage girl. She has a difficult time understanding her purpose, and is unsure how she is supposed to help the planet. Her personal life is also distressed, both with her mother and sister, and especially in her uncertain relationship with Tokio, whose thoughts she cannot figure out, and who similarly never manages to understand her feelings. While she attempts to succeed in her job, she cannot understand the message Chris is trying to explain until the very end, when she realizes the meaning of "becoming one with the target" that she repeats from the beginning of the series.
Voiced by: Mami Higashiyama (Japanese); Maggie Blue O'Hara (English)
- Chris Hawken (クリス·ホーケン)
Chris is a powerful entity who appears in the body of a young boy. His efforts to revive Juna left him crippled, but he can still leave his body when the situation demands it. He is unerringly kind and patient with everyone, including Juna, despite her misunderstanding his words. He repeatedly admonishes Juna for trying to fight the Raaja ("Why do you kill?"), claiming he never asked her to do so.
Voiced by: Yūji Ueda (Japanese); Brad Swaile (English)
- Cindy Klein (シンディ·クライン)
Cindy is a young orphan whom Chris rescued, leading to her unwavering devotion to him. She is a telepath who acts as Chris' translator. She seems to take an immediate dislike to Juna; she is arrogant and rude towards her and says negative things about her even when she's not around. This is presumably because she feels that Chris's crippled condition is Juna's fault.
Voiced by: Mayumi Shintani (Japanese); Brittney Irvin (English)
- Tokio Oshima (大島 時夫, Oshima Tokio)
Tokio is a normal teenage boy, addicted to video games and fast food. He is greatly concerned with Juna's safety, not realizing he is powerless against the forces she must face. Though Tokio is witness to Juna's tribulations, he cannot fathom what she is going through and is quick to criticize her as needlessly obsessive.
Voiced by: Tomokazu Seki (Japanese); Andrew Francis (English)
- Sayuri Shirakawa (白河 さゆり, Shirakawa Sayuri)
Sayuri is a classmate and friend to Juna and Tokio. She knows nothing of Juna's role as savior, but tries to help her deal with what she sees as nothing more than emotions from her confusing personal life.
Voiced by: Aya Hisakawa (Japanese); Tabitha St. Germain (English)
Themes
This section possibly contains original research. (March 2008) |
As is clear from the title, Arjuna, the series is highly influenced by Hinduism, as well as Indian culture in general. The story was inspired by the Bhagavad Gita, most notably in the character of Chris, who is modeled after Krishna.[1] Note that the series is set in a pantheistic vision in which it emphasizes the connection between all elements of the Earth.
The setting for the show, Kobe, was chosen by creator Shoji Kawamori for his personal fondness of it,[1] and the city itself plays a prominent role, with famous buildings such as the Kobe Meriken Park Oriental Hotel and nearby Ferris wheel showing up as common backdrops. The idea of living in a city is a main theme, with both Juna and the Raaja rebelling against how removed from nature modern life is.
An idea which Kawamori emphasized was natural farming. Not to be confused with the mere absence of chemicals that is often meant by "organic farming", natural farming involves letting nature grow as it will, not removing weeds or bugs, or using any fertilizer. The old man Juna encounters in episode four explains the need for this return to nature in order to sustain life in the long term, a sentiment directly from Kawamori himself.[1]
Another theme of the show is that of the disconnect between emotions, thoughts, words, and actions.[original research?] In episode seven, "Invisible Words", Juna is able to read the words in the minds of everyone around her, yet still cannot understand their intentions. She sees in Tokio's mind that he has been asking Saiyuri about a ring, and assumes that he has been cheating on her, when in fact the ring had been for her. Juna and Tokio's feelings never reach each other successfully. In episode eight, while talking on the phone, Juna finds her spirit in the room with Tokio. But despite her even embracing him, he has no understanding when she tries to say that she is with him. At the same time, Tokio actually says he loves Juna for the first time, even though he is at the same moment not feeling her love at all. This idea is later visualized in episode 10, when Tokio is having an argument with his father. Juna is able to "see" their angered thoughts flying at each other, and entirely missing, neither of them hearing or understanding the other. Also another theme emphasized in the show, is about abortion and teen pregnancy. In Episode 9, Juna learns that her older sister, Kaine, who is a college student and a smoker, is pregnant when she hears a little voice telling her "stop that. It hurts." It is revealed later that Kaine's boyfriend broke up with her. At the end of the episode, we see Kaine in her apartment, smoking and placing a hand to her stomach, possibly contemplating to keep the child growing inside her as she presses her cigarette to bits in an ashtray.
The show contains some very scientific and current elements which include the pole shift hypothesis, the Van Allen Belt, Fermat's Last Theorem, etc.
In episode two, Chris's chakras are shown on the monitor screen which are also adapted from the Hindu concept of 7 chakras inside the human body.
Media
Episodes
Music
Arjuna's score was composed by Yoko Kanno. Director Shoji Kawamori says he instructed Kanno that the music was supposed to sound feminine, despite some of its use in action scenes.[citation needed] Many tracks have Indian influences, matching those of the show, while others are more surreal. The vocals are done by Gabriela Robin, Maaya Sakamoto, and Chinatsu Yamamoto. The soundtrack was released on two CDs: