Reviews for Kare Kano: His and Her Circumstances
Back to MangaKareshi Kanojo no Jijō (Kare Kano for short) is an amazing journey of a group of high schoolers with the main focus revolving around the power couple Soichiro Arima and Yukino Miyazawa. It is falsely advertised as a simple comedy/romance genre manga. There is so much more to the story, to be specific, there is a very dark side that makes the reader's heart wrench in pain as they watch the character struggle and grow. It has elements of psychological drama that are in line with stories such as "This Ugly Yet Beautiful World," "School Days," "Ef-A Tale of Memories," and "ElfenLied."
The anime/manga starts off very peaceful and it seems to be your typical comedy/romance. I suggest you stay with the manga, don't drop it so easily. It picks up it's pace...and at this point I will tell you how this manga made me feel, since I can't judge everyone's reaction... The story starts twisting and turning; as soon as you think something is solved, another situation pops up. It all made me feel so anxious...I became addicted. The mangaka, Masami Tsuda does a great job developing the characters...she makes you fall in love with the characters. In most other animes/manga, there is usually one character you yell at throughout the story. Yet, in Kare Kano, right when you start questioning a character's intelligence, they surprise you. Either they do what any sensible person should do (if they think about a situation calmly) or they reveal something that is so emotionally twisted that you can't blame them (or you just feel their pain so you sympathize). Of course, there are characters I didn't like, but it never developed into straight up annoyance--I don't know, it was such an emotional rollercoaster.
IN CONCLUSION, this is a great manga that will take you on a journey. It will make you laugh, cry, grin, hurt, hate, heal, and love. If you really think about it, and draw some parallels between the story and real life, you may even discover something about yourself. Maybe I am glorifying the manga a little too much...you should judge it for yourself, but you won't be able to do that unless you read it...so what are you waiting for? Get started ^_^
In typical fashion, I decided to read this manga months after watching the anime adaptation. And, while, the anime remains partly true to the manga, the manga itself offers so much more than what the anime ever could. Not only that, but it continues past the anime's ending point - the cultural festival, or more importantly the stage play that was taking place. As this is actually quite an important part of the story. Now, I know what you're thinking - 'this is just another high school romantic comedy manga'. You know the ones, boy meets girl, boy likes girl, boydeclares undying love fir girl = happily ever after. And for the most part, that is exactly what Kare Kano (His and Her Circumstances - which is the English title) actually is. But there is more to this manga than just a simple love story. The more you read into it, the darker it becomes. While the anime had some of the darker infusions towards the end - the manga delves in deeper. Much deeper. This story contains love, betrayal, secrets, child abuse, self-harm (2 instances), teen pregnancy, and a lot more that really makes it worth reading. All the pain and confusion that a person can (or could) suffer when growing up is all there in the Kare Kano manga.
Like most manga, character development takes place over a period of time, and this is no exception. The more the story progresses, the more complex the character's personalities become. This is most apparent in Arima Soichiro's personality, and this generally starts to take place during the stage play (this is why it's a key occurrence). The art style changes slightly as the manga continues, but it keeps it's style well and is really fitting with the story content. The complexities between the relationships of some of the characters is also well constructed. Apart from the main relationship (Arima and Miyazawa), there are 3 other relationships that are happening - one being a step-brother/step-sister relationship, as well as a high school student dating an adult (however, this particular relationship receives much less attention in comparison to Arima and Tsubasa's respective relationships).
In essence, the reader could possibly relate to any number of issues that occur in the manga better than the anime (with it's slightly off-key ending and no closure whatsoever). This is one manga that I would actually encourage people to add to their collections.
Kareshi Kanojo spends most of its story bland and forgettable. It briefly becomes so ridiculous that it’s hilarious, only to end abhorrently. The characters are remarkably shallow. Oh, they have “depth” that comes in the form of tragic backstories and internal self-hatred, but it’s all paper-thin. They aren’t believably flawed human beings. They’re perfect caricatures that exist for the reader to fantasize about dating them, and their “flaws” only exist to make them feel like troubled emo bishonen that a good girl can surely fix. Miyazawa, the girl, has less of this issue, though she isn’t particularly interesting. If she was any more bland than she alreadyis, I’d call her an intentional blank slate for the reader to slot themselves into. The story started with an interesting hook for her personality — an egoist who wants to maintain a facade of perfection to impress her peers. But this is only temporarily maintained for the initial drama for her to start dating Arima, and a brief arc of her being bullied. Past that, she essentially forgets that this was ever part of her personality, and settles into a forgettable lack of traits. You could call it character development, but she develops into someone with nothing interesting about her. Near the end of the manga she essentially stops having any relevance to the plot at all.
Arima is the bigger problem. He’s so perfect it’s hilarious. #1 test scores in the country, kendo prodigy, likeable and lovable by everyone. His only flaw is that he believes himself to be a terrible person, for hiding the fact that he’s a terrible person from those around him. Notice the circular logic? Not all characters need to be perfectly rational, but the internal conflict should be at least believable.
It reminds me of another manga, Kaguya Wants to be Confessed to. Kaguya feels like it took heavy inspiration from Kareshi Kanojo on several fronts. But it’s also much better written, and understood how to balance its perfect-seeming protagonists out by making them inwardly flawed in realistic ways. Arima feels like both of those characters wrapped into one perfect person without any of the realistic drawbacks to that lifestyle.
If all you want out of it is an enjoyable fantasy of a perfect, darkly troubled bishonen boyfriend, then I don’t begrudge you that enjoyment. I don’t personally think it holds up as well written.
Visually, it’s not particularly well made either. The art goes through three stages. The early art has extremely messy and hard to follow paneling, with way too many small (and weirdly narrow) panels crammed into single pages, and way too much dialogue crammed into those panels with very little flow. It was tiring to read. Luckily, past the beginning, the mangaka apparently got much more experienced with the art of making a readable manga, and it settled into a mediocre average. In this phase, the main thing I’d criticize is the extremely repetitive character designs. The mangaka blatantly had very few character design ideas to actually draw from, with many characters having the same faces and extremely similar hairstyles, differentiated only by hair color and height. There were countless points I mixed up the main girl with a temporary rival, or the main boy with the main girl’s father or another girl in the cast. If characters aren’t immediately distinguishable at a glance, then something’s clearly wrong.
The art improves in the final stage, but I’ll talk about that part of the manga later.
During those first two stages of the story, the plot is mostly bland. After Miyazawa and Arima settle into their relationship, it has a collection of arcs focusing on various other couples. Most of those are about as bland as the main duo’s romance, and I won’t say much about them. Though there’s a bit of a problematic romance between a high school girl and a 28 year old man. But that's another thing I’ll talk about later.
Most of the drama during this stage of the story is, yet again, shallow. There are far, far too many misunderstandings borne purely of miscommunications. There are ways to make the resolution to that kind of thing satisfying, when they finally do communicate, but here it mostly felt arbitrary and forced. I also never found this manga funny. There was very little drive to keep reading.
Later in the story, it improves… kind of. The art definitely gets better, with the occasional impact page that has solid shading and composition. This is where Miyazawa completely stops mattering to the story — now, it’s all about Arima, and his tragic backstory. The backstory itself isn’t that poorly written, but I’d laugh at the idea that this makes this story “dark.” It’s written to make Arima more of a caricature, the boy who’s oh so perfect yet is so darkly troubled. It’s dark in an edgy teenage way. All of the drama centering around his belief that he’s a bad person, because he was abused as a child, is just nonsensical.
What’s a little more compelling is his relationships with his birth parents, which have a little more basis in truth, in the desire some adopted people have to gain some sort of connection to the people they never knew. It’s not awfully written, I’ll say that much for it. It does, however, lead to an absolutely ridiculous climax. It’s like the story goes from an extremely boring soap opera, to an spicy, over the top, hilarious soap opera. I’ll give this part of the story credit for having the guts to go crazy.
After that, things get problematic. This is where I have to spoil a couple things, though I’ll try not to go into detail. Spoiler warning.
In its epilogue, the manga starts to seriously idealize certain ideas, and I’d call it genuinely harmful of it to do so.
The first is how it idealizes teenage pregnancy. Shockingly, there’s only a single character who has a realistic reaction to this reveal. Everyone else is happy and supportive. I won’t say it’s outright impossible for a teenage pregnancy to be handled in a mature way and for the involved parties to all grow up fine. But even with characters as “perfect” as the protagonists of this story, it comes off as incredibly tone-deaf and problematic to treat it as a perfect situation with no concerns. I guess it’s “believable” in this story since there’s rich grandparents supporting them through it, but realistically, I honestly don’t think this is a good message to end on, for shoujo readers to internalize or believe.
The second is to do with Asaba’s ending. He’s Arima’s best friend, a womanizer who never found the girl right for him. Somehow, when he finds out that Miyazawa’s baby will be a girl, he goes through a strange thought — that this girl will be his soulmate. I genuinely gaped when reading this, going over the last few pages, certain I must have misunderstood something. I didn’t. In the epilogue chapter it makes it clear. Their daughter falls in love with Asaba, and he “resists” this weakly, essentially acknowledging that he’s going to “give in” because he loves her too much.
This is not an okay thing to condone in fiction. I don’t care if you think that cases like this are okay because “the child wanted it.” Minors are not capable of making that kind of decision, full stop. Art does not exist in a vacuum. When you write something like this into a story, treating it like a positive, you influence your readers to think it’s an okay thing, to not be as careful as they should about not falling into abusive situations. If you read this and were smart enough to just take it as a story and not be influenced by it, then I’m happy you reacted to it properly. But that does not make it an acceptable thing to write.
These abhorrent moments are at least small, near the end. The vast majority of the experience has nothing to do with it. And normally, I would have given that experience a 4/10. Because of the way it ended, it gets a 3/10 instead.
But by and large, even without the awful ending, it’s not a manga I’d recommend. It’s uninteresting, unfunny drama, with poorly written characters. It feels like what Kaguya is making fun of, rightfully, and has none of the self-awareness. If you want to read a good shoujo, go read Glass Mask.
Now I wouldn’t really describe myself as being a big fan of the shoujo genre and to be perfectly honest I always normally hate series that centre around high school students (so perhaps I am not the best person to be writing a review for this series but oh well). The reason for this is that these stories have been done again and again thousands of times and have become stale but here we have Kare Kano (short version of the title) which is for all intents and purposes one of these old boring high school romance series that we have all seen far toomany times before, the only difference being that Kare Kano is a lot better than many other similar series that come to mind, and why is this exactly?
Well Kare Kano really isn’t any different than any other high school love story you will have seen before. There are no radically new approaches to the genre or anything of the sort; on the contrary it is more like a perfect refinement of all of the elements that make up this kind of story. In short this is just a simple love story told very well. Well actually it is not as simple as I made it out to be, there are plenty of complications and unexpected developments to keep the reader hooked and complex multi layered characters that elevate the story above most anything I’ve read thus far, so if anything it is the depth and complexity of this story that makes it great.
While the series appears to more or less be your typical high school romcom it eventually evolves into its own independent story and separates itself from those familiar series. If you go into this series (like I did) expecting some kind of fluffy romance then you will most probably be caught off guard as this story is a lot darker and more mature than you would expect.
I think the main thing that stood out for me, personally, about Kare Kano was the feeling of authenticity that this series seemed to have. It felt like the author was probably basing aspects of the story on things that she herself had some kind of experience with, which makes a real change from those wish-fulfillment harem series that I am used to.
The two main characters, Soichiro Arima and Yukino Miyazawa, particularly felt very real to me. They really do seem like real people complete with flaws (extremely well hidden, mind you) and emotional baggage. Everything about their relationship felt very truthful to me, nothing felt forced and all the challenges the two had to face were relatable. The cuteness of their relationship and the envy seen by fellow classmates also rings true as well.
But each of the main characters individually are both really great as well. I especially liked Yukino because she is really completely unlike the stereotypical shoujo female lead. On the surface she appears to be the ideal student; kind, extremely smart and attractive as well. But this is only a mask beneath which lies a money crazed borderline sociopath that desperately craves everyone’s admiration and praises. Right from the get go I really loved her character for some reason but over time she really developed into a wonderful and really likable character.
The male lead Soichiro Arima appears to be the typical super idealised male that you can’t help but fangirl over but he is a seriously complex character and much of the story deals with his emotional scars and checkered past.
But Kare Kano is not solely focused on these two characters. There is a large cast in this story and unlike too many manga they are not mere cardboard cutouts, they too are fully fleshed out characters in their own right. I really loved the way that the author would occasionally take a step away from the main story to concentrate on other characters that would usually be ignored, this really serves the series well in my opinion as it makes the whole high school experience presented feel that much more personal for the reader which is always a good thing.
I also feel like I should praise the use of comedy in this manga because the author managed to find that perfect sweet spot. There is plenty of comedy but it is always at the right moments and when the story gets more serious these jokes are carefully placed to one side and only picked up again when they should be, this is something that a lot of anime and manga completely mess up and I find it quite frustrating but Kare Kano did a great job in regards to the use of comedy.
The artwork in this series is quite simple which is not to say bad, characters are all distinctive, landscapes are clean and there’s really nothing I can criticise…well sometimes she would put too much into a small panel and things would look a bit messy but this was only present in the early part. The art progressively improves as the series goes on and the mangaka did take special care with the art in the more significant scenes which makes them stand out and it makes them more memorable. Also I loved those little rant type things down the side of the page.
The more I think about it the more trouble I am having expressing exactly why it is I liked this series so much. If I had to sum it up it was mostly because I loved both of the main characters and I was always very happy to see things work out for them. The story just sort of felt personal to me and I was able to get very involved and relate to the story, feel for the characters and I felt really immersed and captivated by this not-so-simple-simple-love-story.
Story: Kare Kano is a longer shoujo series filled with romance, drama, and the life of teenagers. We get to see the life of a high school couple overcoming many obstacles. This being a long 102 chapter manga, a lot of things happen. It is not a typical school/romance, you will notice. Art: really unusual art. definitely not a commonly seen style, but appealing nonetheless. Character: What's interesting is that yukino + soichiro are both very intelligent, and both pretend to be someone theyre not. The other characters, their classmates, add variety to the series with a bunch of side stories. The characters portrayed in thismanga are nothing of the recent more popular shoujo manga. Their personalities and interests are very widespread and unexpected, which makes you love them even more.
Enjoyment: Kare Kano can be pretty mellow, with long lasting moments and a steady moving pace. It is very light-hearted and typical in the first few volumes, and it begins to get more deep and dark in vols 13+, mainly because arima's past is revealed.
Overall: Read it. Not your typical romance, full of surprises, something the older teen audience would like. If you have seen the anime series, I definitely recommend this manga because it goes much more in detail.
*slight spoilers ahead, though nothing you might not already guess* Kare Kano is the best manga and anime I have had the pleasure of reading yet. Simply because of this - it tells a story so bittersweet, so captivating, so enthralling, you cannot bear to tear yourself away from the page in case you miss something. Yukino Miyazawa is the top student of her class, of her year. She is beautiful, smart, sporty, kind and helpful to everyone. All the boys fancy her and the girls want to be her. The only thing is - it's all fake. She, in secret, works tirelessly to be the best,training and studying long hours just to get that pat on the head, that acknowledgement she is brilliant. Why? Because she loves the praise.
Everything is going well, until a competitor shows up. Soichiro Arima, who matches Yukino in everything, from brains to beauty. And it really burns her to see someone as tirelessly perfect as she is. Except, he's no fake.
And what happens when he falls in love with her facade?
The next 100odd chapters are all about this couple. But not to fear, although they get together fairly quickly in the story (volume 2 I believe) don't worry about the next 19 volumes being utterly about the lovey-dovey couple.
The way the mangaka does this wonderful manga is she spins it to feature other brilliant characters. Watch out for Hideaki Asaba as a hilarious, comic relief character, but who also is generous, kind hearted, and just a little pyschotic. Arima's past comes back to haunt him, and you can't help but feel empathetic for him.
Your never bored, or wishing something else would happen.
The only complaint I could have is that by the end of the manga, you will be left wanting, and begging, for more of this beautiful tale.
HI! Barbie herein shoujo magical girls, but i read this again at my 19 years old, and really felt every single one of it, this great story makes you think about self issues, and self discover when it comes to love, that when you LOVE SOMEONE you need to overcome yourself first so you can love to the fullest, idk is this is a shoujo manga but definetily needs to be a josei, why? well all this problems are not typical highschool people problems, fr tho how normla kids are gonna be questioning why their DNA is like that or even adoption issues, no, this is for us intellectuals who don't wanna feel alone by reading this.
The woman on this series is so well sritten ugh miyazawa is that queen!! this is a safe Manga and anime series for GIRLS!<3
I am absolutely entranced by Kareshi Kanoujo no Jijou. Underneath what may seem a simple romance budding between our main characters, Arima Souchirou and Miyazawa Yukino, lies a multi-faceted story of love, childhood, family and friendship. I have to admit, in the beginning, I have underestimated this manga. The art did not particularly appeal to me and although the story did, I was sceptical about whether or not it could capture my attention. I was wrong. With 21 volumes, Kareshi Kanoujo no Jijou (Kare Kano in short) seemed like a huge read. Well it was, to a certain extent. But what comes from that huge read isa deep and dark story revolving around the main characters, Arima and Miyazawa. In the surface, you do see the comedy and light-hearted tone of high school romance. But once the manga reaches its peak in that, it switches to a heavy story that draws you deeper and deeper until you are unable to stop reading.
The strength of Kare Kano as a manga lies truly in its character development. Although the story is outstanding in itself, the characters' development throughout the series outshines other elements of the manga. While Kare Kano does delve into the stories of other characters besides Arima and Miyazawa, they seem slightly dull in comparison to the journey of Arima and Miyawa as a couple. What's truly fascinating is Arima's character. Arima's façade and the secret that lies behind it may evoke surprise due its darkness, but it's absolutely entrancing.
Kare Kano's art may not be its best point but I still adored how the characters are drawn. When the story is serious, the art conveys that serious tone but when it switches to the comedy side, the art is cute and adorable!
Without spoiling the story any further, I can say that Kare Kano is one of the most surprising manga I've ever read (in a good way). It's similar to a Chinese box in a way that once you open the box containing the past and story of the characters, there's more that awaits in the smaller boxes until you reach the end of it. This is a highly recommended manga particularly to those who are looking for deep, dark and realistic story encased in romance and comedy.
Thank you so much for reading my first review on MyAnimeList!
this story takes a long time to get good.like in the second or third is were it is good.the first volume is really slow. you get kinda bored but wait until the second volume to deceide if you want to drop it or not. the romance is not too extreme.like a chessy junoir high crush."like he was destined for me" kinda thing.basically it is about two teens tryin to find who they really are instead of who they try to be in every day life.
I recently picked Kare Kano up for a second read after i read it about 5 years ago. THe reread value was as good as the first time around. There are several components of a shounen manga that can make (or break) it, but in this case i found that there was a balance in all aspects. The charm of this series is the manner that the characters interact with one another. As you read the manga, every character becomes memorable and likeable in his or her own way. pretty much everyone worht mentioning in the manga has a well developed storyline. I especially liked howthe author digressed from the main characters for 3 volumes to develop the other characters. You would think that this would hurt the storyline, but its because of this that I came to love the story
I think that the ending is the best, after experiencing all the trials and tribulation with the characters, you want to see how their lives turn out after they enter society as adults. I can without a doubt say that i was satisfied with the ending. There wasn't any &quot;well that makes NO sense&quot; or &quot;you stopped right there? are you kidding me? i want more!!!!!!&quot; kind of moments to the ending.
You'll notice that i gave the art a 9. I'm not saying that i didn't like the author's art style, just the opposite: I loved it. its just that there are the rare times where the proportions just don't flow right. This tiny imperfection doesn't detract from the overall score of 10 that Kare Kano deserves.
I hope that you read this manga and come to love it as much as i do.
Today we are talking about one of my biggest disappointments, karekano. I gave it a final rating of 5, but I have so much to say that a single rating doesn’t even describe all the feelings that I had while reading it. Let’s start off by saying that I consider this manga divided into 2 very different parts: the first one being the first 50ish chapters, a generic shoujo manga with no particular flaws, very likable if you’re into this genre. And the second part being complete shit. And yes, I said shit. I don’t really have much to say for the first part. This isreally just a simple and generic shoujo manga. I enjoyed it since I’m really into this genre, but it doesn’t have any quirky qualities that make it any different or better than any other manga of this kind. It was good though, and if it was all like that I would have given the manga a solid eight. The art was mediocre, but it never really bothered me, whereas the characters were pretty decent and the jokes were quite entertaining.
The problem comes after. After a while, I started noticing that the author had this particular liking to unconventional relationships: age gaps, brother and sister and so on. It seemed to me that, in order to distinguish different relationships and having no talent to do so in a healthy way, she had to force some kind of weird shit into it, which is, honestly, kind of disgusting. We are in fact introduced to some side stories that for some chapters show the love life of the other characters of the story. The problem with these stories is that they give off the impression that they are just different stories that were put in the manga just to make it a bit longer, not really written with the intention of being connected and actually important to the general plot. The result of this are unnecessarily long, boring and problematic stories of characters that, after having their 10 chapters of glory, stop mattering to the manga, being completely forgotten and left to rot. And let's not even talk about the enabling of problematic relationships in this manga; we see completely normal couples such as a 14 year old being with a 28 year old man, or a guy falling in love with his step sister. Completely normal, right?
The brother and sister’s side story it’s definitely the worst one, being not only completely unnecessary, but also extremely unreasonable. It’s just pure nonsense, with him being completely absorbed in music and her falling in love for no reason at all. Nobody in the story finds it weird (instead, some characters even encourage him to confess), and not even their parents question this behavior. Here is where the downfall started.
Let’s talk about the character of Arima. While I really appreciated the representation of depression, I hated the way it was dealt with. To me, it seemed like a perfect character was struggling with being perfect, and he decided to deal with the situation by…. being perfect. I have no way to describe it in a better way. He never, not even once, gave off the impression that he wasn’t perfect, so the incredible craziness he goes through seemed kinda uncalled for. The author tried really hard to prepare the field for this twist, but the few hints she gave never actually broke down the image of the perfect boy Arima had: he just gave off the impression that he was insecure sometimes. And how did he deal with it? He just..did..? And crazily, what happens after he overcomes it? He’s literally the same, he opens up a bit but we are never shown any significant changes in him. He tries so hard to change from just being the perfect boy, but while we are told he actually got freed form his obsession with being perfect, the boy we see hasn’t actually changed, and the result of this is that to us it’s like he was really the perfect boy all along, which kinda breaks down the WHOLE point of the manga. He wanted to become someone else but we never see an actual development. He just goes crazy for some chapters and then comes back like it never happened. And let’s not talk about the role of the girl: after a while she completely stops mattering to the story as well. Arima is in the spotlight. Honestly, it was heartbreaking to read. The relationship seemed fake, or, at least, it seemed like they were together just because they felt like it, connected with one another just because they were both pretending to be someone else. But does this really bring together people? Was the fact that they were both pretending their whole personality? I never actually understood why they were together and never actually felt connected to the couple. At some point it’s just a story about Arima, not about the couple, which is not a bad thing itself, it becomes bad when it’s the only thing you want to show in your manga, which is supposedly about a freaking couple. Yukino after a while has no role other than being a major support to her boyfriend, which is an even more harmful depiction of a relationship. She’s just there to give his boyfriend some help, and that’s her only role, even though at the beginning she had so much potential to be independent, and generally just a really good character. To me it seemed like she was giving up her independence in order to help and serve her boyfriend. And let’s not talk about all the dramatic and tragic twists we have towards the end, because they only served as a way to make the whole thing painfully longer and “darker”.
But the biggest let down for me was teenage pregnancy. Was it necessary? Is it a good message to portray in a manga that is literally made for young girls? Really, this left me disgusted. And I don’t understand why nobody has a problem with this disgusting thing. And, be careful, I’m not saying that the disgusting thing is the pregnancy itself, but the fact that it was portrayed as a happy occurrence, something that doesn't bring problems to the very, very young characters, and, most importantly, something good or common to deal with. Why? Nobody ever questions the actions of the two protagonists, and everything they do is always enabled by everyone in their surroundings. This completely positive response to this unexpected news inevitably clashes with the generally very dark tone that the manga had in its last chapters. But again, they both are too perfect to actually have problems, and a pregnancy at 18 wouldn’t scare anybody right? That’s why to me they seem even more fake. Of course, I am aware that we are talking about a shojo manga so I can’t expect extreme realism from this, but at least, if you want to talk about something deep like abuse or teenage pregnancy, you have to do it with some care.
To me, it felt like I was reading something completely different from what I started reading at the beginning, and I felt little to no connection to the characters. It’s a shame, because I really enjoyed the anime, but the manga really let me down. I decided to give it a 5 just because the first part is actually enjoyable, and I loved reading it, but if it were just for the second part, my rating would most definitely be a four or even less.
What to say about this series now ? Just calling it one of the greatest romance/drama stories ever just doesn't do it justice. Yukino is one of my favourites characters ever, and one of the more original concepts I've ever seen. This double-faced, incredibly sharp, amazingly strong-willed (yet sometimes insecure), partially evil but always funny girl is the character I'm gonna miss the most. It really is worth it reading the manga just to see her interact with the rest of the cast, with the world, and often just to follow her thought processes. Her reactions to developments are often surprising, yet endearing to the reader.Her simple but powerful "I never said no" little speech (you'll know it when you get there) remains one of the most touching and memorable (and unexpected) things I've ever read. Yes, she's that amazing and more.
Arima is also a good character, always interesting to read. He and his family are responsible for most of the drama in the series, specially in the second half of the manga (the part that's left out of the anime). In fact, he's pretty much the main character in this half. And although I was a little skeptic at first as the author hinted at his future developments, I have to admit Ms. Tsuda did a terrific job in this "Arima arc". Seeing Arima battle his personal demons was truly touching, and the outcome of all this was very satisfying.
The rest of the cast is also comprised of funny, charming, real, memorable characters, and it's a really nice thing that they are all (some more, some less) given space to show themselves and develop. I also love the fact that they are all given some sort of closure by story's end.
This manga does back story like no other. Starting from Yukino, you get to hear the story of her parents since their childhood. In Arima's side, you get to hear about his parents and their cousins, as adults, teenagers and children; about Arima's grandfather (quite a bit), and even about that guy's father, and it's all important to the story as a running theme is the effect parents have on their children's lives. All in all, five (!) generations are explored, to a different extent. And this is a good thing, because it deepens the story as it explains the motivations of the characters to act as they do.
So, to recap: this manga is an exploration of love between teenagers as they bloom and become adults (with its fun, tender and painful moments); it's a look at the world of parents, and how their actions can both screw or save their children; and it's a beautiful tale of young people trying to understand themselves, improve themselves, overcoming their burdens and finding out what their dreams are - and then launching on the life-long trip to fulfill them.
Definitely a 10 out of 10 !
After the frustrating and abrupt ending of Kare Kano anime I have to read the entirety of the manga to get most of the story and I am so glad I did. Kare Kano is an amazing story from beginning to end. I specially love the growth of the characters. I also feels like I grew up with the characters. Kare Kano may seem like your typical, cliche highschool romance at first but it is not. As there are a lot of unexpected and shocking moments also goes deeper with personal life and issues of the characters. There are also psychological and tragedy aspects aswell. Focuses more on human drama (which i love more about this series).
Story- The story is about Yukino Miyazawa is sweet, intelligent girl who is popular, always gets first in class and praised by everyone. But in reality she is different person who always tries very hard to get praised. But in highschool she gets beaten (got 2nd) by her rival Souchiro Arima who is also perfect like Yukino (also likes her). One day unfortunately Yukino's true self get discovered by Souchiro. As Yukino also discovered Souchiro's secret and understand each other. The two become friends, then become more than friends less lovers and eventually lovers. As their relationship progresses they have to overcome lot of obstacles but their love for each other become also stronger. As the first half of the story mostly highschool romcom focuses also on several other character and couples. But the 2nd half is psychological, tragedy, drama. Also advances Yukino and Souchiro's love more than ever as they help each other. And finally to the most satisfying ending of all romance drama.
Art- The artstyle which I would call flawless. I love the character designs. I also love how the faces of characters changes as they grew up. The artstyle is perfect. I love it.
Character- The character are the best thing about this series.Yukino Miyazawa is great and enjoyable female character. Souchiro Arima seems mysterious at first but we get to learn more about him. Besides Yukino and Souchiro's relationship. In several other chapters and volumes it focuses and develop various other characters as well. We also get attached to this characters as if they are real people.
Enjoyment- I realy love reading Kare Kano manga from the very beginning to end. It is transition between several genres romance, drama, psychological, tragedy. The series is really unpredictable as it does lot of shocking and unexpected moments. I love the ending as well. Which left a big impact on me. I enjoyed this series a lot.
Overall- As I like the anime of Kare Kane. I love the manga more than ever. We got to know and explored more of the characters. I am so glad I read the entirety of Kare Kano. I absolutely recommend it to everyone. But don't expect it to be cliche it is unpredictable.
Rating- 11/10 😁😁😁
Wow. That was really intense. I have been reading this manga non-stop since I started it a month ago. There were times when I felt like crying and I have definitely sworn a couple of times during the course of reading it from over active emotions brought out when I was dragged into the story. I loved how all of the different characters had their own little side stories that gave you the satisfaction and turmoil that most shugo manga do. What makes this one special is that in the midst of all the side plots are those life changing questions that just get thrownat you over and over again as the main characters are put through a plot line that would tare you heart out and keep it beating just to hear you scream. There were times of bliss and epiphanies but at the same time moments where madness crept so close and infected the characters you had come to love so deeply. Wow... I wish they had ended it with a group picture of all the couples but maybe that is too cleche, this story was great and it concluded well. I think the ending moment could have been better but maybe the story was just to great for one image or word to do it justice. I hope you read this manga and feel what I did or something similar just push through it looks long but once you've started in there is no going back, you need to know the ending and its worth it, every stroke.
His and her circumstances I have watched the anime first and I was expecting a funny light story. Oh man, I was very wrong. After finishing the anime (which had a horrible low budget art) I couldn't wait to read the manga. Story: The story starts off by introducing two brilliant teenagers who pretend to be something else than what they are in real life. Yukino is the female lead who has a twisted second personality and her biggest "enemy" the flawless Souichirou. I really thought this was going to be another romantic shoujo manga with spiced with some humor. Again, I was dead wrong. First, thisstory has logical and real emotions from a realistic relationship between the two main characters. I have never seen anything like this before from a shoujo anime. Their love builds up so nicely to the point that they actually decide to get to the next level. This is something very rare in romantic animes as most of them only build-up to the first kiss or just to start the relationship. But not this one. And the best part is that the story only just starts getting more interesting as from that point we getting to know the main male character's real nature and thoughts. I don't want to spoil anything, but it gets very dark. Way too dark for a simple romantic shoujo manga. I loved it!!
Second, all side characters have a real background and story. They are not just side characters, as they are very important to the story. Again it's so rare when we get so much info to get to know other characters than the mains. Any of the side characters could be this manga's main protagonist as they all have detailed personalities. Honestly, this amazed me! We even get to know all the parents and their backstories. This is very rare!
The story overall: I hardly say this to anything, but the story is outstanding. No awkward silly situations, everything realistic, and even managed to be funny. I read the manga straight away after watching the anime and it was one of the most interesting stories I have ever read. 10/10
Art: The art was very good compared to how old is this manga. The only thing that I didn't like that it has a lot of scribbles between the conversations. It made it a bit messy. 8/10
Characters: I would write an essay if I start to analyze all of them. They are great! doesn't matter which character we talk about as they all have their stories. As I said above any of the side characters easily could become the main character of a stand-alone manga.
The main male protagonist's story is so interesting that I couldn't stop reading the manga so I was up until 4am for two days in a row just to get to know him better :D
My favorite was Kazuma. No particular reason simply that he is like an angel, but not in the common anime way. No, he is really something else.
Characters are an absolute 10/10
Enjoyment: I loved it! It left a huge impact on me. I'm so happy that I found it. The only reason why I give a 9 instead of 10 because there were some chapters that I had the urge to skip because it felt disappointing that something interesting going on then Bamm and 5 chapters of something completely different.
Overall: This is a great manga. I really recommend it to anyone who likes mature thinking and strong characters. READ IT! haha 9/10
I came into this manga a little hesitant, to be perfectly honest. I looked at the art style and thought, "Oh, this is an older manga, I wonder if its any good". I'm used to reading the new and seasonal stuff, but man was I in for a surprise. This story reminded me what made me fall in love with manga in the first place. They may be far and few between, but there are great authors with even greater stories to tell. The depth of this story just touched my heart. It starts off as your typical high-school love story (and I did reallyenjoy that part of it. Just taking the first half, this was an excellent romance story), but then it transitions into some darker, and more profound. It gives you a vivid dive into what it means to be human, and I mean human in the way that whenever someone does something bad, we say they are only human. We are all a little messed up, some of us more then others, many through no fault of our own, but this story gives me hope. We are all trapped by vicious cycles, but those cycles can be broken.
There is just so much to talk about with this manga, I don't even know where to start.
For the first half, I really loved how each side character was given their own unique and beautiful love story. Each persons struggle was unique, but I found myself reflected in each piece. I felt attached to each character, and really loved deepening my understanding of them. It was like I got a little tangent from our main romance, but each tangent was so great in its own right, that I would have no issue reading an entire manga about them.
For the second half, I was just straight up blown away. The depiction of both struggles and people overcoming those struggles had me alternating between crying from despair and joy. Not to mention the classic theme of people growing up, leaving their high-school friends, and living their life. This was one of those stories that made me step back and look at my own life, and just, get excited? That's not quite the right word. Its more just being amazed that I get the opportunity to experience this crazy and amazing thing we call life. This story changed me, and for that, it deserves 10 stars.
I desperately need to go back and find more great, older manga like this. Society may change, and our stories change with them, but we are still human, and this story is touchingly human. It speaks to something innate in the human experience, and that kind of story will always resonate with me. If you haven't read this manga, you need to. Its got romance, its got deep characters, its got coming of age, and if you are anything like me, you will cry (a lot).
"Classic" is a word that's vague by itself, whose meaning's continually changing with time. In the 90's, when KareKano was first published, the "classic" works of shoujo were titles such as Princess Knight and The Rose of Versailles; nowadays, these mangas are still classic, but KareKano, which used to be a prime example of a modern shoujo, has gained a very different aura. The characters of KareKano are always dealing with their own identity. Their worrying about the face they present to the world and their real self — about the difference between who they are and who they want to be — is, forme, what turns this manga into a universal experience, making it transcend Japan in the 90's to still be relevant twenty-odd years later.
The mangá was written and drawn by Masami Tsuda, and published in La-La magazine between 1995 and 2005. Its center is the relationship between Yukino Miyazawa, a girl who works hard to look perfect solely because of her need for attention, and Souichirou Arima, who tries to hide the flaws within himself so as not to cause problems for his adoptive parents. Together, they learn about the fear and the joy of true vulnerability, and thus, about the feeling of accepting and being accepted completely by someone else — not only in love, but among family and friends. It's a straightforward plot, and it's interesting exactly because of that: they go through problems many of us have gone through, and the narrative does not look away from the effects these things can have in a person's psyche.
The narrative does not look away from many things, actually. The regular teenage manga rarely deals well with the transition between holding hands and sex, even though this is a very important aspect of a teenager's day-to-day. This is not a problem here: KareKano does not show explicit scenes, but makes it clear that sex is present in the characters' lives, even in brutal ways. The representation of violence, physical as well as psychological, is also outstanding and right on the mark, especially when it comes to mental illnesses.
I believe that KareKano's strongest point are the protagonists. Yukino and Souchirou are built in fascinating ways. It would be very easy to take the initial setup and just extend it, make Yukino into a stuck-up tsundere and Souichirou into a jerk with a hidden "nice side" — but the story evolves, and they evolve with it. Even better: the evolution of the characters does not mean the end of their conflicts, but leads to an increase in their complexity. The manga's climax is not something that comes from punctual misunderstandings, made up in the eleventh hour; it is carefully woven from the protagonists and the natural path towards which their actions take them.
Of course, so much focus in one aspect of the story may lead to slight deficiency in others. In KareKano, I believe this manifests itself in difficulty with teenager characterization. One can justify Yukino and Souichirou's maturity on the count of their, ahem, circumstances — but it is hard to believe that all the characters around them show the same characteristics. The only character that is actually immature reaches a stunning level of philosophical detachment practically overnight. In the same group of teenagers, we have a genius writer and a genius musician, individuals who have already defined the path of their lives, relationship counselors and a girl who is so mature that, in her relationship with a 25-year-old, she is the one who manipulates and dominates everything. I haven't seen such an extraordinary group of young people together since Ouran. (And it doesn't help matters that their personality seems to vanish next to the main couple...)
When it comes to the art, KareKano is within expectatives. It's commonplace to find light and delicate tracing in such publications, and Masami Tsuda draws her bishounen and bishoujo with painstaking care. The character design I like the most is Yukino's; she looks feminine and pretty without relying on that generic blonde phenotype so many mangaka adopt (and that the author herself uses in other characters — I'm keeping an eye on you, Tsubasa), nor in that stereotype of Japanese beauty, with long black hair and mysterious eyes. Generally speaking, it's a style that's very representative of the time the manga was published, without excessive detailing and a more practical look. Even so, there are moments in which the author shines: here I am thinking about the conversations between Souichirou and his imaginary double.
I can safely say I liked KareKano. Even if it's hard to believe in the exceptionality of every single person involved in the plot, it never gets to the point that story takes a backseat to wish fulfillment. The love interests do get together and the author manages to keep us interested for a long time after. I have heard the animated adaptation does not follow the manga until the end, and that that disappointed Masami Tsuda a lot; considering that the climax of KareKano feels like the unavoidable unfolding of the conflicts in scene, I can understand where her distress comes from.
One of the many definitions of "classic" is a work that never "runs out", so to say; a work that always has something to say to the reader, even if many years have passed already. If, once, KareKano was a brilliant example of what was in vogue in shoujo manga, nowadays it can be seen as a sort of pioneer in trails that other works like Toradora! and Kimi ni Todoke have followed. It is easy to notice its influence, and the reason this influence lasts until this day; you just have to open a volume and listen to the messages it can tell. After all, it's going to be a while before KareKano stops talking with us.
Kare Kano is such a beautiful manga I don't even now how to begin describing it. You guys, don't get fooled by the shojo- high school appearance of it, this is heavy gear romance and drama. It deals with real life problems and situations faced by our main couple, Miyazawa Yukino and Arima Souchihiro . Both of them are compelling on their own right and make on of the best couples I've ever seen. Arima, particularly, goes through incredible changes throughout the whole story. The manga deals with matters as simple as a sport festival to really deep ones like family and truelove. Though this story looks light- hearted, it can get pretty serious too, as it takes on subjects like rape, family abuse and. abandon, teenage pregnacy, self- harm... it gets dark, you see. Things get very rough for our main characters, but that's what makes it so real . Not to say itdoesn't have its funny parts. It does.
In short, this is a heartbreakingly beautiful romance story that no manga reader should miss.
Story " In the eye's of others, what kind of person am I?" -This is so much more than a typical love story this story is so complex and full of emotions. Yukino Miyazawa who is this perfect model student is full of pride and hypocrisy she is “perfect” in everyone’s eyes, then we have the other model student (Arima Soichiro) who is also a perfect model student, but he is full of a mysteriously dark side and it becomes apparent throughout the manga. Yukino is very jealous of Arima’s new found popularity over all the attention he is getting for representing the freshmen class, they endedup becoming rivals to friends to lovers then to finally becoming boyfriend and girlfriend the story is about their relationship and the test’s it endures as their relationship develops Arima’s dark side becomes more and more evident. This story is about love, friendships and overcoming personal obstacles.
I would highly recommend this manga to anyone who is looking for more of a mature reading with a good sense of humor.
!0/10 !! I love this manga sm, definitely my favourite so far, and one of the most mature and heart-wrenching high school romances i have readout, they have dreams, hopes, ambitions and were all really likeable! i didn't wanna scream when the story wasnt about yuinko and arima which is very good :)
- story: the manga handles a lot of dark themes like childhood trauma, significant issues in a relationship, insecurity, perfectionism, emotional baggage but also balances it very well with sweet romantic scenes and comedic relief. the manga made me laugh cry and swoon it was an absolute emotional rollercoaster and i loved it!!! to me, the relationship between yukino and arima was handled so perfectly and their growth whilst being in a long term relationship was so realistic, you can really picture a couple like this lasting forever, i also really enjoyed the realistic portrayal of mental struggles and how it effects a relationship. i haven't seen any anime or read any manga that handled it so well. i picked up the manga after watching the anime (which i also highly recommend) and i was so entranced by it i finish it in under a week! one of the most intensive binge reads!! such an interesting read that always kept me hooked
overall:
if you can decipher my excited rambling i commend you and encourage you to please give this manga (and its anime adaption) a chance! as someone who loves romance animes and has already watched and read so many, his and hers circumstances truly stands out and is probably my favourite of all time <3333