Kurogane Communication

Kurogane Communication

First volume of the Go! Comi English release of the series. Cover characters, from top left to bottom right are: Haruka, Angela, Reeves, Cleric, Spike, and Trigger.
鉄コミュニケイション
(Tetsu Komyunikeishon)
Genre Adventure, Mecha, Science Fiction
Manga
Written by Hideo Kato
Illustrated by Tomomasa Takuma
Published by MediaWorks
English publisher
Demographic Shōnen
Magazine Dengeki Daioh
Original run 19971999
Volumes 2
Anime television series
Directed by Yasuhito Kikuchi
Written by Mitsuhiro Yamada
Studio APPP
Licensed by
Network WOWOW
English network
Original run October 5, 1998 March 29, 1999
Episodes 24
Light novel
Written by Mizuhito Akiyama
Illustrated by Tomomasa Takuma
Published by MediaWorks
Demographic Male
Imprint Dengeki Bunko
Original run October 10, 1998March 10, 1999
Volumes 2

Kurogane Communication (Japanese: 鉄コミュニケイション Hepburn: Kurogane Komyunikeishon) is a manga series written by Hideo Kato and illustrated by Tomomasa Takuma. The individual chapters were originally serialized in Dengeki Daioh in 1997 and published in two tankōbon volume by MediaWorks. Set in a post-apocalyptic world in which a lone human survivor, a girl named Haruka, lives with a family of five robots. The manga series is licensed for an English language release in North America by Go! Comi.

The series was adapted into a twenty-four episode anime series by APPP. It premiered in Japan on WOWOW on October 5, 1998 and ran until its conclusion on March 29, 1999. The anime series was released to Region 1 DVD in North America by Media Blasters. A two volume light novel series, written by Mizuhito Akiyama, was also published in Japan 1998 and 1999 by MediaWorks under their Dengeki Bunko label.

Plot

Haruka is an ordinary teenage girl, but her life is extraordinary because as far as she knows, she is the sole human survivor of a global nuclear war. Surviving the war in cold sleep, she is awakened by five robots about 30 years later. Things are fine, but she is constantly haunted by sudden flashbacks and dreams about her parents. There is also a constant danger of roving war machines and threats like water depletion, yet despite all this, life is still in quite good shape. The robots are her family and friends, and do everything they can to help the human girl. However, deep inside Haruka is yearning to meet other surviving humans.

In the ending of the anime adaption, Haruka discovers that surviving humans left Earth to build a colony on Mars, and she takes a surviving battleship to join them. The epilogue shows her years later when she returns to Earth with a daughter and meets her old robot comrades.

Characters

Media

Manga

Written by Hideo Kato and illustrated by Tomomasa Takuma, Kurogane Communication was serialized in Dengeki Daioh in 1997. The individual chapters were also published in two tankōbon volumes by MediaWorks in September 1998.[1][2] It is licensed for an English language release in North America by Go! Comi,[3] which released the first on July 1, and the second on September 15, 2008.[4][5]

Anime

APPP produced a twenty-four episode anime series adaptation based on the manga chapters. The anime series premiered in Japan on WOWOW on October 5, 1998 and ran until its conclusion on March 29, 1999. It was released to Region 1 DVD in North America by Media Blasters.

The series uses two pieces of theme music, both performed by Yui Horie. "My Best Friend" is used for the opening, while "Dear Mama" is used for the ending.

Light novels

A two volume light novel adaptation, written by Mizuhito Akiyama, was published in Japan on October 10, 1998, and March 10, 1999 by MediaWorks under their Dengeki Bunko label.[6][7]

References

  1. "鉄コミュニケイション (1) (DENGEKI COMICS)" (in Japanese). Amazon. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  2. "鉄コミュニケイション (2) (DENGEKI COMICS)" (in Japanese). Amazon. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  3. "'Kurogane Communication' Category". Go! Comi. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  4. "Kurogane Communication Vol. 1". Amazon. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  5. "Kurogane Communication Volume 2 (Kurogane Communication (Go! Comi))". Amazon. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  6. 鉄コミュニケイション(1) (in Japanese). ASCII Media Works. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  7. 鉄コミュニケイション(2) (in Japanese). ASCII Media Works. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
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