Pandora Hearts (InstanceTopic, 11)

From Compile Worlds

(Difference between revisions)
 
(8 intermediate revisions not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<[#ontology [kind topic] [cats Anime Manga Pandora_Hearts_series]]>
<[#ontology [kind topic] [cats Anime Manga Pandora_Hearts_series]]>
-
'''Pandora Hearts''' is an ongoing manga series brought to you by [[Mochizukin Jun]] (Sponsored by [[Square Enix]]), who also wrote [[Crimson-Shell]]. It's pretty infamous for its humongous list of [[Alice in Wonderland]] references and penchant for pretty [[bishounen|boys]] and [[bishoujo|girls]] and [[Impossibly cool clothes|clothing]].
+
'''Pandora Hearts''' is an ongoing manga series brought to you by [[Mochizukin Jun]] (Sponsored by [[Square Enix]]), who also wrote [[Crimson-Shell]]. It's pretty (in?)famous for its humongous list of [[Alice in Wonderland]] references and penchant for pretty [[bishounen|boys]] and [[bishoujo|girls]] and [[Impossibly cool clothes|clothing]], though it doesn't attract as much attention as the other manga.
-
So far, it has a [[drama CD]], [[Pandora Hearts ~Caucus Race~|novel]] and 25-episode [[anime]] adaptation, licensed by [[NIS America]]. Said anime has a fail 3-episode [[end]], though, but it's not a huge loss; [[Yuki Kajiura]] composed some tracks for it, and, man, are they ''[[awesome]]''!
+
So far, it has a [[drama CD]], [[Pandora Hearts ~Caucus Race~|novel]] and 25-episode [[anime]] adaptation, licensed by [[NIS America]]. Said anime was the pinnacle of notoriety, though, with its [[QUALITY]], little changes from the manga that greatly contradicted with the recent plot points, and, most notably, a really subjective 3-episode [[end]]. But! It's not a huge loss~; [[Yuki Kajiura]] composed some tracks for it, and, man, are they ''[[awesome]]''!
-
== Plot ==
+
Key points of this series include the aforementioned [[bishies]] of many ages and their fancy clothes, [[Dysfunction Junction|notable lack of true sanity in several places]], a [[Oz Vessalius|boy]] reappearing after ten years of disappearance, in which he spent about a few hours running away from scary [[Jack Skellington]] look-alikes and eating cookies with a cute rabbit girl, a freaking old albino with a doll who comes out of your cabinets and is craved by all due to his twenty-something bishie exterior, and last, but not least, chains. Lots of them. Both the [[Chain (Pandora Hearts)|monsters]] and actual metal [[wikipedia:chain|chains]].
-
Once upon a time, a [[cheery]], [[shota|young]] [[nobleman]] called [[Oz Vessalius]] lived a [[Sorta|happy]] life, and is about to come of age (Through [[ceremony]]). Unfortunately, some [[red]]-cloaked [[shinigami]] [[Baskervilles|creeps]] decided to send him to the [[Abyss (Pandora Hearts)|Abyss]] for the [[sin]] of [[exist]]ing, [[For some reason nobody knows|for some silly reason everybody seems to refuse to say]].
+
-
With an [[Alice the B-Rabbit|rabbit chick]] he meets there, he escapes the Abyss [[Like a Badass Out of Hell]], and is met by three people from [[Pandora (Organization)|some kind of organization]] that seems highly related to this "Abyss" place. And so, with the help of [[Raven (Pandora Hearts)|the sorta-useless goth guy]], they traveled the world, in search for the rabbit's lost identity, and other kinds of knowledge (most notably, that "sin").
+
== External Links ==
 +
* [http://www.mangareader.net/350/pandora-hearts.html Mangareader]
 +
* [http://pandorahearts.livejournal.com/ LiveJournal Page]

Latest revision as of 16:50, 30 December 2011

Pandora Hearts is an ongoing manga series brought to you by Mochizukin Jun (Sponsored by Square Enix), who also wrote Crimson-Shell. It's pretty (in?)famous for its humongous list of Alice in Wonderland references and penchant for pretty boys and girls and clothing, though it doesn't attract as much attention as the other manga.

So far, it has a drama CD, novel and 25-episode anime adaptation, licensed by NIS America. Said anime was the pinnacle of notoriety, though, with its QUALITY, little changes from the manga that greatly contradicted with the recent plot points, and, most notably, a really subjective 3-episode end. But! It's not a huge loss~; Yuki Kajiura composed some tracks for it, and, man, are they awesome!

Key points of this series include the aforementioned bishies of many ages and their fancy clothes, notable lack of true sanity in several places, a boy reappearing after ten years of disappearance, in which he spent about a few hours running away from scary Jack Skellington look-alikes and eating cookies with a cute rabbit girl, a freaking old albino with a doll who comes out of your cabinets and is craved by all due to his twenty-something bishie exterior, and last, but not least, chains. Lots of them. Both the monsters and actual metal chains.

External Links