![]() Characters Ĭharacters are listed by their Japanese names. The series follows the formation of the team and the adventures of the girls as they try to fight off their enemies to collect the magical tokens called Cure Decors (Saban: Glitter Charms) that will enable them to upgrade their powers and revive the queen. When Pierrot's minions from the Bad End Kingdom (Saban: Shadow Realm) try to revive him by harnessing negative energy from the people of Earth, the queen sends the messenger Candy to assemble a team of five magical girls. The kingdom of Märchenland ( メルヘンランド, Meruhenrando, Saban: Jubiland), where various characters from fairy tales reside, is attacked by the evil Pierrot (Saban: Emperor Nogo), who intends to direct its world to have its unhappy ending, but is stopped when the queen uses the last of her energy to seal him away. It is the second series in the franchise to receive an English-dubbed adaptation following the original Pretty Cure series. Hasbro currently owns the rights to the brand alongside other Saban Brands entertainment assets as of June 14, 2018. As of May 24, 2017, the Glitter Force trademark and the license was transferred to Toei Animation. The series was adapted into English by Saban Brands under its SCG Characters unit, under the name Glitter Force and was released as a Netflix exclusive outside of Asia and in multiple languages on December 18, 2015. A novel was released in 2016, which serves as a series epilogue taking place 10 years after the events of the anime. The series' main topic is fairy tales and happiness. A film was released in Japanese theaters on October 26, 2012. The series aired on All-Nippon News Network (ANN)'s TV Asahi network between Februand January 27, 2013, replacing Suite PreCure♪ in its initial timeslot, and is succeeded by DokiDoki! PreCure. The illustration book of her works was released on February 12, 2014. The initial members consisted of 5 members for the first time in 5 years since Yes! Pretty Cure 5, The order of the color scheme is pink, red, yellow, green, and blue is the same as Yes! Pretty Cure 5, but the difference is that all five are the same classmates in the second year of middle school, and in this work, additional members and purple also does not appear. The character designs were done by Toshie Kawamura, who previously worked on the character designs for Yes! PreCure 5. The series is written by Shōji Yonemura, who is best known as the head writer of Glass Fleet and Kamen Rider Kabuto. "Smile Pretty Cure!") is a 2012 Japanese anime television series produced by Toei Animation and the ninth installment in Izumi Todo's Pretty Cure metaseries, featuring the seventh generation of Cures. Smile PreCure! ( Japanese: スマイルプリキュア!, Hepburn: Sumairu PuriKyua!, lit. Smile PreCure! The Movie: Big Mismatch in a Picture Book! So in conclusion I will forever be bitter that we as a collective decided that magical girl anime is too childish or bad just because its made by women and for women.40 (International version) ( List of episodes) ![]() magical girl anime single handedly proves that women in anime can be well written and not shoved into subservient roles. gnc women aren't made to seem inferior or looked down upon (eg nao midorikawa and akane hino from smile/glitter precure), women can be feminine and still kick ass in a frilly dress, they're barely sexualised because instead of wearing skimpy revealing outfits (not saying there's anything wrong with it, it's just I don't like it when underage girls have a huge boob window for their main costume *cough cough* momo yaoyoruzu *cough cough*) they wear fun and over the top outfits (kinda like how lolita is feminine but worn in a way where it's not sexual or specificly attractive), and it never shits on women for being "too feminine". we get all female protagonists with touching stories and incredible fight scenes. generally action based anime is horrible with women.īut then magical girl anime comes and completely flips that on its head. sometimes its tiring to see more and more men in action anime with like one or two kinda developed women. ![]() While it's getting somewhat better, it still sucks. because of this, lots of action/shonen tends to be pretty misogynistic with plenty of one dimensional female characters because it's made by men for men, we get tropes like women with barely any armour or with anatomically incorrect boobs or who's only role is to be in love with the protagonist. I'm someone who watches lots of action anime, which tends to be mostly shonen or aimed at men. Ok so today I'm talking about magical girl anime
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