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Japanese manga serial and its franchise

Heaven's Lost Property
Sora no Otoshimono vol01.jpg

Comprehend of the commencement volume featuring Ikaros.

そらのおとしもの
( Sora no Otoshimono )
Genre Comedy, fantasy,[1] harem[2]
Manga
Written past Suu Minazuki
Published by Kadokawa Shoten
Magazine Monthly Shōnen Ace
Demographic Shōnen
Original run March 26, 2007January 26, 2014
Volumes 20 (List of volumes)
Anime television series
Directed past Hisashi Saitō
Produced past
  • Tsuneo Takechi
  • Seiichi Hachiya
  • Tomoko Suzuki
  • Yuka Harada
Written by Yūko Kakihara
Music by Motoyoshi Iwasaki
Studio AIC A.Due south.T.A.
Licensed by

AUS

Madman Entertainment

NA

Funimation

U.k.

MVM Entertainment

Original network Television receiver Saitama, Chiba Television set, KBS Kyoto, tvk, Sun Television, TVQ, Tokyo MX, Telly Aichi
Original run Oct 4, 2009 December 27, 2009
Episodes xiii + OVA (List of episodes)
Light novel
Written by Rin Kanzaki
Illustrated past Suu Minazuki
Published by Kadokawa Shoten
Imprint Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko
Demographic Male person
Published Feb 1, 2010
Game
Sora no Otoshimono: Heart-Throbbing Summer Holiday
Developer Kadokawa Shoten
Platform PlayStation Portable
Released March 25, 2010
Light novel
Sora no Otoshimono f
Written by Ayun Tachibana
Illustrated by Suu Minazuki
Published by Kadokawa Shoten
Imprint Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko
Demographic Male person
Published Oct 1, 2010
Anime boob tube series
Heaven'south Lost Property: Forte
Directed by Hisashi Saitō
Produced by
  • Seiichi Hachiya
  • Tomoko Suzuki
  • Yoshikazu Kumagai
  • Tomomi Numata
Written past Yūko Kakihara
Music past Motoyoshi Iwasaki
Studio AIC A.South.T.A.
Licensed by

AUS

Madman Entertainment

NA

Funimation

Original network Television set Saitama, Chiba TV, KBS Kyoto, tvk, Sun Television, TVQ Kyushu Broadcasting, Tokyo MX, TV Aichi
Original run Oct 1, 2010 December 17, 2010
Episodes 12 (List of episodes)
Other
  • Heaven'southward Lost Belongings the Moving-picture show: The Angeloid of Clockwork (film)
  • Sora no Otoshimono Forte: Dreamy Season (game)
  • Heaven'southward Lost Belongings Final – The Movie: Eternally My Main (film)

Sky'due south Lost Property (Japanese: そらのおとしもの, Hepburn: Sora no Otoshimono , lit., "Lost Property of the Sky" or "Misplaced past Heaven"), is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Suu Minazuki. The plot revolves around Tomoki Sakurai, a male child who desires to alive a peaceful life but encounters a fallen daughter with wings, named Ikaros, who becomes his retainer.

The manga began monthly serialization in the May 2007 issue of manga mag Shōnen Ace and ended with the March 2022 event. The commencement tankōbon was released by Kadokawa Shoten on September 26, 2007, with a total of 20 volumes released. An anime adaptation produced by AIC aired in Japan in 2009,[3] followed with a second season, a feature film, and two video games.[4] A second film was released in Nippon on April 26, 2014.[5] The anime is licensed in North America past Funimation.

Plot [edit]

Tomoki Sakurai is a perverted teenage boy whose motto is "Peace and quiet are the best", and oftentimes has dreams of coming together an angel. He finds it hard to live in comfort when he has to put upwards with Sohara Mitsuki, his side by side-door neighbor with a killer karate chop; Eishiro Sugata, an eccentric pseudo-scientist bent on discovering the "New Globe"; and Mikako Satsukitane, their school's sadistic student council president. I night, while he was witnessing a strange anomaly in the sky, a UMA (Unidentified Mysterious Brute) crash-landed nearby. Tomoki discovers that what fell from the sky is a winged female humanoid named Ikaros from an unknown globe of Synapse, who soon declares herself to be Tomoki's servant. From so on, more creatures known as "Angeloids" get in; with this, he loses his peace and quiet, but at the aforementioned time finds pleasant things the Angeloids bring him, and fight the forces that autumn upon Earth.

Characters [edit]

Main [edit]

Tomoki Sakurai ( 桜井 智樹 , Sakurai Tomoki )
Voiced by: Soichiro Hoshi (Japanese); Greg Ayres (English)
Tomoki is a teenage boy[ch. 20] who wants nothing more than than a peaceful and tranquility life in Sorami City. He has had recurring dreams of meeting an angel since babyhood.[ch. 1] Despite beingness a shameless pervert, a trait heavily influenced by his grandfather and mother,[ch. seven,33,36,49] Tomoki is described as a kind and sincere person. He strives to make Ikaros and the resident Angeloids behave more than similar humans by having them non be then focused on obedience, and telling them to brand their ain decisions.[ch. 9] He is usually drawn in chibi parameters, except when he is serious or relaxed. Tomoki occasionally uses a device that transforms him into a girl named Tomoko ( 智子 ).[ch. 11,33]
Ikaros ( イカロス , Ikarosu )
Voiced by: Saori Hayami (Japanese); Brittney Karbowski (English)
The title character and primary heroine of the series, Ikaros is a cute gynoid known as an Angeloid.[a] She falls from the sky at the commencement of the story. After Tomoki recovers her, she forms a bond with him and calls him master: the imprinting is symbolized by a chain from her collar to his hand.[ch. ane] She has an expressionless face that makes the other characters wonder if she will always grinning.[ch. xiv,fifteen] Her emotions develop slowly, due to her programmed setting of loftier battle abilities and high processing abilities but low emotional abilities.[ch. 22] Despite this, she develops genuine feelings of love for Tomoki. She also goes along with any of his perverted schemes,[ch. two,16] and eventually burns up into zilch later on carrying Tomoki to Synapse, showing him her smile for the first fourth dimension.[ch. 76] She and the others are later resurrected by Tomoki's final wish.[ch. 77] Although she initially states she is a "Pet-Class" (entertainment-purposed) Angeloid, she is actually a "Strategic Battle-Class" Angeloid.[ch. ten] In her previous visit to World equally the Uranus Queen[I], she destroys the Tower of Babel.[ch. 10] In "Battle Mode", she employs: Aegis[Two], an energy shield sphere; Artemis[III], which fires an array of energy projectiles from her wings; and Apollon ( アポロン , Aporon, from the Greek Apollyon ), a bow that fires an pointer of mass devastation.[ch. 10,15] In Uranus Queen mode, she tin can interface with massive weapons platform called the Uranus System (Hephastus Arrangement in the Funimation dub). In a later battle, she evolves into Ikaros Version II with "Dual Variable Wings" that heave her power.[ch. 55,56] Her name comes from the Greek mythological grapheme Icarus, a craftman's son who flew besides shut to the dominicus and roughshod from the sky.
Sohara Mitsuki ( 見月 そはら , Mitsuki Sohara )
Voiced by: Mina (Japanese); Trina Nishimura (English)
Sohara is Tomoki'southward next door neighbor and childhood all-time friend.[ch. 1,7] She gets annoyed whenever Tomoki acts in a lecherous mode and typically punishes him with a single karate chop.[ch. 1] As a child, she was constantly sick and only had Tomoki every bit a friend. Despite all the penalization she dishes out to him, she secretly loves him,[vol. 6:EX-i] and has embarrassing lustful dreams nigh him.[ch. 18]. She is good at sports,[ch. nineteen,23] just struggles heavily with English (Castilian in the Funimation dub),[ch. 12,26] and is a deadly cook when it comes to sunny-side upward eggs.[ch. 41,51] Eventually, Daedalus reveals that she created Sohara: the girl who died from a childhood illness was Daedalus'south original avatar, and the girl who grew upwardly with Tomoki was a clone she made then that he would not forget her.[ch. 77]
Eishiro Sugata ( 守形 英四郎 , Sugata Eishirō )
Voiced by: Tatsuhisa Suzuki (Japanese); Eric Vale (English)
Sugata is the leader of the New World Discovery Society ( 新大陸発見部 , Shin Tairiku Hakkenbu , Too "New Continent Discovery Club") at Tomoki'due south school.[ch. 11] He is an eccentric explorer and scientist who enjoys hang-gliding and living in the wilderness.[ch. 5] In the anime, he opens the episodes with some philosophical narrations which reference historical explorers such as Magellan and Columbus. He is best friends with Mikako Satsukitane.[ch. 8,26] He behaves in a generally deadpan way unless it involves the "New World",[ch. 11,50] or his family unit background.[ch. 58,59] Prior to the events of the series, he is the son of a renowned political family unit. When his elder brother died from a hang-gliding accident, Eishiro takes blame and is disowned by his family.[ch. 67] Leaving his younger blood brother the sole heir. Since then he has followed his elder brother's footsteps in discovering a "New World" as a fashion of atoning for his misdeed.
Mikako Satsukitane ( 五月田根 美香子 , Satsukitane Mikako )
Voiced by: Ayahi Takagaki (Japanese); Jamie Marchi (English)
Mikako is an upperclassman to Tomoki and Mitsuki and the pupil body president. She is a babyhood friend of Sugata, whom she calls "Ei-kun", and is the daughter of an influential yakuza dominate in Sorami.[ch. viii] She is manipulative, cunning, highly intelligent, athletic and sadistic.[ch. 19,26] She initiates many schemes in the form of festival competitions that identify Tomoki in humiliating situations for her amusement. Different Sohara and the Angeloids, she directs her romantic affections towards Sugata,[ch. 49] and claims him during the mock wedding in the second anime season finale.
Nymph ( ニンフ , Ninfu )
Voiced by: Iori Nomizu (Japanese); Kara Edwards (English)
Nymph is an "Electronic Warfare Angeloid, Type Beta" ( 電子戦用エンジェロイドタイプβ(ベータ) ). She is introduced when she finds Ikaros on an errand and attacks her[ch. ix], and so later mysteriously appears in Tomoki's living room where she casually snacks on fries.[ch. xiii] She has a cavalier attitude towards humans, whom she refers to as "bugs", and she calls Angeloids past their types rather than their names. For example, she calls Ikaros "Blastoff".[ch. 10,thirteen] Despite the attitude, she starts enjoying everyday life and her favorite hobby is eating snacks and watching lather operas.[ch. twenty]
Nymph's original mission was to recall Ikaros and render her to Synapse, still, she is physically weaker than her and fails in the mission later awakening Ikaros'due south Uranus Queen ability,[ch. ten] and is consequently heavily punished and abused.[ch. 12,13] After spending time with Tomoki and his friends, she begins to like humans, and soon develops feelings for Tomoki, admitting in an aristocratic fashion.[ch. xiii,16,xx] Nymph eventually betrays Synapse: in the manga she tries to surprise attack the Harpies, while in the anime she sides with Ikaros. In both cases, her wings are consequently ripped off by the Harpies, but Tomoki and friends manage to free her from her link to her primary.[ch. 15] The wings regenerate when she accepts Tomoki as her new principal.[ch. 31] After the regrowth, Nymph needs to get through an Imprinting process required for her principal;[ch. 34] she somewhen asks Tomoki, but he refuses and states that he wants her to live freely.[ch. 39]
As an Electronic Warfare-type Angeloid, Nymph'southward allocation of abilities emphasize her high processing capabilities and high emotional control, merely her raw battle power is gear up low.[ch. 22] Nymph is able to hack computer systems likewise as other Angeloids[ch. 10] and even humans.[ch. 25,27] She uses a device called the Dive Game which enables humans to enter each other's dreams and through Tomoki's dream, visit Synapse.[ch. xviii] Her "Stealth" wings appear sheer, dissimilar Ikaros'southward wings which can only retract to stubs, and she can utilize them as a radar.[ch. 13,iv] [vol. 6:affiliate EX] She tin as well fire a high-powered energy beam from her oral fissure called "Paradise Vocal"[4].[ch. 15] During the battle with Angeloid Hiyori, Tomoki's encouragement allows her to upgrade her powers to Aphrodite[Five], a "fundamental particle-jamming organisation" that she uses to hack and free Hiyori.[ch. forty] She eventually faces Minos and self-destructs to destroy Zeus.[ch. 76]
Nymph is named later and based on the nature spirits of Greek myth.
Astraea ( アストレア , Asutorea )
Voiced by: Kaori Fukuhara (Japanese); Carli Mosier (English)
Astraea is a large-breasted "Local-Combat Angeloid, Type Delta" ( 局地戦闘用エンジェロイドタイプΔ(デルタ) ) sent by Synapse to impale Tomoki. She is strong in gainsay and emotion compared to Ikaros, simply because of that allocation, her weakness is her depression processing power, and the other Angeloids consider her an idiot; this is affirmed when she bungles her multiple chances to kill Tomoki at the Buddhist temple, and afterward at the quiz evidence where she fails basic questions such equally "what is one+1"[ch. 22,26]. She is often famished because she does not know how to hunt or to obtain nutrient by her ain ways; in one episode, she eats Sugata's fish bait[ch. 28]. Afterwards spending time with Tomoki, she refuses Master's lodge to kill Nymph, and severs her own concatenation.[ch. 30-31]
Astraea has a good relationship with her senpai sisters. Astraea somewhen realizes that she too has fallen in love with Tomoki, later Chaos questions her on the definition of love.[ch. thirty,31,48] In recent chapters, she becomes depressed from losing her weapon and shield, but is encouraged by Tomoki who tells her only she can decide whether or not she is useless. She then decides to rescue her younger sister, Chaos.[ch. 60]
According to Daedalus, Astraea is extremely quick and has great close-gainsay capabilities only is vulnerable to long-range attacks. She wields a super-oscillating photon blade called Chrysaor[Vi], which tin can fifty-fifty penetrate Ikaros's Aegis defence system. For defense, she uses Custodianship L ( イージス L , Ījisu Eru , "L" stands for "left", as information technology appears on her left arm), a shield that is more than powerful than Ikaros'south version, but guards a limited angle and can only exist deployed for a short period.[ch. 31] However, in her fight with Ikaros Melan, Astraea'southward sword and shield are destroyed.[ch. 56,60] Towards the terminate of the story, she battles Chaos where she evolves her weapon and shield, and they both are killed.[ch. 75]
Astraea is named after the Greek mythological effigy Astraea, who was a goddess of justice that subsequently became the constellations Virgo and Libra.
Hiyori Kazane ( 風音 日和 , Kazane Hiyori )
Voiced by: Yōko Hikasa (Japanese); Colleen Clinkenbeard (English language)
Hiyori is a 2nd-year student at Tomoki'south school whose story is detailed in Heaven's Lost Holding the Movie: The Angeloid of Clockwork. She has feelings for Tomoki and joins the New Earth Discovery Society in order to get closer to him.[ch. 34] In reality, Hiyori is an Angel who was first seen inside some sort of sleeping sleeping accommodation when Sugata went to Synapse. The chamber connects her to her body on Earth, which functions like an avatar.[ch. 24] Sugata is hesitant in letting her bring together his club, but welcomes her upon hearing the lodge would receive more funding. Tomoki puts Hiyori through a false initiation to assess her purity. Thus far, only Sugata, Nymph, and Ikaros are aware of Hiyori'southward true identity.[ch. 35,38]
Hiyori gets rather embarrassed when it is suggested that she and Tomoki are an item; while she likes Tomoki, she has not considered dating him nonetheless, and her presence becomes a source of major discomfort for Sohara, Nymph, and Astraea. This stems from the realization that Hiyori is always kind and caring to Tomoki, while the others seem to only see his "faults".[ch. 36] Somewhen, Hiyori manages to confess her feelings to Tomoki, which leaves him in shock equally no girl has always confessed to him earlier. However, her time with Tomoki is ultimately cut short when a sleepy truck driver runs her over, which causes her avatar to disappear and her beingness to be erased from anybody's memories (except for Tomoki and the Angeloids).[ch. 36-38]
Hiyori is later converted to a "Blazon Zeta" Angeloid who works for the Master of Synapse to destroy the metropolis. She uses a staff, called Demeter[VII], which has the ability to manipulate the weather by changing the air pressure, and thus knocking people unconscious. She is also able to counter-hack Nymph, but somewhen loses when Nymph evolves into Aphrodite mode. After she is freed from Principal, Hiyori remains on Earth and quits the New World Discovery Guild. Equally she has accomplished her goal of getting close to Tomoki, she leaves him with a farewell buss,[ch. 40] although she continues to harbor feelings for Tomoki.[ch. 61] She later gives Chaos the power to fully grasp emotions, at the cost of her own life.[ch. seventy]

Synapse [edit]

Synapse ( シナプス , Shinapusu ) is a land located in the skies that is habitation to the Angels and the Angeloids. It was first introduced in the series as a black pigsty in a higher place Sorami. Nymph has a device chosen the Dive Game that creates a portal between Sorami and Synapse via Tomoki'southward dreams. In the Synapse, there is a big dome that contains numerous Angels in sleeping pods, which connects them to their existent-world avatars. If the avatar in the real world is killed, the people associated with them will have their memories erased, such every bit the example with Hiyori. Also in the Synapse is a large obelisk[ch. two,eighteen,24] called the Rule which grants people wishes and creates the cards that the Angeloids use.[ch. 77]

Daedalus ( ダイダロス , Daidarosu )
Voiced by: Asuka Ōgame[6] (Japanese); Monica Rial[6] (English)
Daedalus is an angel that often appears in Tomoki'south dreams, but she flies away, which makes Tomoki cry. She comes to his dreams and asks him to aid save her, and later on sent Ikaros to him from the heaven. It appears that she greatly cares for Tomoki. Her name originates from the Greek mythological graphic symbol Daedalus, the father of Icarus. Her face is obscured in all of her appearances.[ch. ane,xviii] Information technology is afterwards revealed she's the creator of the first generation of Angeloids: Ikaros, Nymph, the Harpies, and Astraea.[ch. 26] She helps Sugata when he visits Synapse.[ch. 29,30] She eventually reveals to Tomoki that she is in fact the real Sohara. The other Sohara was her incarnations: the kid Sohara was her avatar that died from sickness (similar to Hiyori'southward example), and that the Sohara who grew upwardly with him was a good for you replica to watch over him afterwards. In add-on to creating the Angeloids, she created the "Dominion" obelisk that grants wishes and the cards that go with it.[ch. 77]
Master of Synapse ( 空(シナプス)のマスター , Shinapusu no Masutā )
Voiced past: Shinichiro Miki[six] (Japanese); Mike McFarland (Heaven Chief)[6] (English)
The sadistic and ruthless ruler of Synapse, Master enjoys torturing the Angeloids he owns (both physically and emotionally); he sees them as merely his playthings which he can do as he pleases, and discard as trash. He is condescending towards humans, and refers to them as "Downers", a trait that is as well shared with his Angeloids. Considering of his arrogance and belief that the Angeloids volition ever obey his orders, he is surprised when he witnesses one of them break their chain or go confronting his orders. He is commonly seated at a throne with two Angeloids beside him. Like Daedalus, his face is more often than not obscured in his appearances.[ch. 12-15] He also creates an "Ultimate Air Defence force System" called Zeus[8].[ch. 47] His existent name is afterward revealed to be Minos[IX] [ch. 68], named afterwards the king of Crete in Greek mythology. In the last affiliate of the series, Tomoki punches him with the strength of the Angeloids' core. Equally Minos stabs himself, Tomoki advises him that he should endeavor coming to Globe.[ch. 77]
Harpies ( ハーピー , Hāpī )
Voiced past: Michiko Neya (Harpy i), Maya Okamoto (Harpy two) (Japanese); Clarine Harp (Harpy), Stephanie Young (Gamma)[b] (English)
A pair of "Interceptor Angeloids, Type Gamma" ( 要撃用エンジェロイドタイプγ ), who answer direct to the Master of Synapse. They are responsible for vehement off Nymph'south wings[ch. 15] and are as well guards at Synapse's lab.[ch. 18,26,29] They are equipped with a "High-Fever Object Pinch Anti-Aircraft Gun" on their left arm chosen Prometheus ( プロメテウス , Purometeusu ), which fires white-hot projectiles of 3,000 °C (5,430 °F) at iv kilometres per second (viii,900 mph),[ch. 15] and a "Super Vibration Claw" called Nemea ( ネメア ) mounted on their correct arm.[ch. 62] They are named and modeled after the harpies of Greek mythology. After Master orders them to assault Ikaros for his amusement, but they are interrupted past Tomoki, who tells them to dress up; the younger is embarrassed, only the older plays along until they get to a bikini where she becomes extremely conscious about showing her abdomen push button that she flees.[ch. 62] Later at the embankment, the older harpy discovers she cannot survive beingness underwater, but was rescued by Tomoki and friends.[ch. 63] After she and Tomoki were stranded in a desert[ch. 64], the older harpy develops feelings for him and questions her mission.[ch. 64] The younger harpy decides to keep the mission; she fights Ikaros on her own, until the older harpy rejoins her.[ch. 65,66] They eventually strength themselves inside Ikaros'southward Custodianship shield and cocky-destruct by detonating their collars.[ch. 66] This causes the Master of Synapse great distress,[ch. 66] and causes Tomoki to lock himself in his room in depression.[ch. 67]
Chaos ( カオス , Kaosu )
Voiced by: Aki Toyosaki (Japanese); Carrie Savage (English)
Chaos is a "Second-Generation Angeloid, Blazon Epsilon" ( 第二世代エンジェロイドタイプε , Dainisedai Enjeroido, Taipu Epushiron ) and a major adversary of the serial. She initially appears to Tomoki as a girl in a nun'due south outfit.[ch. 28] Chaos can modify her appearance to mimic someone dear to her victim in order to instill turmoil and confusion (as her name implies), equally she did against Nymph (and Ikaros) past taking on the likeness of Tomoki.[ch. 29] Her "wings" are a wicked assortment of bladed, nigh organic-like appendages. Dissimilar the first generation Angeloids who lack the ability to sleep, Chaos can enter another person'south dream, as she has initially done with Tomoki. Chaos has a strange obsession with love, often request the person what love is, to which Ikaros responded that love, for her, was a sensation of hurting in her reactor, obviously in a figurative sense.[ch. 31]
Chaos's kickoff mission is to retrieve Ikaros' core. She lures Nymph by deceptively posing as Tomoki and then orders her to kill herself.[ch. 29] She as well fights and defeats the other first generation Angeloids, except for Ikaros who sends Chaos into an ocean chasm where she was temporarily incapacitated due to the great h2o pressure.[ch. 31] While there, she concludes that love equates to hurting. Anarchy was left in the abyss, where she dismembers and devours fish to "abound bigger" and "to show her 'love' to everyone". She easily devours Seiren, one of the Sky Master's Angeloids, and uses the Pandora programme to evolve into Chaos Version 2.[ch. 45,47] She continues to question dear by following Tomoki effectually a bit, simply returns to her master only to be shot downwards by the Zeus cannon, and later on overhearing Tomoki tell his Angeloids to go abroad, decides to return to the bounding main floor to express her love more.[ch. 47] She later returns to devour the dark Angeloids; she acquires their powers, nevertheless holds back from attacking Tomoki because of her feelings for him, and her desire to be accepted by him as a "proficient girl".[ch. 56] She retreats to the bounding main.[ch. 56,60]
Anarchy later on returns to absorb Hiyori.[ch. 69] She gains a small agreement of right and wrong, and is directed by Hiyori to osculation Tomoki.[ch. 69] She visits Tomoki and reveals herself to exist an Angeloid,[ch. 70] but their chat is interrupted past Nymph, who had discovered Hiyori'south trunk thinking she killed her. In the ensuing fight, Tomoki steps in the way of Chaos' fly and is impaled in the back. Chaos retreats to the river bank with a desire to "start it all over" when she encounters Sugata.[ch. 71] After using too much of her powers, Chaos' torso explodes, taking Astraea with her.[ch. 75] After Tomoki resurrects everyone, Tomoki welcomes Chaos to his household, where she finally realizes what dearest is.[ch. 77]
In the Sora no Otoshimono: Forte anime, subsequently Chaos is plunged into the sea, she emerges as an adult and fights Nymph and Astraea; she hands overpowers them, until Ikaros arrives. She was later defeated past Astraea and Ikaros, who use their upgraded weapons (courtesy of Nymph) and briefly shuts downwardly, subsequently which Tomoki installs on her concatenation a padlock device given to him by Daedalus, who then restores Chaos to her kid form. Chaos then joins the cast as the newest resident of Tomoki'south household.
Oregano ( オレガノ )
Oregano, as well known as "Mini-Ikaros" ( ミニイカロス , Mini-Ikarosu ), is i of the mass-produced Medical Specialist Angeloids ( 医療用エンジェロイドタイプ ) from a hamlet in Synapse who mysteriously manages to come up to Globe by tagging along with Eishiro when he teleports back from one of his trips.[ch. 51] She seems to take common sense with Tomoki. Mikako takes her in subsequently (even giving her the power to speak, a first since her Angeloid type are usually mute), every bit Tomoki does non take enough money to support another Angeloid. While Tomoki and Nymph are initially concerned that Mikako would corruption Oregano, they find her initially generally courteous and well-mannered, that is, until Tomoki leaves; then Oregano acts especially cruel to Nymph by serving her vile nutrient, insulting her, and trapping her in a cell full of ecchi animals (frogs licking, eels squirming) while dumping a bunch of grenades on her, all the while spinning the situations as if it were all Nymph'due south fault.[ch. 52] She later on reveals that Nymph used to visit her hamlet and forced everyone to heed to her horrible singing, explaining why Oregano greatly dislikes her.[ch. lx] She prefers to hang out with people (like Tomoki) who desire peace and quiet.
Ikaros Melan ( イカロス=メラン , Ikarosu Meran , Ίκαρος Μέλαν )
Ikaros Melan, or "Black Ikaros", is a "Tactical Angeloid, Type Theta" ( 戦略エンジェロイドタイプθ(シータ) ) is introduced as a night winged copy of Ikaros that possesses a Variable Wing core designed by the Master of Synapse. As a Second-Generation Angeloid, Ikaros Melan is stronger than her original: Astraea's Chrysaor breaks on her Aegis shield, and her counter-punch breaks Astraea's Custodianship L shield. Ikaros Melan is eventually destroyed when the real Ikaros is hit with Ikaros Melan'south Apollon arrow, after which Ikaros traps both in her Aegis shield just before the pointer explodes. She and the other dark Angeloids are then consumed by Anarchy.[ch. 54-56]. However, a grouping of Ikaros Melans were seen attacking Yoshitsune Hououin when he accidentally found himself in Synapse.[ch. 68] Minos has since generated an army of melan angeloids to baby-sit Synapse. Some of his Melan angeloids are modeled after Nymph and Astraea.[ch. 55, page 24]
Seiren ( セイレーン , Sirēn )
Seiren is a "Underwater Warfare Angeloid", able to swim in water equally deep as 8000 meters (26,246 feet). She is based on the sirens from the Greek mythology, and was designed by the Master of Synapse. Her appearance in the manga is brief, as when she attacks Tomoki, Chaos suddenly appears and consumed her.[ch. 45]

Humans [edit]

Tomozo Sakurai ( 桜井 智蔵 , Sakurai Tomozō )
Voiced by: Hiroshi Iwasaki (Japanese); Nib Flynn (English)
Tomoki'south equally perverted grandfather, whose dream was to slumber with every adult female in the world, but could non practise so earlier his decease.[ch. 18] He unremarkably appears when Tomoki is in a dire situation, usually as a flashback or some supernatural phenomenon, to give him albeit perverted communication.[ch. vii,18,22,33] The manga features a recurring gag where Tomoki (and sometimes a friend) would be killed later on doing something perverted; grandpa would meet them in the afterlife and tell them to "become abode" (dorsum to life).[ch. 27,41,58]
Tomoyo Sakurai ( 桜井 智代 , Sakurai Tomoyo )
Tomoki's perverted mother; her appearance resembles Tomoki'due south female person change ego, Tomoko. Tomoyo and her husband left Tomoki on a "world tour" when he was only 10 years quondam, prior to the series' start. When she reunites with her son, she harasses Astraea and some of the other girls by fondling their breasts, and then flirts with Sugata, which enrages Mikako. She is finally stopped by her husband and so resumes her world bout with him.[ch. 49]
Tsutsumi Sakurai ( 桜井 つつみ , Sakurai Tsutsumi )
Tomoki'southward father who briefly appears at the cease of affiliate 49 of the manga. Tsutsumi is very much like Sohara in that he packs a powerful karate chop that he uses on his wife for her pervertedness. Tsutsumi was actually married into the Sakurai family, while Tomoyo is the descendant of the Sakurai bloodline.[ch. 49]
Yoshitsune Hououin ( 鳳凰院 義経 , Hōōin Yoshitsune ) and Tsukino Hououin ( 鳳凰院 月乃 , Hōōin Tsukino )
Yoshitsune Voiced by: Shinji Kawada (Japanese); J. Michael Tatum (English)
Tsukino Voiced by: Minako Kotobuki (Japanese); Cherami Leigh (English)
Yoshitsune Hououin is the guy from the rival school that competes against Tomoki's schoolhouse during the cultural festivals.[ch. 21,44] He comes from a wealthy family unit, although, in a public showdown against Mikako, his fortune cannot rival Mikako's "black money". Tsukino is his piffling sis who e'er looks upward to him, that is, until Yoshitsune acts like a pervert past flipping a girl's brim. Tomoki and friends try to help him reconcile with his sister while still interim like a man. He also notices that Sugata is hiding something virtually his past.[ch. 58] He later sacrifices himself to the Ikaros Melans to protect Sugata when he is in Synapse.[ch. 73]
Nada / Judas
Voiced by: Jūrōta Kosugi[7] (Japanese); Christopher Sabat[vii] (English language)
A mysterious visitor who minds a pigeon-covered booth that bears the name JUDAS. He regularly appears during the Satsukitane festivals to foil any chances Tomoki has of winning the result; he ordinarily overpowers him with his pair of pistols. He is directly based on the title character in the Judas manga that Minazuki worked on prior to this series.[ch. 19] In the manga, he is never mentioned by name, but in the anime he is credited by Shooting Range Man[viii] or Nil in the Japanese dub, and Judas in the English language dub.[7]

Production [edit]

In 2006, Suu Minazuki's previous manga Judas had ceased publication in Kadokawa Shoten's Shōnen Ace mag with a full of five volumes. Minazuki had likewise wrapped upwards his fantasy harem comedy serial Watashi no Messiah-sama in 2007, for which he started a sequel Watashi no Kyūseishu-sama ~lacrima~ which ran for 35 chapters in Monthly GFantasy in 2007–2008. These works were set in fantasy worlds with some references to Biblical characters and settings; Minazuki briefly alludes to the Tower of Babel in the history of the Angeloids.[ch. x] Minazuki'southward Angeloid characters and weapons in Sora no Otoshimono are primarily named afterward characters in Greek mythology, including their classifications sequentially pulled from the Greek alphabet.

In 2008, Minazuki started a seinen water chance series called Vii Ocean, but only half dozen chapters were published. As the publication of Sora no Otoshimono was geared for a wider shōnen audition, Minazuki fabricated some adjustments such equally posting warnings to his readers to skip the chapter when it contains obvious nudity themes, and placing conscience boxes and ovals over exposed body parts.[ch. eleven,33] Yoshihiro Watanabe, who worked on Brighter than the Dawning Blue and Bamboo Bract handled the Grapheme Design and served as the Chief Animation Director for the commencement anime series. Hisashi Saito, who besides directed Bamboo Bract, handled the Direction for the anime series as well as the OVA and the feature motion-picture show.

Media [edit]

Manga [edit]

Heaven'due south Lost Property began monthly serialization in the May 2007 issue of Shōnen Ace sold on March 26, 2007 and concluded with the March 2022 issue sold on January 26, 2014.[ix] The get-go tankōbon was released past Kadokawa Shoten on September 26, 2007, with a total of 20 tankōbon released in Japan. Chapter titles are often suffixed with 2 assertion points.

In improver, a 4-panel comic, titled Sora no Otoshimono Pico ( そらのおとしものPICO , Sora no Otoshimono Piko ), illustrated by ms, was developed and published in the inaugural issue of Kadokawa Shoten's four-Koma Nano Ace magazine (published on March 9, 2011), and connected in Shōnen Ace until its decision on March 26, 2011. Information technology focuses on the lives of Astraea, Nymph, and Ikaros.[ten]

Anime [edit]

An anime accommodation produced by AIC and directed by Hisashi Saitō aired in Japan from Oct 4 to December 27, 2009 on TV Saitama and Chiba TV, with subsequent broadcasts on KBS, tvk, Sun Television, TVQ, Tokyo MX and TV Aichi,[iii] with English language-subtitled simulcasts provided on the Crunchyroll. Seven DVD compilation volumes were released between December 25, 2009 and June 25, 2010 by Kadokawa Pictures, with limited edition volumes also sold.[11] A Blu-ray box set was released on June 24, 2011. An OVA episode entitled "Project Pinkish" was bundled with the express edition release of volume 9 of the manga on DVD on September ix, 2010.[12]

A second season, Sora no Otoshimono: Forte ( そらのおとしもの(フォルテ) ), was announced on reprinted copies of the manga,[13] and aired 12 episodes between Oct 1 to December 17, 2010 with simulcasts provided by Crunchyroll, as with the first season.[14] Half-dozen DVD volumes were released by Kadokawa Pictures betwixt December 24, 2010 and May 27, 2011.[15]

The opening theme for the beginning season is "Ring My Bong", and for the 2d season, it is "Heart no Kakuritsu" ( ハートの確率 , Hāto no Kakuritsu , "Probabilities of the Eye"); both are performed by Blue Drops and feature singers Hitomi Yoshida and Ikaros (Saori Hayami). Both seasons also use different ending themes for each episode.

Both seasons of the anime are licensed in N America by Funimation Entertainment, which released them under the respective titles of Heaven's Lost Property and Heaven's Lost Holding: Forte.[16] [17] The first season was released on December 20, 2011 on DVD and Blu-ray.[18] However, due to concerns from the Japanese licensing company regarding Blu-ray sales, the second season was released only equally a ii-disc DVD set in Due north America on March 20, 2012.[19] The 2nd season was released on Blu-ray on June 25, 2013.[20]

Films [edit]

A film adaptation called Sora no Otoshimono the Movie: The Angeloid of Clockwork ( 劇場版 そらのおとしもの 時計じかけの哀女神(エンジェロイド) , Gekijōban Sora no Otoshimono: Tokei-jikake no Enjeroido ) was announced by Kadokawa Shoten in November 2010.[21] The film focuses on the Hiyori arc of the manga. A 30-second teaser trailer was shown in the postal service-end credits of the concluding episode of Forte. The film premiered in Japanese theaters on June 25, 2011.[4] Funimation Entertainment licensed the movie under the championship of Heaven'south Lost Property the Moving-picture show: The Angeloid of Clockwork, and released information technology on February 26, 2013.[22] [23] A 2nd film called Heaven'south Lost Property Final – The Movie: Eternally My Master was released on April 26, 2014.[v]

Other media [edit]

A lite novel accommodation of Heaven's Lost Belongings written by Rin Kazaki and illustrated by Minazuki was released by Kadokawa Shoten on Feb 1, 2010 under its Kadokawa Sneaker Bait-and-switch imprint.[24] A sequel to the low-cal novel called Sora no Otoshimono f, written past Rin Kanzaki and illustrated by Minazuki and Ayun Tachibana, was released on October i, 2010.[25]

A video game developed past Kadokawa Shoten called Sora no Otoshimono: Eye-Throbbing Summertime Vacation ( そらのおとしもの ドキドキサマーバケーション , Sora no Otoshimono Dokidoki Samā Bakēshon ) was released for the PlayStation Portable on March 25, 2010, featuring character interactions and mini-game puzzles.[26] Another game developed by Kadokawa Shoten called Sora no Otoshimono Forte: Dreamy Season ( そらのおとしものf(フォルテ) Dreamy Flavor , Sora no Otoshimono Forute Dorīmī Shīzun ) was released for the Nintendo DS on January 27, 2011, with gameplay of a visual novel plus some mildly sexually suggestive mini-games.[27]

Several types of merchandise take been produced based primarily on the female person characters of Sora no Otoshimono; they include: figurines, T-shirts, keychains, and body pillows.[28] "Oppai" Mouse pads were also produced; the one of Ikaros became the subject of a bonus affiliate.[vol. 10:extra] [29]

Reception [edit]

Tim Jones of T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews stated that the anime show "Dangles between the line of guilty pleasance and stupid, only manages to be an entertaining series all the same." and is really funny in comparison to DearS, with "decent fanservice, amusing characters, and doesn't revolve entirely around subservient alien girls", however, he is critical of the tacked on fanservice, and dislikes Mikako'due south terrible character, "basically a 2-faced bowwow" whose smirks imply a "mean-spirited, unfunny joke coming out of her mouth."[xxx] Chris Beveridge of Mania.com wrote that the second anime serial "provides the kind of humor that'south good to have one time in awhile [sic] and certainly not what I desire out of a lot of series, just the staff here has striking simply virtually everything right (outside of that awful wrestling episode)."[31] Theron Martin of Anime News Network wrote that the second series was sporadically enjoyable, with much of the attempts at humor and fanservice to be abysmally poor, although he enjoyed the English dub's vocalism work.[32] Dennis Amith of J!-ENT considered the series "Intriguingly perverse, reminiscent of Urusei Yatsura and Chobits" and appealing to harem and fan service anime fans, merely "enjoyed with every episode, the voice talent singing songs via anime theme songs from the '70s, 'eighty′s and modern-style themes".[33]

Post-obit the anime episode ending that involved flight panties, Rocket Girls creator Hōsuke Nojiri created a rubber band powered ornithopter in the shape of the panties, and posted the video on Nico Nico Douga where information technology shortly became pop. NKH (Niconico's alive streaming station) and a local school (Niconico Technical Community) then hosted a Sora Fes outcome on March half dozen, 2010, where participants built and flew model airplanes in the likeness of the flying panties. Nojiri, along with OpenSky's media artist Kazuhiko Hachiya, director Hisashi Saito, and TBS announcer Jun Suzuki also attended the result.[34] [35] With the circulate of the Sora No Otoshimono Forte anime season, the Jan 2011 effect of Newtype featured Ikaros as the well-nigh pop female person character, with Nymph at #7 and Astraea at #9. Tomoki Sakurai was also listed equally #five for nearly pop male grapheme in that calendar month.[36] Streaming broadcaster Crunchyroll reported that Sora No Otoshimono Forte ranked #3 in popularity of their meridian 10 anime broadcasts in the Fall of 2010.[37]

Works cited [edit]

Sora no Otoshimono manga volumes by Suu Minazuki. Original Japanese version published by Kadokawa Shoten.
  1. Vol. 1 (ch. 1–4): そらのおとしもの (1). September 26, 2007 ISBN 978-four-04-713973-2 (in Japanese).
  2. Vol. 2 (ch. five–ix): そらのおとしもの (2). December 26, 2007 ISBN 978-4-04-715013-three (in Japanese).
  3. Vol. three (ch. ten–14): そらのおとしもの (three). July 26, 2008 ISBN 978-4-04-715079-9 (in Japanese).
  4. Vol. 4 (ch. xv–18): そらのおとしもの (4). January 26, 2009 ISBN 978-four-04-715164-2 (in Japanese).
  5. Vol. five (ch. 19–22): そらのおとしもの (v). April 25, 2009 ISBN 978-iv-04-715228-i (in Japanese).
  6. Vol. vi (ch. 23–26): そらのおとしもの (6). September 26, 2009 ISBN 978-iv-04-715292-2 (in Japanese).
  7. Vol. vii (ch. 27–thirty): そらのおとしもの (7). October 26, 2009 ISBN 978-4-04-715301-1 (in Japanese).
  8. Vol. viii (ch. 31–34): そらのおとしもの (8). March 26, 2010 ISBN 978-4-04-715399-8 (in Japanese).
  9. Vol. 9 (ch. 35–38): そらのおとしもの (nine). September 9, 2010 ISBN 978-4-04-900800-5 (in Japanese).
  10. Vol. 10 (ch. 39–42): そらのおとしもの (10). October 26, 2010 ISBN 978-iv-04-715545-ix (in Japanese).
  11. Vol. 11 (ch. 43–46): そらのおとしもの (11). January 26, 2011 ISBN 978-four-04-715603-6 (in Japanese).
  12. Vol. 12 (ch. 47–50): そらのおとしもの (12). June 4, 2011 ISBN 978-4-04-715711-8 (in Japanese).
  13. Vol. 13 (ch. 51–54): そらのおとしもの (13). November 26, 2011 ISBN 978-4-04-120008-7 (in Japanese).
  14. Vol. fourteen (ch. 55–57): そらのおとしもの (14). March 26, 2012 ISBN 978-4-04-120163-3 (in Japanese).
  15. Vol. 15 (ch. 58–61): そらのおとしもの (15). July 26, 2012 ISBN 978-4-04-120322-4 (in Japanese).
  16. Vol. xvi (ch. 62–65): そらのおとしもの (16). October 26, 2012 ISBN 978-4-04-120442-9 (in Japanese).
  17. Vol. 17 (ch. 66–69): そらのおとしもの (17). April 26, 2013 ISBN 978-4-04-120666-9 (in Japanese).
  18. Vol. 18 (ch. 70–73): そらのおとしもの (eighteen). October 26, 2013 ISBN 978-4-04-120821-2 (in Japanese).

Japanese notes and terminology [edit]

  1. ^ 空の女王 (ウラヌス・クイーン) , Uranusu Kuīn
  2. ^ イージス , Ījisu
  3. ^ アルテミス , Arutemisu
  4. ^ パラダイスソング , Paradaisu Songu
  5. ^ アフロディーテ , Afurodīte
  6. ^ クリサオル , Kurisaoru
  7. ^ デメテル , Demeteru
  8. ^ ゼウス , Zeusu
  9. ^ ミノス , Minosu

Other notes [edit]

  1. ^ Angeloids ( エンジェロイド , Enjeroido ) are a serial of gynoids from Synapse that have wings similar Angels. They are programmed to serve their masters using a process called "imprinting", represented by neck collar and chain that extends to her chosen principal's hand.[ch. 3] Each Angeloid is designated with a letter of the Greek alphabet, and can be programmed with abilities and powers that are a part of three main parameters: battle capability, emotional control and processing capability. The Angeloids' names, weapons, and abilities are primarily derived from Greek gods and mythological figures.
  2. ^ In the Funimation dub, one of the duo is named Harpy and the other is named Gamma.

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Heaven'southward Lost Holding". Funimation. Retrieved November half-dozen, 2018.
  2. ^ Theron, Martin (February 10, 2012). "Blu-Ray + DVD - Season i Complete Set Express Edition". Anime News Network . Retrieved November half dozen, 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Sora no Otoshimono Manga Has Anime in Development". Anime News Network. January 23, 2009. Retrieved January 24, 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Sora no Otoshimono Film Trailer Streamed". Anime News Network. March 21, 2011. Retrieved March 22, 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Sora no Otoshimono/Heaven's Lost Property's New Anime to Play in Theaters in 2014". Anime News Network. Oct 24, 2013. Retrieved October 30, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d Sora no Otoshimono Forte anime, episode vi
  7. ^ a b c Sora no Otoshimono Forte anime, episode iii
  8. ^ Sora no Otoshimono, episode 8
  9. ^ "Sora no Otoshimono/Heaven's Lost Property Manga to Terminate in January". Anime News Network. Dec 25, 2013. Retrieved December 26, 2013.
  10. ^ "Black Rock Shooter's 4-Console Manga Launches This Week". Anime News Network. 2011-03-07.
  11. ^ "Sora no Otoshimono DVD volumes" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Pictures. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  12. ^ "そらのおとしもの (9) オリジナルアニメDVD付き限定版" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. Retrieved September four, 2010.
  13. ^ "Sora no Otoshimono 's 2d TV Season Reportedly Greenish-Lit". Anime News Network. March sixteen, 2010. Retrieved March 22, 2010.
  14. ^ "Crunchyroll Adds Heaven's Lost Holding 2, Panty & Stocking, Fortune Arterial (Updated)". Anime News Network. September 15, 2010. Retrieved September 25, 2010.
  15. ^ "Sora no Otoshimono: Forte DVD volumes" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Pictures. Retrieved June 7, 2011.
  16. ^ "Funimation Adds Rosario + Vampire, Chaos;HEAd, Regios". Anime News Network. May fifteen, 2010. Retrieved May 15, 2010.
  17. ^ "Funimations Adds Kuragehime, 2d Heaven'south Lost Property". Anime News Network. October 27, 2010. Retrieved Oct 27, 2010.
  18. ^ "Funimation December 2011 releases". Janaiblog. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved September xv, 2011.
  19. ^ Saabedra, Humberto (2012-01-12). "Funimation Responds to Canceled Heaven's Lost Property Forte Blu-Ray". Crunchyroll.com.
  20. ^ "Heaven's Lost Belongings Forte: Season 2 Blu-ray". Blu-ray.com. Retrieved October x, 2013.
  21. ^ "Sora no Otoshimono: Forte Anime Motion-picture show Dark-green-Lit". Anime News Network. November v, 2010. Retrieved November 6, 2010.
  22. ^ "Heaven'southward Lost Holding Movie DVD/Blu-Ray Combo (Hyb): Angeloid of Clockwork". The Right Stuf International. Archived from the original on February 1, 2013. Retrieved December 27, 2012.
  23. ^ "Funimation Adds Heaven's Lost Property/SoraOto Motion picture". Anime News Network. July 29, 2011. Retrieved Oct 28, 2021.
  24. ^ そらのおとしもの (in Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  25. ^ "そらのおとしものf" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. Retrieved September four, 2010.
  26. ^ "Sora no otoshimono Dokidoki Summer Vacation [PSP]". cdjapan.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2012-07-25 .
  27. ^ "そらのおとしものフォルテ Dreamy Flavour | 2011年1月27日発売" (in Japanese). Kadokawa Shoten. Archived from the original on September 7, 2014. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  28. ^ "Consummate releases of Sora no Otoshimono". cdjapan.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2012-07-25 .
  29. ^ "Anime Mouse Pad Sora Otoshimono". amazon.com . Retrieved 2012-07-25 .
  30. ^ Jones, Tim. "Heaven's Lost Property". T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews . Retrieved 2012-07-24 .
  31. ^ Beveridge, Chris (2010-12-17). "Sora No Otoshimono Forte Episode #12". Mania.com. Archived from the original on 2012-x-13. Retrieved 2012-07-24 .
  32. ^ Martin, Theron (2012-07-xiii). "Heaven's Lost Belongings Forte DVD Review". Anime News Network.
  33. ^ Amith, Dennis (2012-01-11). "Sora no Otoshimono: Heaven's Lost Property – Season 1 (a J!-ENT Anime Blu-ray Disc Review)". J-ENT.
  34. ^ "Sora No Otoshimono Flying Panties Event Planned". Anime News Network. 2010-01-thirty.
  35. ^ ""Sky Total of Flight Panties" became real, Video of Flying Session in Sora-Fes!". Gigazine.net. 2010-03-xi. - translated from the Japanese commodity posted on March 8, 2010
  36. ^ Newtype (in Japanese): 154. January 2011.
  37. ^ "Crunchyroll Ranks Fall 2010 Simulcasts past Popularity". Anime News Network. 2010-x-12.

External links [edit]

Official websites
  • Sky's Lost Property at Funimation
  • Sora no Otoshimono at Kadokawa (in Japanese)
  • Sora no Otoshimono: Heart-Throbbing Summer Vacation (in Japanese)
  • Sora no Otoshimono Forte: Dreamy Flavor (in Japanese)
Additional websites
  • Heaven'southward Lost Belongings (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
  • Sky's Lost Belongings at IMDb

johnstongiceins.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heaven%27s_Lost_Property

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