Le Portrait de Petit Cossette

(Redirected from Cossette no Shouzou)

Le Portrait de Petit Cossette (Japanese: コゼットの肖像, Hepburn: Kozetto no Shōzō, "The Portrait of Cossette") is a Japanese original video animation anime series produced by Aniplex and animated by Daume. It spanned 3 episode OVA series and ran in 2004. It was licensed for North American distribution by Geneon Entertainment and released as Le Portrait de Petite Cossette. The OVAs were broadcast in the United States on Fuse on December 15, 2007, and in Canada on G4techTV's Anime Current programming block from January 19, 2008 to February 2, 2008. It is currently licensed by Sentai Filmworks and available for streaming and video-on-demand via The Anime Network.

Le Portrait de Petit Cossette
The cover of the third Region 2 volume as released by Aniplex on December 22, 2004
コゼットの肖像
(Kozetto no Shōzō)
Genre
Original video animation
Directed byAkiyuki Shinbo
Produced by
  • Masatoshi Fujimoto
  • Takeshi Anzai
  • Ai Abe
Written byMayori Sekijima
Music byYuki Kajiura
StudioDaume
Licensed by
Released May 26, 2004 December 22, 2004
Runtime38 minutes
Episodes3
Manga
Written byAsuka Katsura
Published byKodansha
English publisher
MagazineMagazine Z
DemographicSeinen
Original runAugust 11, 2004December 21, 2004
Volumes2

The series was adapted into a manga series by Asuka Katsura. It spanned two volumes and was published in 2004. The English-language release is published by Tokyopop.

Plot

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The series focuses on Eiri Kurahashi, a college art student who works in an antique shop. One day, he sees the image of a girl in an antique glass. To his shock, she appears to be moving and living out her life before his eyes. He becomes infatuated with the girl, and one night at midnight, he somehow makes contact with her. He learns that her name is Cossette, and that she was an aristocrat's daughter during the 18th century. She reveals to him that her spirit has been entrapped within the glass because the artist Marcello Orlando murdered her. She tells Eiri that, in order to set her free, a man must be willing to take upon himself punishment for the sins Marcello committed.

As the series progresses, Eiri is tortured mentally and physically by Cossette, who demands that he prove his professed love for her. It is revealed that Eiri is the reincarnation of Marcello, and that Cossette is becoming as infatuated with him as he is with her. Also depicted are the efforts of the women in Eiri's life—relatives, friends, mentors, and the girl who secretly loves him—to free him from what is becoming apparent to them as a self-destructive path.

Characters

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Cossette d'Auvergne from Le Portrait de Petit Cossette
Cossette d'Auvergne (コゼット・ドーヴェルニュ, Kozetto Dōverunyu)
Cossette is a beautiful young girl whose spirit haunts a delicate Venetian glass. With delicate eyes, long blond hair and a lithe frame, her beauty is both haunting and enchanting. She was murdered by her lover Marcello Orlando because he became obsessed with her beauty and wanted her to stay young forever. Her soul was trapped in a glass. She convinced Eiri to enter "a pact of blood" to take revenge on Marcello. Since Eiri is the reincarnation of Marcello, she achieves this by torturing him. She later fell in love with Eiri.
There is a second Cossette created by Marcello. He drew such a perfect portrait of her, it gained life of its own. This Cossette was similar to the original, but a different being. She was jealous of the affection Eiri gave to the original Cossette and believed she was the true Cossette. She loved Marcello and considered Eiri a vessel for Marcello's soul.
Eiri Kurahashi (倉橋 永莉, Kurahashi Eiri)
Eiri is a talented budding artist, and works in his family's antique shop. His young world is transformed after he stumbles upon a delicate Venetian glass that is but a portal into the tragic world of a young girl named Cossette. He falls in love with this illusion that is as beautiful as she is cursed. Eiri is in fact the reincarnation of Marcello, who was brought back by Cossette because she was desperate to purify herself and the other glasses that became cursed after Marcello murdered her and her family. He agrees to the blood pact because he does not want to lose Cossette and allows her to torture him for the same reason, vowing that no matter how much pain he suffers he will not kill Cossette like Marcello did.
Shoko Mataki (真滝 翔子, Mataki Shōko)
Shoko is a close friend and confidant of Eiri. Although an extremely sharp young lady, her insecurity is coupled with a neurotic nature that is endearing. She easily gets jealous when she hears about Eiri's love life. She cares deeply about him when he changes due to the pact he entered with Cossette, and is horrified when he starts to be wounded, asking what kind of person who claimed she loved him could do that.
Yuu Saiga (斎賀 由布, Saiga Yūu)
A young girl with undeveloped psychic abilities who works at the local deli. Although she doesn't know exactly what is going on with Eiri, her abilities allow her some insight into the paranormal roots of Eiri's obsession.
Michiru Yajiri (鏃 みちる, Yajiri Michiru)
Michiru works as the local tarot card reader and shares with Eiri an emotional bond that weaves her into the saga of Cossette's vengeance.
Zenshinni of Shakado (釈迦堂 菩心尼, Shakadō-Zenshinni)
As the local priestess and psychic, Shakado's talents reveal frightening energies hovering over Eiri like the shadow of death. She attempts an exorcism to free him, but isn't powerful enough to break the blood pact.
Hatsumi Mataki (真滝 八海, Mataki Hatsumi)
The local physician and Shoko's aunt, Hatsumi is utterly confounded by Eiri's psychosomatic afflictions. When Shoko's soul is sent to Purgatory, she is unable to find a scientific explanation for her condition.
Marcello Orlando (マルチェロ・オルランド, Maruchero Orurando)
A talented artist that was close with Cossette's family and was Cossette's fiancee. He murdered her and her family out of obsession with the Cossette he painted, not wishing Cossette to grow up. This action lead to the grudges of her family seeping into the glass objects of the house, turning them into cursed spirits. Their despair, and her own at his betrayal, weighed down Cossette, trapping her in her glass. The final portrait he drew of Cossette was so life like that it gained a soul of its own similar, though different, from Cossette's true soul trapped in the glass. He was reincarnated as Eiri.
Michio Hisamoto (久本 道夫, Hisamoto Michio)
He is a student who attends the same university as Eiri. An adult, he is frequently seen smoking.
Yutaka Enokido (榎戸 豊, Enokido Yutaka)
He is an old man who made a great deal of money through tax and land fraud and buys the glass set Cossette's glass was a part of, although not Cossette's glass, which Eiri has removed.
Kaori Nishimoto (西本 香織, Nishimoto Kaori)
She is the much younger lover of Yutaka Enokido. She frequently smokes and jokingly calls Yutaka her papa.

Media

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Aniplex released the three Region 2 DVD compilations from May 26, 2004 to December 22, 2004.[3][4] On December 1, 2004, the soundtrack to the OVA was released by Wint. It contained eighteen tracks by Yuki Kajiura, including the main theme music "Jewel" (宝石, Hōseki).[5] Later released as a single on August 11, 2004, "Hōseki" is sung by Marina Inoue.[6] During the period when Geneon Entertainment held the license, the episodes were aired on Fuse TV The anime has since been relicensed by Sentai Filmworks, with distribution from Section23 Films. The OVA was released on April 20, 2010 and streamed on the Anime Network a month later.[7]

Aniplex DVD releases
Volume Released
1 May 26, 2004[3]
2 July 28, 2004[8]
3 December 22, 2004[4]

Petit Cossette is also licensed in New Zealand and Australia by Madman Entertainment,[9] and in German by Tokyopop.[10]

Manga

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Le Portrait de Petit Cossette appeared as a serial in Monthly Magazine Z.[11] Kodansha collected the chapters into two tankōbon volume and published them from August 11, 2004, to December 21, 2004.[12][13]

Tokyopop licensed Le Portrait de Petit Cossette for an English-language release in North America and published the volumes from July 2006 to November 2006. However, both volumes are now out of print.[14] The series is also licensed in France by Asuka Comics.[15]

No. Original release date Original ISBN North American release date North American ISBN
01 August 11, 2004[12]978-4-06-349183-8July 11, 2006[16]978-1-59816-530-2
02 December 21, 2004[13]978-4-06-349191-3November 7, 2006[17]978-1-59816-531-9

Production

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SME Visual Works (later Aniplex) produced Masatoshi Fujimoto had watched Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995) and was interested in working with an "unusual... auteur"-like director similar to Hideaki Anno, and having then watched the Starship Girl Yamamoto Yohko OVAs (1996–1997) and Metal Fighter Miku (1994) was convinced that Akiyuki Shinbo was one such director that he would like to work with.[18] The pair were originally conceiving an adaptation of Go Nagai's popular Devilman manga, but the plans never went through, and instead Cossette was concepted.[18] According to Fujimoto, the intent behind the work was to illuminate "Shinbo as an auteur."

The series featured several of Shinbo's prior collaborators: notably writer Mayori Sekijima [ja], animation studio Daume, and co-art director Junichi Higashi [ja] of Studio Easter.[19] The series was also the first collaboration between Shinbo and co-art director Hisaharu Iijima,[19] who would work together on series produced by Shaft for nearly 20 years. Shinbo and the series' character designer, Hirofumi Suzuki [ja], worked in a semi-subterranean room at Daume mostly by themselves (despite the fact that the room could accommodate for many more people).[20] The character design for Cossette herself was based on a doll, but Suzuki believed he had unconscious influence through Shinbo's The SoulTaker (2001) and the particular character designs of animator Akio Watanabe.[21] Shinbo humored with Suzuki that the series was like an unofficial sequel to The SoulTaker given the main vocal cast is the same and that it has a similar worldview.[21] Speaking with Shinbo in an inerview, Animestyle magazine editor-in-chief Yūichirō Oguro called the atmosphere between the two series "exactly the same."[22]

Shinbo worked on the series with a philosophy of wanting it to be seen by many people.[20] He described the works he had made up until then as being made in a self-centered way and that those who couldn't follow his work didn't need to; however, he started thinking that a work that doesn't "engage with the world" was useless, so it was around the time of Cossette that he began to look for ways to make his works more accessible.[20]

Reception

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Anime News Network's Theron Martin described it as "an artsy, stylish supernatural horror story about love and obsession. Its dramatic visuals, exceptional artistry, and sumptuous musical scoring make watching it quite an experience, and the story isn't half bad, either." However, he noted that the storyline of the first two episodes was "fairly predictable" and the secondary characters were "underdeveloped and underused".[23] Reviewers at Mania Entertainment praised it as "a love story that's almost devoid of happiness, with a style and presentation that makes it engrossing, and yet not exactly easy to watch" and "an easy recommendation for those looking for something more mature from their anime."[24][25]

Notes

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Works cited

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References

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  1. ^ a b Tiu, Diane. "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette". T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
  2. ^ "The Fuse to Air Geneon Anime". ICv2. May 10, 2007. Retrieved January 5, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette vol.1 Animation". CD Japan. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette vol.3 Animation". CD Japan. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  5. ^ "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette - Original Soundtrack". CD Japan. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  6. ^ "Hoseki Marina Inoue [CD]". CD Japan. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  7. ^ "Section23 Films Announces April Slate". Anime News Network. 2010-01-21.
  8. ^ "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette vol.2 Animation". CD Japan. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  9. ^ "Petite Cossette". Madman Entertainment. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2016.
  10. ^ "DVD: Anime: Das Bildnis der Petit Cossette: Einleitung" [DVD: Anime: Le Portrait de Petit Cossette: Introduction] (in German). Tokyopop. Archived from the original on 23 November 2009. Retrieved 5 November 2009.
  11. ^ "Magazine Z, Comi Di Gi+ Manga Mags Ending in Japan". Anime News Network. 3 September 2008. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  12. ^ a b "Cosette House" (in Japanese). Kodansha. Archived from the original on 11 December 2004. Retrieved 1 February 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^ a b コゼットの肖像(2) (in Japanese). Kodansha. Archived from the original on 9 June 2012. Retrieved 1 February 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  14. ^ Debi Aoki (1 September 2009). "The Kodansha-TokyoPop Split: Which Manga Are Left in Limbo?". About.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2014. Retrieved 24 November 2009.
  15. ^ "Le Portrait de Petit Cossette". Asuka Comics. Archived from the original on 17 September 2010. Retrieved 18 October 2016.
  16. ^ "Manga+Comics: Book Catalog". Tokyopop. Archived from the original on 14 February 2010. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  17. ^ "Manga+Comics: Book Catalog". Tokyopop. Archived from the original on 14 February 2010. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  18. ^ a b "Interview: Akiyuki Shinbo (WEB Anime Style 2/14/2005) Part 1". Wave Motion Cannon. Translated by Morissy, Kim. October 30, 2016. Archived from the original on October 1, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  19. ^ a b "Interview: Akiyuki Shinbo (WEB Anime Style 2/14/2005) Part 2". Wave Motion Cannon. July 11, 2017. Archived from the original on September 24, 2020. Retrieved September 23, 2020.
  20. ^ a b c Shinbo 2012, p. 233.
  21. ^ a b Shinbo 2012, p. 189-202.
  22. ^ "Interview: Akiyuki Shinbo (Animage February 2005/Vol 320)". Wave Motion Cannon. Translated by Park, Hyun. November 15, 2016. Archived from the original on February 17, 2020. Retrieved April 29, 2020.
  23. ^ Theron Martin (15 September 2005). "Petit Cossette DVD 1 - Review -". Anime News Network. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  24. ^ Morton, Bryan (5 February 2007). "Le Portrait de Petite Cossette". Mania Entertainment. Archived from the original on 8 October 2012. Retrieved 18 October 2016. Petite Cossette is unusual in many ways " [sic] a love story that's almost devoid of happiness, with a style and presentation that makes it engrossing, and yet not exactly easy to watch.
  25. ^ Beveridge, Chris (25 April 2010). "Le Portraite Petite Cossette". Mania Entertainment. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 18 October 2016. With it being a one-time pick-up, it's definitely an easy recommendation for those looking for something more mature from their anime.
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