Title | Rating | Synopsis |
---|---|---|
R | ||
![]() Rikujyou Bouei Tai Mao-chan |
Rent |
Mao-chan is an 8-year old girl who wants to defend Japan from the evils of those ever-so-cute aliens that just keep landing from outer space. Fortunately her grandfather is in charge of the Ground Defense Force and so Mao-chan and two other 8-year old girls (Silvia-chan and Misora-chan) are given the task to defend Japan's ground, air, and sea. Cute girls to fight cute aliens thanks to alien technology left by the turtle Tamo-chan (Love Hina) which transforms the girls into "magical" girls. Why are the cute aliens invading Earth? |
Rose of Versailles | Buy | See Versailles no Bara |
S | ||
![]() Sabagebu! |
Watch | Transfer student Momoka Sonokawa finds herself press-ganged into her new school's strange Survival Game Club. |
Sailor Moon | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon |
Sailor Moon 1st season | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon |
Sailor Moon 2nd season | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R |
Sailor Moon 3rd season | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon S |
Sailor Moon 5th season | Buy | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon Sailor Stars |
Sailor Moon R | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R |
Sailor Moon R Movie | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R Movie |
Sailor Moon R Movie "Promise of the Rose" | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R Movie |
Sailor Moon Romance | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R |
Sailor Moon S | Rent | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon S |
Sailor Moon S Movie | Buy | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon S Movie: Kaguya-hime no Koibito |
Sailor Moon S Movie: Hearts in Ice | Buy | See Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon S Movie: Kaguya-hime no Koibito |
Shoujo: (Target Group) (↗shoujo () = "young lady", "virgin", "maiden"; opposite of "Shounen") A style of artwork and story created for girls (usually of age 10 to 18). Characterized by plots that focus on emotions and relationships, and art that tends toward the florid, with lanky characters and rather effeminate (but always attractive) men. Mostly popular with teenagers in Japan, most shoujo-style work has not spread widely, but it does occasionally gain recognition outside Japan (some examples are Shoujo Kakumei Utena and X (TV)). The most common uses are "shoujo manga", literally meaning "girls' comics", and "shoujo anime" meaning "girls' animation." Also romanized as "shojo" (actually a different word "処女"
in Japanese). (Please credit http://animeworld.com/glossary.html as the source of this information; see also: ↗Wikipedia:Shoujo Manga.)