Tatamy Galaxy
Tatamy Galaxy
Tatamy Galaxy
The novel was adapted into an 11-episode anime television series by Madhouse
directed by Masaaki Yuasa, which aired on Fuji Television's late-night
Noitamina programming block from April 22 to July 1, 2010. The Tatami Galaxy
won the 2010 Japan Media Arts Festival Grand Prize in the Animation Division.
Contents
Plot
Characters DVD cover art
Media 四畳半神話大系
Novel
(Yojōhan Shinwa Taikei)
Anime
Episode list Genre Psychological,
Film romance[1]
Reception Novel
References Written by Tomihiko Morimi
External links Published by Ohta Publishing
Kadokawa Shoten
Media
Novel
The Tatami Galaxy was first released as a novel by Tomihiko Morimi, published in December 2004 as a tankōbon by Ohta
Publishing, and republished in March 2008 as a bunkoban by Kadokawa Shoten.[2] The novel was translated into Korean by
Viche in August 2008,[3] traditional Chinese by China Times Publishing in December 2009,[4] and simplified Chinese by
Shanghai People's Publishing House in August 2010.[5]
Anime
A television adaptation of The Tatami Galaxy was produced by Madhouse, with Masaaki Yuasa as director, Makoto Ueda as
screenwriter, and Michiru Ōshima as composer.[6] The series premiered on April 22, 2010 as a part of Fuji TV's noitamina
programming block.[7] Two pieces of theme music are used for the series: "Maigoinu to Ame no Beat" by Asian Kung-Fu
Generation as the opening theme, and "Kami-sama no Iutōri (神様のいうとおり, "As God Dictates") by Etsuko Yakushimaru as
the closing theme.[8]
Three seven-minute shorts were included with the DVD and Blu-ray release of the series. The first DVD/BD volume was
released on August 20, 2010 and contained the first short; the second and third shorts were released on the third and fourth
DVD/BD volumes on October 22, 2010 and November 26, 2010, respectively.[9]
In North America the series was simulcast by Funimation,[10] and licensed by Beez Entertainment in the United Kingdom.[11] In
June 2019, Funimation announced the release of the series on Blu-ray and DVD with subtitles only on September 3.[12]
Episode list
Storyboard Episode Original air
# Title
artist director date
"Tennis Circle "Cupid""
Masaaki Masaaki
1 "Tenisu Sākuru "Kyūpiddo"" (テニスサークル「キューピ April 22, 2010
Yuasa Yuasa
ッド」)
At a ramen stall behind Shimogamo Shrine, the protagonist meets Higuchi, who claims he is a god of
matchmaking and that Akashi will be bound to either the protagonist or Ozu. The protagonist reflects on joining the
tennis circle as freshman, only to become embittered upon learning its membership was composed entirely of
couples; abetted by Ozu, he spent the next two years sabotaging the relationships of his clubmates. He came to
like Akashi, and had promised her to take her to the ramen stall behind the shrine. Higuchi tells the protagonist to
confess his feelings to Akashi during Gozan no Okuribi, but he fails to do so.
The protagonist joins the movie circle, but his ideas for films are rejected by Jogasaki, the circle’s president.
Encouraged by Ozu, the protagonist spends the next two years shooting a documentary exposing the worst
aspects of Jogasaki's character, including his love doll Kaori. He becomes fond of Akashi, the only member of the
circle who takes an interest in his films, but she rebuffs him upon seeing the exposé.
The protagonist joins the cycling club, but is too frail to be competitive in races. He spends the next two years
saving money to buy a road bike, but it is stolen. Akashi recruits the protagonist to be the pilot of the birdman
glider she is building; the protagonist trains under Jogasaki to prepare for the event, but his increased musculature
makes him too heavy for the glider. When Ozu attempts to steal the glider, it slips down a grade towards a pond.
The protagonist attempts to steer the plane to safety, but instead crashes it.
The protagonist and Ozu become disciples of Higuchi, who over the course of two years makes them do a variety
of mundane tasks. The protagonist’s final task is to find a mythical tortoise brush that can purportedly clean
anything; he is aided by Akashi, also a disciple of Higuchi. Upon finding the brush, Higuchi reveals that he has
chosen the protagonist as his successor to carry on a “proxy proxy war” with Jogasaki, the original cause of which
has become lost to time. Jogasaki chooses Ozu as his successor, who is revealed to have been a double agent all
along.
The protagonist joins the softball team, but finds that the outward kindness of its membership mask their hive mind
and cult-like tendencies. The team is owned by a health food company, and the protagonist falls for the company
owner’s daughter; he spends the next two years buying a large volume of the company’s products, before being
invited to visit their factory. The company owner believes that the world will end in 2012 and has built a Noah's Ark,
which is subsequently stolen and crashed by Ozu. The protagonist and Ozu flee the factory, and are rescued by
the ramen shop owner.
The protagonist joins three circles as a freshman, one of which is the English Conversation Circle. He becomes
close to Hanuki, a fellow member of the club, while simultaneously living with Kaori the love doll and exchanging
letters with a girl named Keiko. One night, he must choose between getting drinks with Hanuki, spending time with
Kaori before returning her to Jogasaki, or meeting Keiko in person. He chooses Hanuki, and after a night of heavy
drinking, ends up at her apartment. To the chagrin of Johnny, the personification of the protagonist’s libido, he
chooses to not reciprocate Hanuki’s inebriated flirting and returns home.
The third of the three clubs joined by the protagonist is the Reading Circle, where Ozu lends him a novel inscribed
with the name and address of Keiko, its previous owner. Keiko and the protagonist exchange letters over the
subsequent two years, before she invites them to meet. Once again, the protagonist faces a choice between the
three women; he goes to Keiko’s apartment, only to find Ozu instead. Akashi appears and explains that she wrote
the letters at Ozu’s behest as a prank; though Ozu eventually tired of the prank, she continued to write the letters
in earnest as thanks for when the protagonist saved her at the Hero Show. The protagonist returns home, where
he is lectured by Johnny for not asking Akashi out.
As a freshman, the protagonist joins a secret society that organizes the dubious campus activities seen in the
previous episodes. While the protagonist fails in the various missions the society assigns him, Ozu is incredibly
effective and eventually becomes the leader of the society. Under Ozu, the protagonist rises through the ranks of
the society, but still feels dissatisfied with life; Higuchi explains this is because the perfect, idealized campus life he
is searching for does not actually exist. In the depths of his depression, the protagonist discovers that Ozu has a
girlfriend; he is dismayed to learn that Ozu, who always seemed to be wasting time, has truly enjoyed his college
years. The protagonist declares that he should simply stay in his 4½ tatami room; unlike in every episode prior,
time does not rewind.
Disillusioned by the discovery that a perfect life does not exist, the protagonist joins no clubs as a freshman,
choosing instead to spend all of his free time in his 4½ tatami room. He awakens one morning to discover that he
is surrounded by an infinite number of seemingly identical rooms behind every door, window, and wall. It transpires
that the rooms bear slight variations, each corresponding to a parallel universe determined by the choices he
could have (and has) made throughout the series. Overwhelmed by loneliness, the protagonist collapses. Once
again, time does not rewind.
Still trapped in the tatami world, the protagonist continues to search for an exit to no avail, eventually returning to
the room he started from. Upon noticing that Akashi's lost mochiguman hangs from the ceiling in every room, he
realizes that he loves Akashi. As he makes this realization, a swarm of moths appear, which knock him back to the
night of Gozan no Okuribi depicted in the first episode. Back in reality, he rescues Ozu from by the various groups
he has wronged throughout the series, and asks Akashi out to the ramen shop after returning her mochiguman.
The protagonist moves out of the 4½ tatami room, and begins to date Akashi. The protagonist and Akashi visit
Ozu and, in a mirrored version of their conversation from the first episode, the protagonist offers to lend assistance
to Ozu.
Film
Night Is Short, Walk On Girl, a feature film and spiritual sequel to The Tatami Galaxy, was released by Toho on April 7, 2017.[13]
Reception
The Tatami Galaxy won the grand prize in the animation category at the 14th Japan Media Arts Festival on December 8, 2010,
making it the first animated television series to win the award, with the jury describing the series in their justification as a "richly
expressive work that turns the limitations of TV on its head" and complimenting its "unique scene layouts, characters' actions and
color scheme."[14][15]
References
1. "The Tatami Galaxy" (https://www.funimation.com/shows/the-tatami-galaxy/). Funimation. Retrieved May 30,
2018.
2. 四畳半神話大系 (https://web.archive.org/web/20150410232221/http://s.kadokawa.co.jp/bunko/bk_detail.php?pcd
=200603000258) (in Japanese). Kadokawa. Archived from the original (http://s.kadokawa.co.jp/bunko/bk_detail.p
hp?pcd=200603000258) on April 10, 2015. Retrieved February 1, 2010.
3. [알라딘]다다미 넉장반 세계일주 (http://www.aladin.co.kr/shop/wproduct.aspx?ISBN=8992036647) ['Aladin' A
Round The World Of Four-and-a-half Tatami] (in Korean). Aladin. Retrieved December 2, 2010.
4. 時報悦讀網:森見登美彥《四疊半宿舍, 青春迷走》東京京都書店店員最愛一冊 (http://www.readingtimes.com.tw/ti
meshtml/ad/ai0125/index.html) [Reading times: Tomihiko Morimi "The Four-and-a-half Housing, Stray In Young
Days" One of the most popular novels by book store clerks in Tokyo and Kyoto] (in Chinese). China Times
Publishing. Retrieved December 2, 2010.
5. 易文网--图书频道--四叠半神话大系 (http://www.spph.com.cn/books/bookspec/view.asp?id=0202010000978959)
[Ewen network—Library Channel—Four-and-a-half Tatami Mythological Chronicles] (in Chinese). Aladin.
Retrieved December 2, 2010.
6. スタッフ・キャスト:四畳半神話大系 (http://yojouhan.noitamina.tv/staff.html) [Staff / Cast: The Tatami Galaxy]
(in Japanese). Fuji Television. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
7. 放送情報:四畳半神話大系 (http://yojouhan.noitamina.tv/broadcast.html) [Broadcast Information: The Tatami
Galaxy] (in Japanese). Fuji Television. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
8. 音楽:四畳半神話大系 (http://yojouhan.noitamina.tv/music.html) [Music: The Tatami Galaxy] (in Japanese). Fuji
Television. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
9. "The Tatami Galaxy BD/DVDs to Bundle 3 Unaired Shorts" (http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-05-1
3/the-tatami-galaxy-bd/dvds-to-bundle-3-unaired-shorts). Anime News Network. May 13, 2010. Retrieved
May 13, 2010.
10. "Funimation Adds House of Five Leaves, The Tatami Galaxy" (http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-04
-15/funimation-adds-house-of-the-five-leaves-the-tatami-galaxy). Anime News Network. April 15, 2010. Retrieved
May 13, 2010.
11. "Manga UK Adds Haruhi Film, 2nd Season, Haruhi-chan" (http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2010-10-31/
manga-uk-adds-haruhi-film-2nd-tv-season-haruhi-chan). Anime News Network. October 31, 2010.
12. Hodgkins, Crystalyn (June 16, 2019). "Funimation Lists Release of The Tatami Galaxy Anime on BD/DVD in
September" (http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2019-06-16/funimation-lists-release-of-the-tatami-galaxy-a
nime-on-bd-dvd-in-september/.147900). Anime News Network. Retrieved June 16, 2019.
13. Bradshaw, Peter (October 5, 2017). "The Night Is Short, Walk on Girl review – a hallucinogenic trip down a rabbit
hole" (https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/oct/05/night-is-short-walk-on-girl-review-anime). The Guardian.
Retrieved June 20, 2018. Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |website= (help)
14. "2010 Japan Media Arts Festival Animation Division Grand Prize The Tatami Galaxy" (https://web.archive.org/we
b/20110129042714/http://plaza.bunka.go.jp/english/festival/2010/animation/TheTatamiGalaxy/). Japan Media
Arts Plaza. Archived from the original (http://plaza.bunka.go.jp/english/festival/2010/animation/TheTatamiGalaxy)
on January 29, 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2011.
15. "アニメ大賞に「四畳半神話大系」 文化庁メディア芸術祭賞" (http://www.47news.jp/CN/201012/CN201012080
1000711.html) [Animation Grand Prize for The Tatami Galaxy, Japan Media Arts Festival Award]. Kyodo News.
December 8, 2010. Retrieved December 8, 2010.
External links
Official Japanese Web site (http://yojouhan.noitamina.tv) of the television series (in Japanese)
The Tatami Galaxy (https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/encyclopedia/anime.php?id=11200) (anime) at Anime
News Network's encyclopedia
Detailed posts on individual episodes (http://www.pelleas.net/aniTOP/index.php?blog=2&cat=40&page=1&paged
=2) at AniPages Daily
Review of the program (https://web.archive.org/web/20100528005032/http://twitchfilm.net/reviews/2010/05/the-ta
tami-galaxy-yojohan-shinwa-taikei-review.php) at Twitch Film
The Tatami Galaxy (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1847445/) on IMDb
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply. By using
this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia
Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.