Yumeiro Patissiere
Manga and television anime From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Manga and television anime From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yumeiro Patissiere (Japanese: 夢色パティシエール, Hepburn: Yumeiro Patishiēru, lit. Dream-Colored Pastry Chef, sometimes stylized Yumeiro Pâtissière) is a shōjo manga and anime series by Natsumi Matsumoto. It began serialization on September 3, 2008, in the October 2008 issue of Ribon.[2] The series ended on June 3, 2011, with a total of 12 tankōbon volumes.[3] The manga won the 56th Shogakukan Manga Awards in the Children's category.[4]
Yumeiro Patissiere | |
夢色パティシエール (Yumeiro Patishiēru) | |
---|---|
Genre | Cooking[1] |
Manga | |
Written by | Natsumi Matsumoto |
Published by | Shueisha |
Magazine | Ribon |
Demographic | Shōjo |
Original run | October 2008 – July 2011 |
Volumes | 12 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Iku Suzuki |
Studio | Studio Hibari (animation) Pierrot (production) |
Licensed by | |
Original network | NNS (YTV), Disney Channel |
Original run | October 4, 2009 – December 26, 2010 |
Episodes | 63 + OVA |
The series was adapted into two anime television series by Pierrot and Studio Hibari.[5] The series was licensed by Crunchyroll for online streaming with English subtitles.[6] The anime has since been licensed by Maiden Japan.[7]
Yumeiro Pâtissière: Fourteen-year-old Ichigo Amano (her name means strawberry) is clumsy and does not have any talent except for eating sweets (specifically cakes). When she stumbles upon a Sweets Festival, she meets Henri-sensei who acknowledges her ability of taste and invites her to transfer to St. Marie Academy to become a pâtissière. Ichigo has trouble adjusting initially, but with the help of the 3 Sweets Princes (Makoto Kashino, Satsuki Hanabusa, and Sennosuke Andou) and the Sweets Spirits (Vanilla, Chocolat, Caramel, and Cafe), she gains the confidence and skill to work towards becoming a pâtissière. Throughout the entire anime is Ichigo and the Sweet Princes trying to win the Grand Prix, which allowed them to go to Paris. Throughout the competition, Ichigo has a lot of character change and she grows little by little. She realizes many things and her skills are improving rapidly.
Yumeiro Pâtissière Professional: Two years after studying in Paris, the sixteen-year-old Ichigo returns to Japan as a professional pâtissière. As soon as she returns, she finds Team Ichigo breaking up. The Sweets Princes, Hanabusa and Andou, take long absences from school to work for their dreams, leaving only Ichigo and Kashino. Kashino skipped a grade due to having top grades back at Paris. Soon a "new" Team Ichigo is formed by Henri-sensei for the project. The team includes Lemon Yamagishi, Johnny McBeal, Makoto Kashino, and Amano Ichigo. They are now working as professionals for the project and their dreams in St. Marie Garden.
Written and drawn by Natsumi Matsumoto, the Yumeiro Patissiere manga began serialization in Shueisha's shōjo manga magazine Ribon on September 3, 2008, in the October issue of the magazine.[2] Each chapter is called a "recette" (French for recipe); The series ended on June 3, 2011, and is 12 volumes total.[3] The series is licensed by Sharp Point Press in Taiwan.[8]
No. | Japanese release date | Japanese ISBN | |
---|---|---|---|
01 | December 15, 2008[9] | 978-4-08-856860-7 | |
| |||
02 | April 15, 2009[10] | 978-4-08-856882-9 | |
| |||
03 | August 15, 2009[11] | 978-4-08-867010-2 | |
| |||
04 | November 13, 2009[12] | 978-4-08-867020-1 | |
| |||
05 | February 4, 2010[13] | 978-4-08-867036-2 | |
| |||
06 | May 14, 2010[14] | 978-4-08-867053-9 | |
| |||
07 | August 12, 2010[15] | 978-4-08-867069-0 | |
08 | December 15, 2010[16] | 978-4-08-867088-1 | |
09 | May 13, 2011[17] | 978-4-08-867119-2 | |
10 | October 14, 2011[18] | 978-4-08-867145-1 | |
11 | March 15, 2013[19][20] | 978-4-08-867258-8 | |
12 | September 13, 2013[21][22] | 978-4-08-867291-5 |
The anime adaptation was accidentally announced in June 2009 by a listing from one of the card game series based on the manga.[5] The series began airing on October 4, 2009, on Yomiuri TV.[23] The series was simulcasted on Crunchyroll with English subtitles.[6] The sweets in the series were all created by the Paris-based patissier Aoki Sadaharu.[24] A one episode side story, title Yumeiro Pâtissière Mune Kyun Tropical Island! (夢色パティシエール 胸キュントロピカルアイランド!, Yumeiro Pâtissière: Heart-Racing Tropical Island!) was shown at the "Natsu Doki– Ribon–kko Party 5" event for Ribon magazine in the summer of 2010.[25] The episode was included on a DVD with the November issue of Ribon.[26] A second series, taking place two years later than the first, began airing on October 3, 2010. The second season is entitled Yumeiro Pâtissière SP Professional and introduces new characters.[27]
The first season of the anime series uses two pieces of theme music, one opening and one closing. The opening is Yume ni Yell! Patissiere (夢にエール!パティシエール♪, Yell For the Dream! Patissiere) and the ending is Ichigo no Mirakurūru (いちごのミラクルール, Ichigo's Miracle–le). The CD single for the two was released by the Columbia Music Entertainment on January 20, 2010, in a regular and limited edition. The limited edition comes with extra charms and costs ¥1,365, but is otherwise the same as the regular edition, which costs ¥1,050.[28][29] A soundtrack for the series was released on April 21, 2010, entitled Yumeiro Patissiere KiraKira ☆ Myūjikku (夢色パティシエール きらきら☆ミュージック, Yumeiro Patissiere SparkleSparkle ☆ Music).[30][31]
A Nintendo DS game based on the series was released on May 27, 2010. The game is entitled Yumeiro Patissiere: My Sweet Cooking (夢色パティシエールマイスイーツクッキング, Yumeiro Patishiēru Mai Suītsu Kukkingu) and was released by Konami.[32][33]
A trading card game based on the manga was released in Japan by Konami during the serialization of the series. There are two different series, Sweets Deco Cards and My Sweets Cards.[5][34]
A cookbook for the series entitled "Yumeiro Patissiere Special Recipe Book: Oyako de Tsukuru Hajimete no Sweets" (夢色パティシエール スペシャルレシピブック 親子で作るはじめてのスイーツ) (ISBN 978-4-08-102082-9) was released by Shueisha on December 1, 2009, for ¥1200.[35][36][37]
Carlo Santos of Anime News Network calls the anime "a baking-themed series so rife with clichés that it's hard to tell where the plagiarism stops and the actual show begins."[38] Other reviewers on the same site had slightly better opinions of the series though. Carl Kimlinger calls it "pure shōjo fluff" and says that it is a "sugary little distraction that won't harm any sensibilities."[39] Theron Martin suggests either eating before or during viewing as the series is "undoubtedly one of the tastiest-looking series to come along in quite some time." Martin critiqued the art of the series however, saying "The dessert designs are unquestionably the visual highlight, as otherwise the artistry and technical merits are rather bland."[40] Summer Mullins also notes that the sweets are the best part of the animation, saying, "those detailed shots [of the sweets] highlight the fact that some of the animation is only so-so".[24] As of May 11, 2010 Crunchyroll's website listed Yumeiro Patissiere with an overall ranking of 4.8 out of 5 stars, with a total of 1761 votes.[41]
The manga received the Shogakukan Manga Award for best children's manga of 2010.[4]
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