Jigyaku no Uta

Jigyaku no Uta (自虐の詩, lit. "Self-torture Song") is a manga series by Yoshiie Gouda. Yukihiko Tsutsumi adapted the series into a film, known in Japan under the same title and known in the United States as Happily Ever After. Viz Pictures licensed the film for release in the United States.

Jigyaku no Uta
自虐の詩
Manga
Written byYoshiie Gouda
Published byKobunsha
Takeshobo
MagazineWeekly Hōseki
Original run19851990
Volumes5
Live-action film
Happily Ever After
Directed byYukihiko Tsutsumi
ReleasedOctober 27, 2007

The series follows husband and wife Isao Hayama (葉山 イサオ, Hayama Isao) and Yukie Morita (森田 幸江, Morita Yukie). Yukie works at a noodle shop for long hours while Isao is a lazy gangster. Yukie's friends ask her to leave her husband, but Yukie feels an obligation to him because Isao had initially saved her from misery.

The film aired in a selection of theaters in the United States.[1][2]

Principal cast

gollark: With companies or people or whatever, you can usually just go to a different one. You *can't* do that for governments.
gollark: They do not, at least, have legally binding power and the whole "monopoly on violence" thing going on.
gollark: If it's really easy to convert some new opinion into binding law, then people will do it lots and you get badness.
gollark: And I don't trust the government much either, because they tend to grow excessively and/or do stupid/powergrabby things.
gollark: I don't really trust "the aggregated opinion of the majority" to be remotely sensible.

References

  1. "Happily Ever After." VIZ Pictures. Retrieved on June 26, 2009.
  2. "Happily Ever After To Screen In Select U.S. Cities Archived 2009-06-21 at the Wayback Machine." Animation World Network. August 11, 2008. Retrieved on June 26, 2009.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.