The Japanese publisher Shogakukan has announced on Monday that it will end the school learning magazines Shōgaku Gonensei (pictured right) and Shōgaku Rokunensei (pictured left), as well as the shōjo manga magazine ChuChu (pictured below right). Shōgaku Gonensei and Shōgaku Rokunensei (literally, "Elementary Fifth-Grader" and "Elementary Sixth-Grader") will end during the current school year on February 3 and December 28, respectively, and will be replaced by a new learning manga magazine, tentatively titled Gakumanplus, next spring. ChuChu, a magazine aimed at older elementary school girls and middle school girls, will end with its February issue on December 28. Shogakukan cited the great changes in the needs of readers for its decision to reformat all its Shōjo Comic magazines for their long-term prospects.
Among the manga that Shōgaku Gonensei and Shōgaku Rokunensei serialized were Doraemon, Pokémon, Yu Yabuuchi's Naisho no Tsubomi "sex education" manga, and Shigeru Mizuki's "War and Japan" ("Sensō to Nippon") short story. Chuchu published Satoru Takamiya's Heaven's Will, Yabuuchi's Hitohira no Koi ga Furu and Hatsukoi Shinan (Instructions for First Love), Miyuki Ōbayashi's Junai Sensation, Miwako Sugiyama's Ai no Kotoba, Satoru Takamiya's Kusuriyubi Hime, and Kiyoko Arai's Yomogi Mochi Yake Ta? manga. Viz Media publishes the Pokémon and Heaven's Will manga in North America.
Shogakukan launched its Shōgaku magazines in 1922, the same year that the company itself was founded. (Shogakukan literally means "elementary school building.") At their peak in April (the start of the school year) of 1973, Shōgaku Gonensei printed 635,000 copies, and Shōgaku Rokunensei printed 460,000 copies. In recent years, the circulations of both magazines have fallen into the range of 50,000 to 60,000 copies. Shogakukan's four magazines aimed at younger elementary school students—Shōgaku Ichinensei (Elementary First-Grader) through Shōgaku Yonnensei (Elementary Fourth-Grader)—will continue to be published.
ChuChu launched as a spinoff from Ciao and Shōjo Comic magazine's editorial departments in August of 2008. ChuChu was revamped into a monthly magazine in its January 2006 issue in December of 2005. It had a print run of 180,000 at its launch, but it has been hovering around 50,000 copies recently.
The official website for the two live-action Nodame Cantabile Saishū Gakushō (Nodame Cantabile: The Final Movement) movies based on Tomoko Ninomiya's Nodame Cantabile romantic comedy manga is streaming a 95-second trailer for the first movie. The website is also streaming the earlier 34-second teaser trailer and the earlier 70-second trailer. (In the
The official website for the live-action video adaptation of Shigemitsu Harada and Nobuto Hagio's Yuria Hyaku-shiki (Yuria Type 100/Yuria 100%) science-fiction romance comedy manga has
The Box Office Mojo website reports that David Bowers and IMAGI's computer-animated film adaptation of Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy (Tetsuwan Atom) manga earned an estimated US$7,017,000 to debut at #6 on the weekend box office chart in the United States. With 3,014 theaters, the US$65-million film had an estimated per-screen average of US$2,328.
Kodansha's bimonthly Bessatsu Young Magazine will a monthly publication as of December 9. Appropriately, the manga periodical will rename itself Monthly Young Magazine when it restarts on that date.
Masahiro Itabashi and Hiroyuki Tamakoshi are restarting their popular Boys Be… romantic comedy anthology manga in the November issue of Kodansha's Magazine Special next Tuesday. The first installment of Boys Be…next season will deal with two people who, after graduating from different high schools, have a fateful meeting at a cultural festival. In the same October issue that announced the return of Boys Be…, Yuichi Kinoshita launched a new manga called Kuro no Royal (Black Royal). Smash! manga creator Kaori Saki also published a special one-shot manga titled "Bokura no Naki-Mushi Sensei" (Our Crybaby Teacher).
Ryō Ryūmon and Kōji Megumi are resuming their Bloody Monday suspense manga in this year's 46th issue of Kodansha's Weekly Shonen Magazine on Wednesday. This story about a genius high school hacker fighting terrorists has been on hiatus since the first "season" ended over half a year ago in this year's 20th issue. The new storyline goes under the title Bloody Monday Season 2: Pandora no Hako (Pandora's Box). The manga, which began in 2007, inspired a popular 2008 live-action drama.