is a Japanese
manga series written and illustrated by manga author Shinji Ohara. The manga was serialized in the seinen manga magazine Comic Flapper between 2002 and 2007, but continued serialization in the same magazine with the title Nijū Mensō no Musume Utsushiyo no Yoru since October 5, 2007. An anime adaptation aired in Japan from April 12, 2008 to September 27, 2008, and was co-produced by Bones and Telecom Animation Film.
The characters in this series have been used with permission from
surviving members of the family of
Edogawa
Rampo, the renowned Japanese
detective fiction author who had
originally created the fictional characters of Nijū-Mensō and
Kogoro Akechi.
The series is set in the
Shōwa
period, starting around 1953 in the anime.
Story
Chizuko Mikamo is a young girl living with her aunt and uncle after
her parents died. She behaves coldly toward them, despite their
efforts to make her happy, because she knows that they are trying
to slowly poison her so that they can take her inheritance for
themselves. Because of her intelligence and knowledge gained from
reading detective novels, she works to avoid eating the food her
aunt prepares, but it is impossible to avoid all together and she
still takes in enough to cause her to collapse. Her butler is
revealed to actually be the world-famous thief Twenty Faces, who
was there to steal Chizuko's rightful inheritance, a family
heirloom gem known as the Anastasia Ruby. When he realizes just
what Chizuko's been going through, however, he asks her if she
wants to come with him and his band on their travels around the
world. She agrees and Twenty Faces takes her back with him to join
his gang, who affectionately shorten her name to Chiko. Two years
pass and Chiko is now a strong thief, having learned the tricks of
the trade from Twenty Faces and the members of his band. Now, with
Twenty Faces and the rest of the band as her family, she has found
a home at last.
After living with the band for two years, Chiko becomes a skilled
thief and thinks of Twenty Faces as her father. But a sudden train
accident caused by Tiger, Twenty Faces' strongest enemy, kills most
of the band and seems to have killed Twenty Faces himself. By
chance a detective who works for her aunt finds her and, after
being "rescued" two years after Twenty Faces "kidnapped" her, Chiko
is forced to return to her aunt's house, where she becomes
depressed and refuses to eat or talk because of the shock of Twenty
Faces' death. But when a mysterious detective appears and she
learns that there is a possibility that he may still be alive
somewhere, Chiko becomes more lively and works, with the help of a
few new friends, to find him by following the clues that he seems
to have left behind, beginning with something that is rightfully
hers and had been left in his care: the Anastasia Ruby. Now, Chiko
must dodge her aunt's attempts to murder her and unravel the
mysteries Twenty Faces left for her to solve, or so it seems. There
are many steps in her long journey, some of which awaken painful
memories and others that lead her to discover more about the past
of the man behind Twenty Faces and herself.
Characters
Nijū Mensō no Musume focuses on Chizuko Mikamo and how her
life changes after she is saved from her greedy relatives by Nijū
Mensō, a famed thief. Chiko, as Chizuko comes to be known, finds an
unusual but happy family amongst the thieves that form Nijū Mensō's
group, in particular a knife-thrower named Ken.
During the second arc of the series, Chiko finds a close friend in
Shunka Koito, the granddaughter of the headmaster of Chiko's
school, and Tome, a maid in her aunt's household. As Chiko searches
for Nijū Mensō, she encounters a wide range of allies and dangerous
enemies, all who seek her out in hopes of either finding Nijū Mensō
or his supposed legacy.
Episodes
Nijū Mensō no Musume contains 22 episodes. The episodes are
directed by Nobuo Tomizawa and composed by Rikei Tsuchiya.
Theme songs
- Opening theme:
-
- Performance: 369 miroku
- Lyrics: 369, Ryoji
- Composition: 369, tasuku
- Arrangement: tasuku
- Ending theme:
- "Unnamed World"
- Performance: Aya Hirano
- Lyrics: Aki Hata
- composition: Katsuhiko Kurosu
- Arrangement: nishi-ken
References
External links