The Cardcaptor Sakura reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Cardcaptor Sakura

Helping orphans the way you would do it
Cardcaptor Sakura (カードキャプターさくら), also known as Card Captor Sakura (with the space) and often abbreviated to CCS, is a manga series from the well-known all-women artist team CLAMP. It is also an anime show (1998-2000) created from the manga, consisting of 70 half-hour episodes in three series and two theatrical-release movies.

The series begins as a simple girls' anime of the magical girl genre (similar series include Sailor Moon and Pretty Sammy). Ten-year-old Sakura opens a mysterious book in her father's study and accidentally lets loose the magical Clow Cards. As she lost them, it is her job to retrieve them, which involves finding each card and battling its magical personification. She is assisted by Cerberus (a.k.a., Kero-chan), the beast of the seal assigned to protect the cards, but who was asleep when Sakura opened the Clow book. Kero-chan, who appears throughout most of the series rather like an animated plush toy, makes Sakura into the Cardcaptor and gives her the key of the seal which allows her to fight and capture the cards.

As CCS progresses, there is a pattern of foreshadowing and dreams that lead to an unusual conclusion. Like in Magic Knight Rayearth, one of CLAMP's previous works, CCS is a new twist on an old genre.

Due in part to its animation, Card Captor Sakura has a wide fanbase on the Internet, particularly in the yaoi, shojo and lolicon fandom.

The manga was translated into English by TokyoPop; the characters kept their Japanese names in the translated manga. The manga was mostly unchanged from the original.

Table of contents
1 Cardcaptors
2 Characters
3 External links

Cardcaptors

Cardcaptor Sakura was dubbed into English and brought to the United States under the name Cardcaptors. The dub came to be highly disliked by many anime fans. Entire episodes of the original series were taken apart and spliced together in an attempt to make Cardcaptors more appealing to American teenage boys, as the conception that, with the exception of Sailor Moon, girl-oriented series would not succeed. This makes the plotline of Cardcaptors seem rather haphazard to someone who has watched the original. The shojo-ai and shonen-ai romantic subtext was also excised. As a result, the series gained a much darker mood and was passed off as a series similar to the Pokémon anime. For a while it was on the WB Television Network, the same network that carried Pokémon in the United States.

In the United States, Cardcaptors ran for 39 episodes (as compared to the original series' 70-episode run) before it was ultimately cancelled. These episodes ran in a different order compared to the original episodes, and thus there is a feeling that the plot was disjointed. In other English-speaking countries it ran in a more complete form, with all 70 episodes being shown in its original order (although in edited form), in some cases eschewing the English opening and closing themes in favor of dubbed versions of the original themes. The DVD line was canceled after the ninth volume (the beginning of the second story arc).

The two movies have also been dubbed into English, and as both the Cardcaptor Sakura version and the Cardcaptors version can be found on the same DVD, the only major differences between the two are the dialogue. The second movie is more faithful to the original (retaining the original names and much of the original dialogue), and has a different voice cast from Cardcaptors.

In addition to its negative reviews, Cardcaptors merchandise was not widely received as certain parents were concerned that, as the Clow Cards vaguely resembled the (non-satanic) tarot cards, the series promoted some sort of "Satanism".

Cardcaptors Uncensored provides an incomplete list of changes between the two series. The site was last updated in 2001.

Characters

Warning: Plot details follow.

Names are written using the Western naming order (given names first), with the original name listed first, followed by the name used in the Cardcaptors dubbed anime. Names are romanized according to the TokyoPop manga. If the pronounciation of the name is different than apparent by the spelling of the romanized name, the name romanized according to the Wikipedia:Manual of Style for Japan-related articles is notated in Japanese order. In the case of the Syaoran Li, the TokyoPop name is given first, with the actual pinyin notated. In Meiling Li's case, the pinyin in Western order is given first.

External links