Red Garden

It started with the butterflies.

Claire, Rose, Rachel and Kate -- four New York City girls from the same school but from very different backgrounds and social circles -- are drawn together one night by a flock of mysterious butterflies that only they can see. Waiting for them are two mysterious figures -- a woman named Lula and her partner, JC -- who inform the four girls that they are dead.

In order to continue in their borrowed lives, the heroines are forced to fight for them. Each night, they must wait until midnight before they can rest. If the butterflies come to them before midnight, the girls must follow them and fight a twisted, bestial man with no help and no skills but their own will to live.

Thereafter, the lives of the girls (and the plot of the anime) revolve around coming to terms with these facts and the "suicide" of their friend Lise. Their deaths and the rabid men they are forced to fight all tie back to a strange and influential family.

Combining elements of horror, music -- the girls occasionally break into song -- and teen drama, Red Garden takes a very different approach to the girls-fighting-monsters genre.


 * Absurdly Powerful Student Council: Grace.
 * Action Girl
 * Alpha Bitch: Jessica, who is one of the girls in Grace, towards Kate. Subverted, as Jessica later reveals it's out of concern for her.
 * Ancient Conspiracy
 * Animation Bump: The last episode is noticeably better looking than the others.
 * Anti-Villain: Herve just wants to save his family from its curse.
 * Artistic Title: Averted so hard. The opening is made of stylized silhouettes of the girls and the city, giving a light cosmopolitan feel akin to Sex and the City. The show has a different mood though.
 * Back from the Dead: Kate, Rose, Rachel, and Claire, obviously enough. An unexpected example comes up later when
 * Bait and Switch Credits: The opening credits are pretty floral silhouettes accompanied by a pleasant girlish song. The show, on the other hand, is dark.
 * Big Applesauce
 * Big Fancy House: Rachel and Kate both have nice homes, but it's the mansion that takes the cake.
 * Bishonen: Herve.
 * Bittersweet Ending
 * Bland-Name Product: "SDAM" instead of Spam.
 * Blood-Splattered Innocents
 * Break the Cutie
 * Burger Fool: Claire works for an unnamed burger joint.
 * Butterfly of Death and Rebirth: The butterflies only appear to the girls after they've died, and are generally linked to situations where death happens in some form.
 * Calling the Old Man Out: Claire does this towards her father for
 * Captain Ersatz: The NYPD investigators, an old jaded white guy and his younger black partner, would seem to be Detectives Briscoe and Green with the badge numbers filed off.
 * Character Development: The actual focus of the series. The nightly fighting and background of the two clans take a backseat to the way the girls are coping with their borrowed lives for most of the show.
 * Christmas Episode
 * Conspicuous CG: The OVA mecha.
 * Couldn't Find a Pen: In the OVA, telling the girls to go to Red Garden.
 * Cower Power
 * Cultured Badass: Claire listens to Classical Music, really LOUD.
 * Dark Magical Girl
 * Dark-Skinned Blond: Randy and Dr. Bender.
 * Dating Catwoman: Kate ends up dating Herve. She's oblivious about who he is for a several episodes, but he knows from the start - it's why he pursued her in the first place.
 * Defrosting Ice Queen: Lula
 * Die or Fly
 * Disappeared Dad: Rose's dad. She goes to find him later in the series.
 * Driven to Suicide: Lise's death is covered up as this. Later, Randy attempts suicide after the collapse of his company. It's implied that this is what happened to his and Claire's mother.
 * Eccentric Millionaire: Randy, Claire's older brother.
 * Episode Title Card
 * Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas
 * Evolving Credits: The first set of ending credits change gradually over time. Also, the opening has some mostly still bits swapped for something more animated about halfway through the series.
 * Expy: Almost everyone in the OVA (barring the title Dead Girls, who are the same people) is an expy of someone from the TV series.
 * Fangs Are Evil: The men the girls fight tend to have fangs, heightening the animalistic image they project.
 * First-Episode Resurrection
 * Flash Back
 * Foreign Language Title
 * Four-Girl Ensemble
 * Fridge Logic: Why could J.C. fight the way he did? It's clearly stated that only women become Animus, and he wasn't part of the Delor clan.
 * Fur Against Fang: It's the tiniest bit of a stretch, but the Animus and the Delor clan can be seen as Our Vampires Are Different and Our Werewolves Are Different respectively. A clan of people that have Immortality are dead, and have super-human-strength, which also reproduce by reviving the dead, and have a thirst that can only be quenched by lemons. Where as the Delor clan is full of beast-men with glowing eyes and sharp teeth who run around on all fours and systematically go crazy at designated times in their lives.
 * This may just be Wild Mass Guessing but the reason Red Garden isn't marketed as FAF might be because while it is the short and narrow, in order to attract a larger female following the FAF setting was wisely omitted in advertisements when one considers the art style and focus on the main characters.
 * ¨Genre Shift: The OVA features sci-fi stuff such as Humongous Mechas and flying cars. Justified because it takes hundreds of years after the events of the original series.
 * Girl Posse
 * Glowing Eyes of Doom
 * Gratuitous English: Actually averted in the show proper, but the ending themes are guilty of this.
 * Healing Factor
 * He Knows Too Much:  just as they find
 * Heroic Sacrifice:  dies protecting   Both   and   die protecting Kate, though at different times.
 * Hot for Teacher: Rachel gets accused of this.
 * Humongous Mecha: In the OVA.
 * I Just Want to Be Normal
 * Ill Girl: Mireille and Anna, Herve's cousin and sister respectively.
 * In a Single Bound
 * Incurable Cough of Death
 * Jigsaw Puzzle Plot
 * Karmic Death:
 * Killed Off for Real:
 * Laser-Guided Amnesia
 * Les Yay: The first episode has Kate pining for Lise on a very -- personal level. And at times, Paula seems very close to Kate -- very close. This goes into Anvilicious territory from episode 18 onwards.
 * Limited Social Circle: Much of the show deals with the heroines' escalating ostracism from their old social groups and their varying efforts to stay in contact with their old lives.
 * Limited Wardrobe: Averted; most of the girls wear different clothes everyday. Even Kate, who wears her Grace uniform more than anything, wears unique outfits outside of school.
 * The Load: Rose tends to cower more than she fights. Later Lampshaded by Rachel.
 * Love Triangle: Between Rachel, Luke, Amanda, and debatably Rachel's literature teacher, Nick. Heck, Sam's in there too, so let's just call it like it is.
 * MacGuffin: The cursed books.
 * Magical Girl: Played very very dark, and more for the character aspects and conflicts than for the powers. There are powers, but they rarely show up.
 * Minion with an F In Evil: Emilio
 * Morally-Ambiguous Doctorate: The pharmaceutical company Vivaleo.
 * Names to Know in Anime:
 * Brittney Karbowski: Rose
 * Miyuki Sawashiro: Claire
 * Ryoko Shintani: Rachel
 * Misato Fukuen: Lise
 * Takashi Kondo and Chris Patton: JC
 * Illich Guardiola: Luke
 * Rie Tanaka: Lula
 * John Swasey: Claude
 * Takehito Koyasu: Hervé
 * Daisuke Ono: Nick
 * Vic Mignogna: Randy
 * Rei Igarashi: Rachel's mother
 * Oedipus Rex:
 * Older Than They Look: Animus apparently don't age, even after centuries' worth of time.
 * "On the Next..."
 * Ordinary High School Student
 * Parental Abandonment
 * Perpetual Poverty: Claire.
 * Phenotype Stereotype: Most of the upper class people have blonde hair and blue eyes, among them Kate and her family, Claire's family (but not Claire herself),several of the members of Grace, and both of the feuding clans.
 * Precision F-Strike: Delivered by Luke when his suspicions about Rachel and one of her teachers boil out.
 * Random Passerby Advice: At one point Claire is on the sidewalk outside her apartment practicing swinging a bat when a random guy runs across the street and critiques her stance, advising her to "rotate your hips", then walks away.
 * Really Dead Montage
 * Rebellious Princess: Claire
 * The Reveal
 * Robot Girl: In the OVA Louise turns out to be one.
 * Shout-Out: In episode 4, there's seemingly a shout out to either the "Soup Nazi" from Seinfeld or the real person who inspired the character.
 * Episode 5 has a shot of a billboard, labeled Witches, that is obviously modeled off the poster for Wicked.
 * Shrinking Violet: Rose.
 * Taking the Bullet
 * Talking the Monster to Death: In the OVA,
 * Technicolor Eyes: Claire and Randy have purple eyes.
 * The Other Darrin: Joe Diaz voices Herve up until episode 16 in the dub. He is voiced by Quentin Haag for the rest of the series.
 * The Virus: The curse.
 * There Are No Therapists: Subverted. While the girls never actually go to therapists their friends and family do notice that something is wrong, and they do ask the girls questions. The girls, however refuse to tell them.
 * Time Skip: The Dead Girls OVA takes place several hundred years in the future, with all of New York except Roosevelt Island mile high buildings and floating cars.
 * Throw the Dog a Bone: The only outsider to the family wars who gets entrusted with a vague hint of what the girls are doing is, who doesn't understand it, but it's the thought that counts.
 * Happens again in the OVA where
 * Title Drop: Not in the main series, but in the OVA. The Red Garden is Roosevelt Island, which is now covered in pink flowers.
 * Tomboy: Claire leans towards this, especially when contrasted with the rest of the group.
 * Trademark Favorite Food: Well, not the favorite part. A few episodes in the girls find that lemons help with the side effects of their condition and from then on are seen eating them often and to the bemusement of the people they know, but they don't necessarily like them.
 * Training Montage
 * True Companions
 * Wake Up, Go to School, Save the World: Deconstructed. Fighting is clearly difficult for the girls (whether physically or mentally), and they don't know why they have to do it. This ends up creating a lot of social (and mental) problems for them, which are given quite a bit of focus.
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: As mentioned before, the only reason Herve does what he does is to save his family.
 * Who Wants to Live Forever?: The leaders of Animus whose only goal is to die. Of course being unable to move as a result of a curse probably contributed a lot to their disillusionment with eternal life.
 * Averted in the Dead Girls OVA where the four main characters are mostly satisfied with their immortality, and instead of angsting all the time do things like composing ridiculously silly battle songs.
 * Fridge Horror: At the end of the OVA, Kate and Claire admit that they're getting bored.
 * Yank the Dog's Chain: In the OVA, Edgar and Louise finally look like they are ready to love each other [[spoiler: and the girls are willing to let Edgar off the hook for his crimes, only for both of them to get pulled under the earth by vines.
 * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: The hair colors are mostly within the realm of realism, but Mireille and one of Rachel's friends have pinkish hair. Claire's hair appears grey and Luke's purple, but they're probably variations on black.