R.O.D the TV


 * "Read or Dream" redirects here. However, that is a separate work that deserves its own page.

R.O.D the TV is the sequel to the Read or Die OVA. This 26-episode series focuses on the Paper Sisters Maggie, Michelle and Anita, three young women who have paper-manipulation abilities. Although older sisters Maggie and Michelle are fanatical bibliophiles, Shorttank Anita paradoxically hates books. The three work together as detectives and independent agents in Hong Kong until the day Nenene Sumiregawa, an author who Maggie and Michelle are fans of, comes to the island for a book signing. The three are hired as her chaperones and drivers, but become her bodyguards as well when her life is threatened. After Nenene returns to Japan she enlists their help in looking for her missing friend Yomiko.

The rather strange title of the show refers to its fusion of the Read or Die OVA and the cast from Read or Dream, a manga centered around three sisters with powers similar to Yomiko's. Adding to the confusion were both animated adaptations being somewhat different in tone from their respective manga. Regardless its proved to be an interesting blend of both series that worked out particularly well.

The Read or Dream manga (which the Paper Sisters come from) is available in the States for the curious.

Shares a character sheet with Read or Die.

""It has a be a bug in the system. Only .9% of the population possible has enough of a sense of identity to resist the Brainwashing.""
 * 108: Room 108 in the Dokusensha base, where they conduct their brainwashing experiments.
 * Action Girl: Yomiko; the Paper Sisters
 * Adorably Precocious Child: Junior.
 * Affably Evil: is the personification of an Affably Evil foe
 * Alliterative Name: Alice Alice Arquet
 * Alternate Continuity: The Read Or Die novels, the Read Or Die manga, the Read Or Dream manga and the TV adaption (consisting of the Read or Die OVA and this series) are all separate continuities, but borrow key concepts and characters from each other.
 * Anti-Villain: Junior
 * Apocalypse How:
 * Apologises a Lot: Junior, Maggie
 * The Archer: Michelle seems to subvert this with her goofy demeanor, but watch her in most crisis scenes: she plays it pretty damn straight.
 * Artificial Human: Nancy,
 * In fact it's heavily implied that
 * Assimilation Plot:
 * Badass Adorable: Definitely Yomiko, and each of the Paper Sisters could probably count in their own ways as well.
 * Badass Bookworm: Pretty much all the protagonists except for Drake. Even Anita has a weird sort of Tsundere relationship with books.
 * Badass Normal: Drake Anderson. Nenene's stubbornness and determination are also quite something:

"Michelle: "Ah! So cute! Hey, do you want to be my little sister?" Junior: "I'm... a boy...""
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Yomiko is usually just about the sweetest, most forgiving person on the planet...but God help you if you manage to make her mad.
 * Bifauxnen: Maggie
 * Big Bad Friend:.
 * Blood From the Mouth: Alice Arquet. Sign that the series is taking a real turn for the dark.
 * Blonde, Brunette, Redhead: Michelle, Maggie, and Anita.
 * Blond Guys Are Evil:, but not Drake.
 * Blush Sticker: Maggie, oddly enough, gets these a lot.
 * Book-Burning: The British Library is doing this to books that would not fit under their new "unified culture." Naturally, the protagonists object to this.
 * Book Ends: Lee smoking.
 * Brainwashed
 * Brainwash Residue: Anita becomes a bookworm like her sisters after she gets a part of The Gentleman's memories. Take note, Anita used to hate books. But this may simply be her Papermaster nature finally overcoming her PTSD.
 * Brown Note: Webber's giant pipe organ.
 * But Not Too Foreign: Yomiko is half-Japanese and half-British, while Wendy Earhart is half-Indian, half-English.
 * Cheese-Eating Surrender Monkeys: "It's amazing how quickly the nations of Europe fall into line"
 * Chekhov's Gun: Nenene's novel she works on throughout the series.
 * Christmas Cake: Yomiko is 30 years old.
 * Christmas Episode: The three sisters share birthday cake and a Crowning Moment of Heartwarming with Nenene.
 * Cliff Hanger: Frequently, the series pulls you along from one episodes to the next.
 * Cloning Blues:
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Michelle
 * Cool Big Sis: Michelle.
 * Cuteness Proximity: Michelle is drawn to Anita's friends Hisami and Junior.
 * Cute Bruiser: Anita
 * Darker and Edgier: The series is notably darker than both the over the top superheroics of the Read or Die manga, and the whimsical friendly nature of the Read or Dream manga. On the other hand, it's not half as bloody as the OVA, though it does do away with most of the 1960s spy gadgetry.
 * Dark-Skinned Blond: Wendy
 * Determinator: Would you believe it's the villain this time? When Yomiko has him cornered, makes a speech about how no matter what the heroes do, he or his survivors will pick up and begin their plan again, and that nothing they can do can crush the ideals they believe in. It's a downright inspiring speech, the type that normally gets reserved for the hero.
 * Disturbed Doves: Parodied with a pigeon named John Woo.
 * peck "...San."
 * The Ditz: Michelle can be this at times.
 * Dramatic Wind
 * Dude Looks Like a Lady: Junior. The long hair and strange choices of clothing don't help.

""Zah...PAAAAAYPAAAAAAHHH!!!""
 * Egopolis: Britain (or at least the British Library) really thinks too highly of themselves in this universe. So much so that they revert everything back to a 19-century version of the world they ruled, when the British Empire was at its peak of power.
 * Eucatastrophe: Seriously.
 * Evil Brit: Several, most notably, and Elite Mook Mirrorman.
 * Extraordinarily Empowered Girl: Yomiko, the Paper Sisters
 * Eyes Always Shut: Lee
 * Expy: Alice Alice Arquet bears more than a passing resemblance to Tomb Raider's Lara Croft, both in terms of physical appearance and in terms of character backstories (Daughters of British aristocrats who indulge in adventure archaeology)
 * Faceless Goons: Dokusensha operatives wears something that resembles Highly-Visible Ninja outfits, while British Library agents wears hats and sunglasses to cover their faces.
 * Fan Service
 * Faux Symbolism: The shot of a statue of the Virgin Mary during . Also, John Woo (the pigeon) shows up at the end of the episode in a manner evocative of the story of Noah's Ark.
 * Flashback Echo: Anita's memories of burning books.
 * Flipping the Bird: Nenene does this to a literary terrorist in the first episode, and Anita does it to her in the next one.
 * Foot Focus: Indeed, there's many a shot on socked or bare feet in this show.
 * Funbag Airbag: When Nenene is reunited with Yomiko in the Diet Building.
 * Gainaxing: Enough to make Yoko-sama herself jealous.
 * Genki Girl: Anita
 * Gratuitous English: Anita's homeroom teacher seems to speak as much Gratuitous English as Japanese, but he is actually teaching English and asking the students to translate, so it is not gratuitous at all. How does he teach them English? He quotes The Godfather. Students around the world would probably do better in their studies if their teachers made them an offer they couldn't refuse... It becomes Gratuitous Japanese in the English dub, which is strangely out of place seeing how a Japanese teacher is teaching Japanese to Japanese schoolchildren.

""John Smith got his forest burned down. That's why he planted new trees. A lot, a whole lot, and a lot more... A lot, a whole lot, and a lot more..." A lot, a whole lot, and a lot more...""
 * Hannibal Lecture: gives one to Yomiko when they meet for the first time in the series. Nenene cuts him short.
 * Hot Librarian + Badass Bookworm: Yomiko. Her extreme love of books can get to be a very expensive habit (at one point, she even asks her boss for a cash advance so that she can purchase more books), but the British Library still regards her as one of the best in her field.
 * Ill Girl: Hisami
 * Impaled with Extreme Prejudice:
 * Improbable Weapon User
 * I'm Taking Her Home with Me: Michelle to Junior. See the entry for Dude Looks Like a Lady above.
 * Intangible Man: Nancy has the ability to phase her body through just about anything: walls, doors, machinery -- even flesh and blood. Junior also possesses this power.
 * Invisibility / Master of Illusion: Mirrorman.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Okahara towards Hisami, after she tells him that she likes Anita.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Natsume and Okahara
 * Kick the Dog: kicks many many dogs over the course of the series, but it culminates with burning the photograph of Yomiko and Nenene that Yomiko's been pining over for the past five episodes. He then tells her she will be happier when she is brainwashed., who goes from clumsy cutie in the OVA to a cold individual in the TV series, is even worse. Notable examples being  Sunny Wong  is quite a blunt indication of the fact that the Dokusensha are not nice people.
 * Large Ham: Nishizone Natsume, who seems to take every possible opportunity to tell the world about her sister's novels.
 * Limp and Livid: Non-angry example when Maggie is forbidden from visiting bookstores when visiting a town full of them. Apparently it takes all she has to resist the lure.
 * Love Makes You Evil: reason for her actions.
 * Luke, I Am Your Father:.
 * Madness Mantra


 * Mama Bear:
 * Meaningful Echo: In early episodes, Michelle only calls for a "Three Sisters Vote" so that she and like-minded Maggie can get their way instead of Anita. Halfway into the series, though, she calls for a vote on whether or not to risk their lives to rescue Nenene. This time it is unanimous.
 * Meganekko: Yomiko Readman is widely considered the Queen of All Meganekkos. Nenene Sumiregawa is not too bad herself, but has a completely different personality from the stereotype.
 * Mecha-Mooks: Some of the defenses in the Dokusensha base.
 * The Men in Black : culturally quirky variants.
 * The Messiah: Yomiko, as described by Drake.
 * Milkman Conspiracy:
 * The Mole:
 * Mood Whiplash: Awww, Anita is having her first day at school, and she is really popular, and now she is hanging out with Hisami, her new best friend and cutest character in the whole school, and Anita is getting that little bit of childhood that she never had before, and holy @#%& that dude got shot!
 * Ms. Fanservice: Alice Arquet is a clear Lara Croft Expy and has No Nudity Taboo. She even tells Drake to "grow up" when he gets embarrassed by her stripping in front of him.
 * Mundane Made Awesome: This is an action/espionage series about books.
 * Nerds Are Sexy: And so is Yomiko. Michelle, Maggie and Nenene surely qualify too. ROD loves its nerds.
 * No Koreans in Japan: "Mr. Kim" is a Korean name, but he looks and acts more stereotypically Chinese than Korean. It may well be a pseudonym.
 * Odango Hair: When the girls change clothing, Anita has a Chinese-styled top plus this, despite having the shortest hair. Word of God is that those 'odango' are actually empty.
 * One of the Kids: Michelle and Yomiko. Nancy too, though this has less to do about her personality quirks and more to do with brain damage and amnesia.
 * One Last Smoke:
 * One Steve Limit: Averted with Maggie Mui and Drake's daughter Maggie. Drake of course has a double take when he hears Maggie Mui's name.
 * The Other Darrin: The TV series has an entirely different English dub cast than the OAV (save for Wendy Tomson/Tricia Dickson, who goes from playing Wendy in the OAV to Nenene in the TV series), which was not too jarring for the most part, except that Yomiko went from having a very American accent to having a very English accent (according to the DVD commentary, this is because the Japanese creators specifically asked Geneon to give Yomiko an English accent since she is supposed to be half-British).
 * Our Vampires Are Different: Dr. Weber. Really, though he certainly has all the appearances of a vampire, he does not seem to possess any kind of extraordinary abilities.
 * Paper Master: The trope-namer.
 * Phenotype Stereotype: Drake Anderson, fulfilling the common anime stereotype of Americans being pale-skinned, blond-haired, and blue-eyed.
 * Portmanteau: Joker uses the name Joe Carpenter. Whether this is his real name or a pseudonym is unstated, but either way Joker is clearly a portmanteau of Joe Carpenter.
 * The Power of Friendship
 * Power Trio: the Paper Sisters.
 * Precocious Crush: Junior to Michelle; especially after the writers found that Junior and Anita had no chemistry.
 * Pre-Explosion Glow
 * Prophetic Names: "Yomiko" = "reading child"; "Readman" is obvious.
 * Punch Clock Villain: Mr. Kim is rather personable if a bit reticent and seems to have an amicable working relationship with Mr. John Woo. Nonetheless.
 * Puppy Dog Eyes
 * The Quiet One: Maggie.
 * Reality Warper:
 * Redemption Equals Death:
 * Romantic Two-Girl Friendship: Between Hisami and Anita. Big time.
 * Rubber Face: Michelle sometimes does this to herself (one cheek only) after being told off for doing something silly. Anita gets it a lot from various characters, and Yomiko says that getting Rubber Faced helps when she is anxious. She's genuinely surprised when it does not work that way on Anita.
 * Scary Shiny Glasses: Nenene gets these when she gets angry (i.e. quite often). Yomiko's glasses also go shiny a lot, but in her case it usually signifies emotional trauma.
 * Schoolgirl Rival: Nishizono Natsume, for Anita.
 * Secret Project Refugee Family:
 * Sentai (sort of)
 * Serious Business: Books, books, books.
 * Shape Shifter: The Mirror Man.
 * Shorttank: Anita
 * Shout-Out: There's a few shout outs to Hong Kong action films in reference to the Paper Sisters: Anita, Maggie, and Michelle are named for the famous actresses Anita Mui, Maggie Cheung, and Michelle Yeoh (also known as Michelle Khan), who starred together in the Heroic Trio, a film about three superheroines from Hong Kong. They also name their white pigeon John Woo, in reference to the symbolic white doves that frequently appear in the director's films. Additionally for shout outs, the titles for the vast majority of the soundtrack are references to various works of literature, and a number of episodes are also named for famous stories:
 * "The Right Stuff"
 * "In a Grove" (Akutagawa's short story, the basis for the movie Rashomon)
 * Heart of Darkness
 * "Fahrenheit 451"
 * "The Heroic Trio The Paper Sisters are named after the trio of Action Girls from this movie. Anita's last name differs for a reason.
 * Nenene: I left The Three Stooges at home.
 * The Godfather, as mentioned before.
 * Shut UP, Hannibal: "Don't be tricked, you idiot! He's the bad guy!"
 * Soul Jar: While The Gentleman's books don't strictly speaking contain his entire soul (his personality was simply too vast to be contained), they still contain vital pieces of it.
 * Soundtrack Dissonance: Action cliffhangers with the girls in peril, leading into the rather chipper end theme.
 * Steampunk: Much of the British Library. They appear to use 19th-century era cell phones.
 * The Stinger: At the very end of the series, we again see the statue of Mary and Jesus in the church where the sisters met. It has their initials carved into it: "MAM". Which means.
 * Storming the Castle: Twice.
 * Superhero (sort of)
 * Talking Is a Free Action: Subverted.
 * Technical Pacifist: In series -- all of them, even the most of antagonists. Not quite so in OVA.
 * Third-Person Person: Mr. Kim
 * Throw the Book At Them: Anita likes to do this.
 * Title Drop: Kindasorta. Wendy's speech to Anita


 * Trademark Favourite Drink: Anita really likes drinking milk.
 * Tokyo Is the Center of the Universe: Watered down somewhat, as London and Hong Kong also have fairly major roles in the story.
 * Took a Level in Badass: In the time since the OVA, Wendy goes from a tea-serving klutz to gun-toting badass.
 * Took a Level in Jerkass: Wendy again.
 * Town with a Dark Secret: "John Smith is in a grove...."
 * Translation Convention: Michelle addressing people as " dear" for " -chan", as well as "John Woo...*peck*...sir" for John Woo-san. This is just in the dub.
 * Tsundere: Okahara (towards Hisami) -- a rare male example. Arguably Nenene, especially in spiky Grumpy Bear mode.
 * Tyke Bomb: Junior. He is
 * Utopia Justifies the Means:
 * Villains Never Lie: Joker averts with this one. We see a scene where a flunky tells him that they only have one chance to make their plan work. A few minutes later, he is straight-facedly telling the heroes that even if they were to somehow fail today, they would just redo everything tomorrow, and the day after that, etc.
 * Visible Sigh
 * Waif Fu: Anita is very strong, capable of stunning a "vampire" by throwing a book into his face and breaking his nose from 20 feet away without using her paper powers. She can knock out grown men three times her size; and her fighting style was developed by animators via "observing monkeys and the Chinese Royal Acrobats."
 * Was It All a Lie?: When
 * Weaksauce Weakness: One of the only specific weaknesses between true Paper Masters like Yomiko and Paper Users like the sisters is the latter makes objects that fall apart if they are damp or disrupted by sound waves. Except when they do not...
 * It could be that they can make paper resistant to such if they create their constructs expecting them to be exposed to fire, sound or water. That would explain how the sisters could make a boat out of paper that doesn't immediately fall apart when in other situations their paper stops working when suddenly soaked.
 * Wham! Episode: Episode 12, when.
 * Episode 9, where Alice gets Impaled with Extreme Prejudice, qualifies.
 * Wholesome Crossdresser: Maggie, who mostly wears men's suits.
 * "Well Done, Son" Guy: Junior, in a rare female parental figure example.
 * Who Writes This Crap?: "Who the heck would come up with such a fiasco? It's no good! It's not realistic at all!"
 * Younger Than They Look: Junior. Chronologically, he is only 6 years old, but due to accelerated aging, he appears to be about 12. This is probably also technically true for Nancy.
 * Your Princess Is in Another Castle: The Wham! Episode (see above) begins as a fairly formulaic episode about Anita saying goodbye to her friends before she moves back to Hong Kong, culminating in a sweet moment between herself and Hisa. Time for the credits, right? Right?