Kazemakase Tsukikage Ran

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Meow and Ran

Ran is a young female Ronin with an unmatched degree of swordsmanship. She wanders through Japan, looking for thrills and a steady supply of good sake[1]. One day she runs into Meow, a somewhat younger Chinese girl who has tremendous skill in Chinese martial arts and a lust for strife matching her own. Together they wind up in all kinds of adventures, ranging from skirmishes with the Yakuza, helping out clueless parents to duking it out with an overgrown European woman.

Kazemakase Tsukikage Ran (Carried by the wind: Tsukikage Ran) is an anime series produced by Akitaro Daichi (who also produced Jubei-chan and Fruits Basket), that aired for 13 episodes in 2000. It follows a basic adventure formula, with different settings, villains and people to help in every episode. The series derives most of its strength from the often humorous and dynamic interaction between Ran and Meow, who could be seen as Lovely Angels with a twist.

Tropes used in Kazemakase Tsukikage Ran include:
  • Ascended Fangirl: Stephanie wants to be this.
  • Aesop: Mei gives one in universe but the episode itself gives a counter one.
  • Anime Accent Absence: Meow, Stephanie and Mei.
  • Badass: Ran, big time!
    • Badass and Baby: It happened once with Meow.
    • Badass in Distress: Meow may be a skilled fighter but she does get hit with the Distress Ball on occasion, which offers Ran a chance to kick butt. As soon as Meow gets free, however, she joins Ran in beating up the bad guys.
  • Beauty Is Never Tarnished: Ran and Meow never appear dirty or unkempt after fighting or walking through the countryside for days. Even if it rains a lot and they lack food. And the closest they get to battle injuries is Ran getting her hair ribbon cut over, which only makes her long hair sprawl in a fetching manner.
  • Bloodless Carnage: When Ran hacks up bad guys there is no blood (or even clothing damage), yet when Mei gets stabbed in the side a huge bloodstain appears on her dress.
  • Bottle Fairy: Ran loves Sake. A lot. Meow follows suit, though.
    • Ran would rather spend her last coin on sake than on food. Its arguable whether she's a Bottle Fairy or a full-on alcoholic.
  • Braids of Action: Meow always wears her hair in braids and is a martial artist whose competance is only surpassed by Ran.
  • Broke Episode: Ran frequently runs out of cash. One episode begins with her sprawled out on the road, weak with hunger after not having eaten for several days.
  • Catch Phrase
    • "I am just a beautiful traveler." Ran sure is modest.
    • Ran also often proclaims: "Utterly inexcusable."
    • "I'M SO PISSED OFF!" and "Wait up!" for Meow.
  • Catgirl: Despite lacking the ears, Meow tends to make a cat-like impression, especially when fighting.
  • Casual Danger Dialog: Overlaps with Excuse Me While I Multitask; Ran throws thugs around while hitting up Meow for lodging cash. Meow has been imprisoned in a dungeon and Ran's breaking in.
  • Chinese Girl: Meow and her childhood friend Mei.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Stephanie, who is as spaced out as she is big.
  • The Comically Serious: Ran, sometimes, especially when she's indignantly muttering, "Utterly inexcusable."
  • Color Coded for Your Convenience: Ran, one of the two heroes, wears a white hakama. Many of her opponents, including her Evil Twin, wear black. Meow wears pink and is much girlier than her partner.
  • Curb Stomp Battle: Any battle Ran takes part in.
  • Deadpan Snarker: You don't get much more deadpan than Ran.
  • Distaff Counterpart: Ran is considered to be very similar to Kenshin Himura; one big difference, though, she is not a Technical Pacifist.
  • Door Step Baby: Meow gets stuck with one in one episode.
  • The Drifter: Both.
  • Even the Girls Want Her: Ran seems to be pretty popular with the ladies.
  • Evil Counterpart: Ran and Meow encountered two female bandits who happened to be a ronin and a martial artist. While the ronin certainly qualified as Ran's counterpart, Meow was shocked and then irritated to learn that the martial artist was a dumpy middleaged woman.
  • For Great Justice: Meow will fight anyone for this reason. She even calls herself 'The Beauty of Justice'
  • Genius Ditz: Meow, who acts very ditzy, except when she's fighting.
  • Genki Girl: Meow.
  • Hey, It's That Voice!: Meow is Nami. Dub!Meow is Rukia.
  • Jidai Geki: Probably. Could also be earlier.
    • Given Stephanie, it must be after Europeans established contact (1543), but before Japan got closed off (1641), assuming a minimal level of realism.
      • Hiraga Gennai (1729-1779) also known as the electric guy from Read or Die shows up in one episode. Doesn't explain Stephanie but it's the closest you can get to dating it. Seems to be a blatant anachronism for the sake of fanservice.
    • Mei wears a tight-fitting quipao, a style of clothing that was only invented in the 1920s.
  • Large Ham: Meow can be....enthusiastic when she introduces herself and other occasions. This involves a louder voice and practiced posing.
  • Les Yay: Mainly due to its run becoming popular around the time Xena: Warrior Princess was still on the air, but usually as a fan joke. Meow being treated as the equivalent of shudo of course...
    • Well, Meow does appreciate pretty girls, which might be one of the reasons she keeps following Ran around.
  • Limited Wardrobe: And you never see them wash their clothes. Ew.
  • Libation for the Dead: We don't see it, but Ran tells a dead sake brewer's apprentice that his master is the one that deserves his first batch, not her, at the dead man's funeral.
  • Lovely Angels
  • Meaningful Name: Meow's fighting style involves the heavy use of cat-like moves.
  • Michelle Ruff: Meow's English voice actress.
  • Mona Marshall: Ran's English voice actress.
  • Motive Rant: Once's Mei's business is exposed, she goes on one why she partook in it.
  • Mooks: Almost all their enemies are either this or Elite Mooks.
  • Ninja: Meow at times gets mistaken for one. Some of the opponents are real ones, though.
  • No True Scotsman: The samurai in the 11th episode; the only 'true' samurai in their opinion are samurai that think like them. For instance, they show honor in one scene where they refuse to sneak attack and instead decide on a time and place of neutral favor. Then they attack three to one, even when their opponent reveals himself to be (basically) unarmed. Everyone who doesn't act like this is a 'coward' or a 'maggot'.
  • Once an Episode: Meow running after Ran.
  • Phenotype Stereotype: Stephanie is blonde and blue-eyed.
  • Pretty Freeloaders: Ran mooches off Meow all the time.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni : Ran is the blue oni and Meow is the red oni.
  • Ronin: Ran.
  • Serious Business: Sake to Ran. She almost caused a fight over watered down sake.
    • "Sake is like blood! you will shed a tear for each drop spilled"
  • Shrines and Temples
  • Status Quo Is God: Nothing ever changes, but justified in this case as the pair are constantly traveling and Ran drinking all their money as fast as she can.
  • The Stoic: Ran, when she's in battle mode.
  • Tall, Dark and Bishoujo: Ran fits all the qualifications, especially aloof. Usually given away by her voice but edging close to Bifauxnen, considering an old woman is reminded of her son after meeting her.
  • Teacher-Student Romance: Ran's previous lover was the person who taught her kendo, and sake drinking.
  • Thirteen Episode Anime
  • Title Drop: "Where should we go next?" "Wherever the wind blows us".
  • The Adventure Continues: The last episode ends like all the others; the pair walking into the sunset.
  • Tsurime Eyes / Tareme Eyes: In one episode this is was the visual cue that distinguished the Yamato Nadeshiko from the Evil Matriarch. The first had the affection downward while the second pointed up.
  • Vagabond Buddies: While female, this is pretty much Ran & Meow's relationship.
  • Walking the Earth: "Traveling is great."
  • Wrongly Accused: Poor Meow.
  • Yakuza: Man, they're everywhere.
  • Yamato Nadeshiko: The mistress of one of the lords fits the bill: elegant, kind, devoted to family and tough as iron, as well as the physical traits like hair style and clothing.
  1. Rice Wine, in case you didn't know.