Michiko to Hatchin: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
(Adding some stuff.)
No edit summary
 
Line 88: Line 88:
* [[Troubling Unchildlike Behaviour]]
* [[Troubling Unchildlike Behaviour]]
* [[Try Not to Die]]: Used almost ad verbatim.
* [[Try Not to Die]]: Used almost ad verbatim.
* [[Twelve-Episode Anime]]
* [[Twelve-Episode Anime|Twenty-two Episode Anime]]
* [[Unlimited Wardrobe]]: Probably most of Michiko's and Hatchin's wear is stolen. But Atsuko also comes in several outfits.
* [[Unlimited Wardrobe]]: Probably most of Michiko's and Hatchin's wear is stolen. But Atsuko also comes in several outfits.
* [[Villain Protagonist]]: Michiko.
* [[Villain Protagonist]]: Michiko.

Latest revision as of 19:17, 14 August 2019

Michiko & Hatchin

Hana Morenos is nine, miserable, and abused by her foster parents and step-siblings. She does all the chores, puts up with bullying and beatings, and daydreams about getting away.

...And then Michiko Malandro escapes from her high-security prison and crashes into Hana's life on a scooter. With nothing in common but a man named Hiroshi, who's Michiko's former lover and possibly Hana's father, the two embark on a wild trip through the countryside. Traveling through a South America/Brazil pastiche where everyone has Japanese given names, they encounter gangs, are pursued by the police, and learn to appreciate each other--just a little bit.

The show, released in 2008, is produced by studio Manglobe; it's Sayo Yamamoto's directing debut.

Tropes used in Michiko to Hatchin include:
  1. Truth in Television - some deadbeat dads act exactly like Hiroshi.