Rocket Girls

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

It's summer vacation. High schooler Yukari Morita is visiting the Solomon Islands to try and find out what happened to her father, who disappeared there seventeen years ago while her parents were on their honeymoon. Meanwhile, the Solomon Space Association -- a Japanese corporation trying to corner a market in satellite repair by developing low-cost manned spacecraft -- suffers a serious setback when its newest rocket design explodes during testing... for the sixth time. Desperate to ensure a successful flight before the company's financial assistance from the Japanese government is cut off, they decide to dust off an older, proven, but less powerful rocket design. The only problem is, using it would require their astronaut to lose a rather unhealthy amount of weight. And height. Already at his limit due to the launch failures and the sadistic tendencies of the company's doctor, the spooked astronaut steals a vehicle and flees the base, almost running down the now stranded Yukari in the process.

A wild chase ensues, and before long, the SSA has their man back in custody -- but it's clear to them he's just not going to work out. The chase has however brought them into contact with Yukari, who happens to weigh in at a very petite thirty-eight kilograms. Recognising an opportunity, the SSA's unscrupulous Director offers to use the company's supposed connections with the local police to help Yukari find her father... if she agrees to do a job for them. It's just a simple job... one so easy "even a monkey could do it."

Naturally, she's a little freaked out when she finds out that they intend for her to fly a spaceship. But she still wants closure on the issue of her dad, and she's not going to get that without the SSA's help. As such, she reluctantly begins astronaut training. Joined in her endeavours by the energetic Solomon Islands native Matsuri (who turns out to be her half-sister) and later by the intellectually gifted but physically weak Akane Miura, Yukari is soon going Where No High School Girl has Gone Before... into space!

Based on a series of light novels by Housuke Nojiri and produced with technical assistance from JAXA (the Japanese counterpart to NASA), Rocket Girls is a series which at first glance ranks very highly on Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness but ends up being just another anime about space. (An entertaining anime, granted, but not a realistic one.) It aired on Japanese TV in 2007 and was released for the American market as a sub-only DVD in 2008.

For those interested in the original books, the first two of the Rocket Girls light novels are now available in English.

Not to be confused with Racket Girls.


Tropes used in Rocket Girls include:

Plot, Premise, Setting, and Theme tropes

  • All There in the Manual: The anime doesn't explain why Yukari's father wandered off on his honeymoon. It is explained in the novel, though; Matsuri's tribe needed men, so the women used their Magical Native Islander powers to summon one.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Matsuri, during the SSA's first manned mission.
  • Blown Across the Room: Colt .45 + 38 kg girl = wacky result. See Small Girl, Big Gun under characterization tropes.
  • Improbable Age: 16-year-old astronauts.
  • Indy Ploy: The second mission is essentially composed of one jury-rigged solution after another, with both the SSA and NASA astronauts and Mission Control coming up with plan adjustments on the fly to make sure that the Orpheus probe launches as planned and the girls get home safely. Which pretty much describes real space missions, too.
  • Latex Space Suit: Skintight spacesuits are one of the technological advancements the SSA is using as part of its attempt to develop economical manned space travel (since they're a lot lighter than conventional space suits). Amusingly enough, the reactions of the characters themselves to the spacesuits seem a lot more scandalized than the series visuals would seem to warrant.
    • There is nothing that would prevent such a space-suit to be actually used for short-time missions - but only short-time, because of the missing plumbing. The ironic thing is that in the light novels they apparently had said plumbing, to a certain degree.
    • NASA keeps wanting to develop these, but can't seem to get funding. Apparently better spacesuits aren't sexy enough -- they should get more female astronauts, I guess.
  • Literal Metaphor: Yukari is offered a job that even a monkey can do... why, yes, there have been monkeys that have gone into space.
  • Loophole Abuse: Ain't No Rule that says a high-schooler can't go into space. The second novel indicates the traditional Space Powers decide to follow suit rather than closing the loophole.
  • Lovable Traitor: Director Nasuda. He may be funny, but he has a bad habit of keeping secrets from the girls.
  • Older Is Better: A realistic version of this trope is shown when Mukai explains to Yukari that older technology has had all the bugs worked out and is therefore preferable to new, untested technology. This comes back to bite him when he wants to use a new fuel in the rocket that Yukari is slated to crew.
  • Parental Abandonment: More neglectful than actually absent in Yukari's case (which she lampshades after receiving a call from her mother). Subverted in the case of Akane; while we never actually see her parents, her brother reports that they were very worried about her, and the reason they weren't there to talk to her when she phoned was because they'd gone to a shrine to pray for her safety.
  • Red Herring: Yukari's search for her father seems like a long-term plot thread when first introduced, but it's mostly an excuse to get her to the Solomons and introduce Matsuri. Yukari finds him in the second episode, and it's only some fast talking on his part that keeps her from quitting her job with the SSA and forcibly dragging him back to Japan with her.)
  • Refuge in Audacity: Mostly the premise, although a few bits such as the chase scene in the first episode probably qualify as well.
  • Techno Babble: Averted; practically all the tech jargon used in the show is real.
  • Training from Hell: Turning Yukari into an astronaut in five-minute drills.

Characterization tropes

  • Beauty, Brains, and Brawn: Yukari, Akane and Matsuri. (Yes, Matsuri is as beautiful as Yukari, but she's much stronger and substantially more able to handle physical stress.)
  • Butt Monkey: Yasukawa, the SSA's original astronaut. He ends up becoming a taxi driver on the island. Also, the poor saps in production who keep having to pull all-nighters in order to get the agency's hardware built on time.
  • The Chief's Daughter: Matsuri is technically one, although she doesn't fall into the traditional role of being the main character's love interest; (instead she turns out to be the heroine's younger half-sister, since the Chief in question is actually Yukari's runaway dad).
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Most of the SSA staff. Also, once we finally see him, Yukari's father.
  • Determinator: Akane, who flat-out refused any help in order to become an astronaut.
  • Einstein Hair: How we know that the minor character Professor O'Reilly is an important person but not a rocket specialist.
  • Fur Bikini: Matsuri's "native" clothing is a close cousin, being as it doesn't have much fur in it.
  • Gainaxing: Matsuri encourages Akane to do so in her Latex Space Suit right before her first press conference appearance.
  • Hyper Awareness: Satsuki makes an absurdly accurate "estimate" of Yukari's measurements just by eyeballing her. Later, she does the same with Akane.
  • Jumped At the Call: Matsuri, Later, Akane turns Jumping at the Call Up to Eleven.
  • Les Yay: Akane to Yukari, big time. At one point, Akane even says "if you're asking me to do that... I'll strip!" (Yukari asked Akane to go swimming, Akane didn't have her swimsuit handy, and she wasn't going to let that stop her.)
  • Long-Lost Relative: Yukari's runaway dad. Also, Matsuri's father is Yukari's runaway dad. Matsuri takes this revelation a lot better then Yukari does.
  • Mad Scientist: Mihara the chemist. When she needed platinum as a catalyst for the new fuel she was testing, she used her own wedding ring to provide it!
  • Magical Native Islander: Matsuri can charm fishes to the shore by singing to them, uses the Jedi Mind Trick on a guard and survives 38 kg at 10G on her torso during a re-entry without even a bruised rib.[1]
    • In the backstory detailed in the novel, the Jedi Mind Trick is the cause of Yukari's father abandoning his bride during their honeymoon.
  • Nubile Savage: Matsuri.
  • Only Sane Man: Yukari, especially from her perspective. Surrounded by an overly ambitious executive, a surprisingly cold-blooded doctor, a mad scientist, a jungle girl who can't shut up about "fireworks"? Yeah. And then there's her father.
  • Open-Minded Parent: Yukari's mother is totally ok with her daughter risking her life as an astronaut.
  • Ordinary High School Student: Yukari prior to becoming an astronaut. For the first few weeks following her return to Earth, she tries to insist that she still is one.
  • Salaryman: Kinoshita was one of these before he decided to follow his childhood dreams and become an astronaut. After failing screening due to a medical condition, he ended up becoming the SSA's mission director instead.
  • Scary Shiny Glasses: Mihara the chemist.
  • Small Girl, Big Gun: The .45 ACP is on the upper end of the range of handgun calibers. Considering that there is no room in the setting for a BFG, Yukari's Colt semiautomatic is pretty big. See Blown Across the Room under setting/premise/plot tropes.

Metacontext and Presentation tropes

  • As Herself, The Cameo and Ink Suit Actor: Real life JAXA astronaut Naoko Yamazaki appears in a scene in episode seven, where she welcomes the fictional Yukari as a fellow astronaut.
  • Conspicuous CG: Most prominently with ground vehicles and rockets. The actual space capsules are often animated, though they don't avoid this treatment entirely.
  • Male Gaze: In the obligatory Beach Episode, some of the technicians are astonished by Yukari's swimsuit look. The crew on Atlantis also seem to have good times ogling the girls in their spacesuits.
  • Mohs Scale of Science Fiction Hardness: The rocket and capsule technology look real. The skintight spacesuits are projected to become reality in about a decade's time.[when?] However, the story does not qualify for the Speculative Science list: Matsuri's Magical Native Islander abilities mean that any plot point that she touches turns into Magic Realism, including the launches that she serves as CAPCOM for. Also, "Mission Director" is specifically an astronaut's job, but the SSA gave it to somebody who failed to become an astronaut because of a medical condition. Let's not get started on both of Yukari's missions landing in the same place to within a few hundred meters, the first in a pool that's too shallow to be able to have absorbed the energy of the capsules' impact. And the SSA is probably the only space agency on Earth where all of their astronauts got to go into orbit at least once.
  • Shout-Out: Mihara may be one to Mihara "Icchan" Ichiro from Angelic Layer.
  • Shown Their Work: More like "Shown that they had advice from the Japanese Space Agency," but the effect is much the same.
  • Translation Convention: Most of the time, people appear to be speaking Japanese, including the Atlantis crew (it's far more likely that Yukari and Akane are actually speaking English, however).
  1. In Real Life, 38kg at 10G - the equivalent of 380 kg at 1G - is enough to crush a ribcage.