“1814 Edo: Uncredited daughter O-Ei assists her famous artist father Hokusai in creating iconic works.”
Miss Hokusai
百日紅~Miss HOKUSAI~
Would You Love or Hate This?
AI-powered analysis tailored to your taste
Based on your preference for character-driven stories with layered emotional arcs, this title's exploration of identity and belonging would deeply resonate. The pacing mirrors series you've rated highly, and its thematic depth aligns with your appreciation for nuanced storytelling...
However, the slow initial episodes might test your patience given your history of dropping shows that don't hook you early. The art style shift in the middle arc could also be a concern...
Synopsis
1814 Edo: Uncredited daughter O-Ei assists her famous artist father Hokusai in creating iconic works.
The time: 1814. The place: Edo, now known as Tokyo. One of the highest populated cities in the world, teeming with peasants, samurai, townsmen, merchants, nobles, artists, courtesans, and perhaps even supernatural things. A much accomplished artist of his time and now in his mid-fifties, Tetsuzo can boast clients from all over Japan, and tirelessly works in the garbage-loaded chaos of his house-atelier. He spends his days creating astounding pieces of art, from a giant-size Bodhidharma portrayed on a 180 square meter-wide sheet of paper, to a pair of sparrows painted on a tiny rice grain. Short-tempered, utterly sarcastic, with no passion for sake or money, he would charge a fortune for any job he is not really interested in. Third of Tetsuzo's four daughters and born out of his second marriage, outspoken 23-year-old O-Ei has inherited her father's talent and stubbornness, and very often she would paint instead of him, though uncredited. Her art is so powerful that sometimes leads to trouble. "We're father and daughter; with two brushes and four chopsticks, I guess we can always manage, in a way or another." Decades later, Europe was going to discover the immense talent of Tetsuzo. He was to become best known by one of his many names: Katsushika Hokusai. He would mesmerize Renoir and van Gogh, Monet and Klimt. However, very few today are even aware of the woman who assisted him all his life, and greatly contributed to his art while remaining uncredited. This is the untold story of O-Ei, Master Hokusai's daughter: a lively portrayal of a free-spirited woman overshadowed by her larger-than-life father, unfolding through the changing seasons. (Source: Production I.G)
What people say
Community consensus
Derived from 14 sampled reviews
What 14 viewers settled on.
Polarized
σ 1.85 · split reception
4.1 pts
Recommenders 8.1 · others 4.0
↑ 0.14
Running avg · Sep 2015 → Aug 2023
- 10 “I just saw this in NYC two days ago and I absolutely loved it! It's a beautiful slice-of-life, episodic narrative which may not be everyone's cup of tea, but I thought it was really touching! It...”
- 7 “A meandering slice-of-life film that sets up numerous plot threads only for most of them to go nowhere. If you're hoping this film will give you much insight into the titular figure's life, you'll...”
- 8 “High-end anime films tend to draw from Hayao Miyazaki's template: fantastical family drama or adventure in an idyllic setting. Keiichi Hara's "Sarusuberi: Miss Hokusai" instead hues closer to Isao...”
Watch Order & Related
Explore the Miss Hokusai universe
Cast
See all →Trailers & videos
See all →Gallery
See all →If you stay for this, you'll stay for these
See all →The community pairs this with
See all →Made by
See all credits →Production slate
- Format 1 × 90′ eps × min
- Total runtime 1h 30m all episodes
- Aired May 2015 – ongoing
- Source Movie media type
- Rated PG 13 - Teens 13 or older
- Ref. BS-9032 catalog
Produced by
- Sunrise Producer
- TV Tokyo Producer
- Bandai Visual Producer
- OLM Producer
- Asatsu DK Producer
- DandeLion Animation Studio Producer
- Trans Cosmos Producer
- Production GoodBook Producer
- Asahi Shimbun Producer
- Tokyo Theatres Producer