A Gentle Breeze in the Village

A Gentle Breeze in the Village, also known as Tennen Kokekkō (天然コケッコー, lit. "Natural Cock-a-doodle-doo"), is a Japanese slice of life manga series written and illustrated by Fusako Kuramochi.[1][2] It was serialized in the magazine Chorus from 1994 to 2000.

A Gentle Breeze in the Village
Cover of Tennen Kokekkō volume 14 as published by Shueisha
天然コケッコー
(Tennen Kokekkō)
GenreSlice of life
Manga
Written byFusako Kuramochi
Published byShueisha
DemographicShōjo
Original run19942000
Volumes14
Live-action film
Directed byNobuhiro Yamashita
Written byAya Watanabe
ReleasedJuly 24, 2007
Runtime121 minutes

The manga won the 20th Kodansha Manga Award in 1996.

It was made into a movie in 2007, directed by Nobuhiro Yamashita and starring Kaho. It was released on July 24, 2007.

Plot summary

One of six students in a combined primary and junior high school, Soyo Migita (Kaho) is the most senior pupil. For her, school is a joyful experience with an extended family of loving little brothers and sisters, but her days as the tallest and oldest student are soon to be over.

Hiromi Osawa (Masaki Okada), a cool boy from Tokyo, arrives in the village. Attracted to him, Soyo tries to ignore the feelings that begin to occupy her heart and mind. However, she soon surrenders to her passion and learns to act upon her newfound emotions.

Main characters

Soyo Migita (右田 そよ, Migita Soyo)
Hiromi Oosawa (大沢 広海, Ōsawa Hiromi)
A boy who came from Tokyo and became Soyo's first classmate. He later becomes her boyfriend. He has a very good sense of fashion.
Atsuko Yamabe (山辺 篤子, Yamabe Atsuko)
One grade younger than Soyo and her best friend. She wants to be a manga illustrator. She uses Hiromi as a model for the male character in her story.
Ibuki Taura (田浦 伊吹, Taura Ibuki)
One grade younger than Soyo and her best friend. His house is a store.
Itoko Migita (右田 以東子, Migita Itoko)
Mother of Soyo.

Film

The film was shown at the 2007 Toronto International Film Festival during the Contemporary World Cinema programme. It was later shown at the 28th Yokohama Film Festival.

Tennen Kokekkō was ranked as the 2007 Asahi Best Ten Film Festival Number 1, 2007 Japan Movie Best Ten Number 2, and as the 2007 Yokohama Film Festival Japan Movie Best Ten Number 2. Kaho has won two new actress awards from this film, including the Best New Actress award.

Cast

Staff

Filming location

References

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