Miyuki-chan in Wonderland
Title: Miyuki-chan in Wonderland
Genre: Comedy, Ecchi, Fantasy
Artists: CLAMP
Anime: 2 episode OVA
Manga: 1 volume / 7 chapters
Release Dates: June 1995 (Anime), 1993-1995 (Manga)
Important note. Miyuki-chan is light-hearted humor. It's silly, ecchi, and it's meant to be that way. There is no plot, we know. CLAMP made this series to experiment with their notable costume designs, character art, and themes, all while having a little fun and delving a bit in yuri territory. It worked. Miyuki-chan is comedic and displays some of CLAMP's serious artistic talent. If you watch or read the series and complain about its lack of a plot, you're missing the point.
Chapter Listings
- Miyuki-chan in Wonderland
Loose parody of Alice in Wonderland. Miyuki is a school girl who wanders through Wonderland trying to make her way home. - Miyuki-chan in Mirrorland
Loose parody of Through the Looking Glass. Miyuki's reflection pulls her through the mirror, and she must engage in a chess battle. - Miyuki-chan in TV Land
- Miyuki-chan in Part-Time Job Land
- Miyuki-chan in Mahjong Land
- Miyuki-chan in Video Game Land
- Miyuki-chan in X Land
Miyuki replaces main hero Kamui in this crossover with CLAMP's X/1999 series.
The Creators: CLAMP
CLAMP is an all-female Japanese mangaka group that formed in the mid 1980s. It consists of their leader Nanase Ohkawa, who provides much of the storyline and screenplay for all their works and adaptations, and three artists whose roles shift for each series: Mokona, Tsubaki Nekoi, and Satsuki Igarashi.
They are praised for their blending of shojo and shounen elements. Unlike most mangaka who specialize in a single genre, Clamp has created a diverse body of work. Clamp's genres vary widely, from childish and comedic (Angelic Layer, Clamp School Detectives) to much more dramatic and mature (Clover, Tokyo Babylon) series. Furthemore, as they did in Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicle, Clamp often reuses characters from their own earlier works, which gives rise to a loosely defined "Clamp universe". Among anime fans, they have a dedicated cult following, as well as a large general fanbase.
Notable works include X/1999, Magic Knight Rayearth, Card Captor Sakura, Chobits, and the character designs for Code Geass. (~Edited from Wikipedia)