| Title | Rating | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|
| E | ||
|
EVE no Jikan |
It is common to see the coloured halos of androids at school, on the street or helping out at home. The news is trying to make an issue about being too dependent on these mechanical servants, but how dependable are they? Ruiko is troubled when he realizes that his family's android ‘disappears’ for several hours each day. Using GPS tracking and logfiles, he and a school friend retrace the route taken by his android and end up at a strange little café named ‘EVE no Jikan’ - where discrimination between androids and humans is not permitted, and none of the customers or staff have halos. |
|
| H | ||
|
Hoshizora Kiseki |
Rent |
Kozue, a member of an astronomical club, is a girl who dreams of the starry sky and of a summer romance. During one summer break, she sets out on a journey with a shining fragment of a fallen meteor hanging from her wrist and with a distant feeling that someone calling her. On her trip, she catches a glance of a boy with sad eyes. Later that evening she meets him in an isolated astronomical observatory, and feels an attraction to him as they spend time talking about the stars. Ginga is a boy who has lived his life in a bubble as part of a governmental program to contact an orbital satellite and feels very alone in his structured and isolated life. Under the innumerable stars in the sky, a night of friendship and miracles begin... |
| T | ||
| Time of Eve | See EVE no Jikan | |
| W | ||
| Wonderful star filled sky | Rent | See Hoshizora Kiseki |
| イヴの時間 (Japanese) | See EVE no Jikan | |
| 星空キセキ (Japanese) | Rent | See Hoshizora Kiseki |
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