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      • Elfen Lied is licensed for English language releases by ADV Films for North America and by Madman Entertainment for Australia and New Zealand. ADV Films UK division aired the English dub of the series in the United Kingdom on Propeller TV as part of Anime Network 's launch, uncensored and uncut.
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  1. Elfen Lied (Japanese: エルフェンリート, Hepburn: Erufen Rīto) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Lynn Okamoto. It was serialized in Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from June 2002 to August 2005, with its 107 chapters collected into twelve tankōbon volumes.

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  3. Stream and watch the anime Elfen Lied on Crunchyroll. Lucy is a psychopathic killer with powers beyond any humans. Nyu is a helpless child with no memories.

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    • Overview
    • What does "Elfen Lied" mean and how do you pronounce it?
    • How can Yuka be a love interest for Kouta? They're cousins!
    • What is the ultimate fate of Kurama?
    • Are the Diclonii naturally violent?
    • Does Lucy live or die at the end?
    • If The Kakuzawas are Diclonii as well, why doesn't Lucy want to ally with them?
    • Are there any male Diclonius or are they an all-female subspecies of normal Humans?
    • Why does Elfen Lied have so much ecchi content?

    About The Elfen Lied Series: Manga And Anime.

    It's very common for English speakers to mispronounce Elfen Lied due to the Lied half of the title resembling the word "lied," the past conjugal of "lie." However, Elfen Lied is in fact German! The series title is a canonical misspelling of Elfenlied, the title of a poem written by Eduard Mörike. It is composed of the words Elf(e) and Lied, the latter of which is the German word for "song." Elfenlied is a compound word, with "-en" written between the two base words to describe what kind of song it is: an elf's song. However, Elf(e) can also refer to a sprite, fairy, or pixie, so its meaning is often context dependent.

    Further, in German, the letter D sounds like a T when it is the last consonant in a word, and the ", ".i.e.," vowel combination gives a long E sound. Therefore Lied is pronounced "leet." This idea is further reflected in the katakana for the series reading "erufen rito" instead of "erufen rido."

    There's a lot to say about this, including questioning their degree of blood relation, and the taboo nature of cousin marriage is relative (pardoning the pun). In Japan, there is no legal or customary prohibition against cousins marrying, so Yuka and Kouta as a couple wouldn't raise eyebrows.

    Bottom line: Culture shock is a heck of a thing, so an online parody of 4Kids meets Elfen Lied says, if it bothers you to distraction, think of them instead as childhood friends or remind yourself that in its country of origin, it's not a big deal.

    That depends on whether you watch the anime or read the manga. In short, the anime has Kurama die along with his actual daughter, Mariko, to atone both for his treatment of her and his euthanizing of many Diclonius infants. The manga makes this more complex, with Kurama, at first wishing to die, but then realizing that he should atone by living and making up for his sins as a living man.

    Bottom line: The man had much to answer for, and each version has him do so in different ways.

    The anime and manga have different approaches on this subject. There is evidence on every front with which to make the nature versus nurture argument--Nana, being a huge part of any such debate. One of the biggest problems in making this determination is the way Humans do discriminate, even against each other, and the young age most of these girls are when their powers awaken.

    For the anime, it makes things more ambiguous and focuses more on the nature vs. nurture aspect more and is mysterious. The manga flip-flops on this idea but ultimately decides in the end Diclonius aren’t meant to only destroy humans, but the entire world itself, and need to be eradicated because they are only seen as dangerous and the fertile class can only exist through inbreeding, although there seems to be huge contradictions with these ideas alone.

    At the end of the anime, it seems likely she is still alive and is likely the person standing behind the door that Kouta goes to answer. The events at the end of the anime strongly imply that the events of the later parts of the manga are still to come, and even if Kurama isn't needed somehow, Lucy is. The special side story that takes place in the same continuity as the anime shows that Nyu is happily living with her found family. However this side story appears to take place around the same time as the OVA. In the manga, her power grows to such a state that massive use of that power in several battles and then to heal Kouta destroys her body's integrity, causing it to melt. In the last act of mercy and love, Kouta kills her to end her pain and agony.

    Bottom line: Neither scenario looks good for Lucy, at least in this life.

    Since Diclonius means two horns, technically, the Kakuzawas are Diclonii. But they are not of Lucy's species or, if you will, subgroup/offshoot of Humanity. The Kakuzawas are ordinary Humans born with a minor genetic mutation. They never had powers or any other thing that made them more than Human. True Diclonii can sense one another's presence, but Lucy never sensed any such presence from either Professor Kakuzawa or his father. Since the revealed Kakuzawa family history included tales of their persecution by non-horned Humans in feudal Japan, it seems likely that the racial and eugenics stories the family told were just that, stories meant to rally the morale of a people who were hunted and hated by others. Their case is also not helped by both Kakuzawas making it clear they intend to use her solely for furthering their own glory.

    Bottom line: Lucy didn't want them because they weren't part of her kind and they saw her only as a tool instead of a person.

    While in the anime, it could be possible the Kakuzawas were actual Diclonii as it was long before the big reveal was made in the manga that they were all just humans, in the manga Lucy’s half-brother from Chief Kakuzawa forcing himself on her mom is the only male Diclonius in existence. It is a huge plot point used in the manga that only he and Lucy could make more fertile Diclonii and thus the Diclonius species had to be killed off because they would only exist through inbreeding and how their species was meant to destroy the world. Many of these elements have been contradictory or go against logic, but the main gist is there was only ever one male Diclonius ever in the manga.

    Bottom line: In the anime, while it is possible the Kakuzawas may have been actual Diclonii, in the manga only Lucy’s half-brother from the chief himself was really the only male in the species.

    There are multiple instances of naked flesh and sexual situations. Elfen Lied has these and so does life. Lucy, as Nyu, is a totally innocent girl, unaware of the impact her antics have on everyone, especially Kouta. The nudity of the Diclonius girls inside the facility isn't meant to be sexual at all and instead shows how inhumanely they're treated as experimental test subjects. A good example to think of is the anime-only scene where Kouta runs to rescue Nana from Mariko. She has been stripped naked by Mariko, but his only concern is for a member of his family. Her prosthetic limbs even put him off more than anything.

    The answer to why all this ecchi content is here in the first place is because Lynn Okamoto wanted the original main premise to focus on romance and be a successor to the popular romantic comedy anime Love Hina. Lynn Okamoto is really invested in sex and romance and enjoys content with those elements, but his original plans for his main romance/ecchi focus got switched. For more context on how Elfen Lied came to be switching from the ecchi/romance focus to the gore and horror focus see this lower section below.

  4. Mar 21, 2008 · Elfen Lied is based on Lynn Okamoto's seinen manga series of the same name and premiered while the manga was still in publication. The anime follows the source material through the first 7 volumes, with several alterations to the story, and concludes with an exclusive ending.

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  5. Currently you are able to watch "Elfen Lied - Season 1" streaming on Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Crunchyroll Amazon Channel or buy it as download on Amazon Video. About the season

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  6. Elfen Lied ( エルフェンリート, Erufen Rīto ) is a Japanese manga series created by manga author, Lynn Okamoto. The title is German or Dutch and translates into English as "Elf Song," "Elf Ballad," or even "Fairy Song." Its name is derived from the poem "Elfenlied" by Eduard Mörike and adapted into a classical German Lieder by Hugo Wolf.

  7. Elfen Lied: Created by Lynn Okamoto. With Sanae Kobayashi, Chihiro Suzuki, Mamiko Noto, Sam Saletta. Two university students come across a seemingly harmless girl named Lucy, unaware that she's actually a mutant serial killer with a split personality.

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