Monday, August 31, 2009

BREAKING NEW* GirlsLocks pics featuring Aragaki Yui

Posted by YKT at 11:00 PM 1 comments
*Girls Locks pics featuring Aragaki Yui taken today!!!

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


Huge thanks to ADGF for uploading his find!!!

Meanwhile, Nikki wrote...

Woot~ cho~ kirei! Arigatou for the pics!^^ (Nikki)


What pics? Hehehehe, please scroll down...

BREAKING NEW Aragaki Yui images

Posted by YKT at 7:31 PM 1 comments
Hi, I found NEW Aragaki Yui images in a web special on feature.movies.jp.msn.com!!!


Aragaki Yui


Aragaki Yui


Aragaki Yui


Aragaki Yui


Aragaki Yui


The above 5 Aragaki Yui images credit: feature.movies.jp.msn.com

Meanwhile, Nikki found the following new Aragaki Yui scans!!!


Aragaki Yui


Aragaki Yui


Nikki found the following gifs...uploaded by ADGF with thanks:

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


Finally, I created another photobucket to showcase Nikki's latest finds as at date time of this post:



Thanks again Nikki!!!

Sunday, August 30, 2009

2 scans from TV Japan featuring Aragaki Yui

Posted by YKT at 8:58 PM 0 comments
Hi, ADGF found and uploaded 2 scans from TV Japan featuring Aragaki Yui:

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


Thanks ADGF!!!

Dt338 is back and uploaded 5 vids...if you are pressed for time, the last 2 are worth watching:







The last one above is apparently very new...like over the weekend new...don't miss it!!!

Thanks dt338!!!

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Sneak preview of Aragaki Yui 2010 calendar, plus new scans and caps of Gakky from yesterday!!!

Posted by YKT at 8:08 PM 1 comments
Sneak preview of Yui Aragaki's 2010 calendar, plus new scans of magazines featuring Yui Aragaki!!!

Please click to resize:

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


Caps of Aragaki Yui from a TV show which aired in Japan yesterday...click to enlarge...

Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui Aragaki Yui
Aragaki Yui

The last couple of gifs are artworks...credit per watermark...

Friday, August 28, 2009

Posted by YKT at 12:01 PM 0 comments
UPDATED with dt338's 3 promotional vid uploads, hyde's translation of a find by Nikki, and masha's contributions...all after the review BELOW...

First English review of Ballad by The Japan Times!!! And it's especially positive for Yui Aragaki's acting performance!!!

Here's the Yui Aragaki excerpt (or sound bite):

"Once again, the cast rises to the melodramatic occasion, especially Yui Aragaki as Ren, channeling Misa Uehara's flashing-eyed Princess Yuki in Kurosawa's "Kakushi Toride no San-Akunin" ("The Hidden Fortress," 1958). --By MARK SCHILLING"

The review as follows:

"Yamazaki blasts the past with stunning CGI

By MARK SCHILLING

Takashi Yamazaki was known primarily as a computer-graphics whiz when he directed the ensemble drama "Always Sanchome no Yuhi" ("Always: Sunset on Third Street," 2005). True to form, the recreation of 1950s Tokyo by Yamazaki's team at the Shirogumi effects house was hyper-realistically detailed, while suffused with a golden-glow nostalgia for a simpler time.

The real discovery for me, though, were the performances Yamazaki drew from his young actors, particularly star Kenta Suga. As Junnosuke, a street kid who becomes the ward of failed novelist Chagawa (Hidetaka Yoshioka), Suga did not try to charm the audience into submission — the favored strategy of nearly every local child actor. Instead he played his dirt-smudged character with a combination of raw innocence and true grit that made him simultaneously a throwback and a standout.

In his new samurai period film, "Ballad Namonaki Koi no Uta" ("Ballad: A Song Without Love"), Takahashi again focuses on a child character, this time a modern-day boy named Shinichi (Akashi Takei), with a story inspired by the 2002 entry in the long-running "Crayon Shin-Chan" feature animation series. Average-kid Shinichi, however, is little like the anime Shin-Chan — a mischief-making, dirty-minded kindergartner who is Bart Simpson's Japanese cousin.

Also, rather than recreate "Crayon" 's crude-but-cute style, Takahashi has conjured up a vividly realized past world, in which the CGI is largely invisible, while focusing on the common humanity of his characters, minus much of the usual cinematic baggage. One of his models was Akira Kurosawa, whose best samurai films always seemed to be rediscovering the genre and whose characters were comprehensible to everyone from kids to foreign critics (some of whom rather disdained Kurosawa for this clarity, while championing the more oblique Ozu).

Watching "Ballad," I was also reminded of the late, not-as-great John Hughes, who had a talent for not only making his kids and adolescents real to people of similar age sitting in the audience but also for imagining the film through their eyes. "Home Alone" (1990) is a tale of primal terror and fantastic derring-do that could have been cooked up by its 8-year-old hero.

"Ballad" begins with Shinichi's recurring dream of a beautiful princess by a pond. Meanwhile, in his waking life, he escapes a quarrel between his career woman mom (Yui Natsukawa) and photographer dad (Michitaka Tsutsui) and later, when bullies harass a girl he likes, he slinks away instead of defending her. Then, after finding a mysterious old letter buried next to an ancient tree, he nods off — and wakes up in 1574.

Despite his surprise, Shinichi quickly and accidentally saves the life of Ijiri Matabei (Tsuyoshi Kusanagi), a fierce-eyed, but kindly samurai general, who escorts him to his clan's castle. There he meets the princess of his dreams — Ren (Yui Aragaki), the independent- minded daughter of the clan lord (Atsuo Nakamura). Shinichi also impresses the locals with his mountain bike and cell-phone camera — and confesses to Matabei that he is from the future.

Before Matabei can help Shinichi return to his own time, Okurai (Takao Osawa), a powerful warlord, descends on the castle and brusquely asks for the hand of Ren in marriage. Though in love with Matabei, Ren agrees, since a martial alliance with Okurai will be of benefit to her clan. Soon after, though, she changes her mind and follows her heart. Not used to being dumped, the enraged Okurai decides to rub her castle and clan off the map.

The ensuing battle is staged with the sort of CGI-assisted spectacle — from swarms of arrows flying through the air to hand-tossed bombs exploding on the castle grounds — that Kurosawa could have only imagined. At the same time, the mayhem is not graphically and disturbingly bloody; instead it's of the sort that stirs the imaginations of small boys: warriors thrusting, parrying and bellowing with manly courage, vigor — and enjoyment.

Shinichi is more spectator than actor in all this, while being better-behaved — or rather more cowed — than his obnoxious, pranksterish cartoon model. Kids looking for vicarious thrills will be disappointed, as will Shin-chan fans looking for a few laughs.

Takashi tries to open tears ducts in the usual way of dramas about star-crossed love, with the added pathos of Shinichi's attachment to Matabei and Ren — and his being only a visitor to their world. Once again, the cast rises to the melodramatic occasion, especially Yui Aragaki as Ren, channeling Misa Uehara's flashing-eyed Princess Yuki in Kurosawa's "Kakushi Toride no San-Akunin" ("The Hidden Fortress," 1958).

The tears, however, don't flow in the hoped-for quantities, since the plot gears designed to wring them are too well-worn and exposed. But I liked the way the past meets the future in "Ballad" — with lively curiosity, but otherwise not a lot of fuss. And, of course, all the samurai want their pictures taken."

Caption:

"Back to the future: A scene from "Ballad Namonaki Koi no Uta" ("Ballad: A Song Without Love") 2009 "BALLAD NAMONAKI KOI NO UTA" SEISAKU IINKAI.
Ballad: Namonaki Koi no Uta Rating: (3.5 out of 5)
Director: Takashi Yamazaki
Running time: 132 minutes
Language: Japanese
Opens Sept. 5, 2009
[See Japan Times movie listing]"

Source: http://search.japantimes.co.jp/print/ff20090828a1.html

UPDATE 3: 3 NEW VIDS FROM DT338:







UPDATE 2: Better Junon October 2009 issue scan and artworks by Ann and Anya:

Please click to resize:

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


UPDATE 1: Nikki's find:

Aragaki Yui


hyde translated the words in the above artwork:

The words in the artwork goes something like:

"Are you happy?

I was once very happy"

lol bout the words , it's a phrase used in Koizora


Thanks hyde and Nikki!!!

Also masha wrote in a comment with the following finds:

hi~~ long time no see!! I'm masha~~
how have you been??
I just want to share some of pics with you~~
here are some gakky's pics in private life, what she cooked and her pets~~


Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui

Aragaki Yui


Thanks masha~~!!! Special thanks to ADGF for the codes!!!