Loading this show's details and discussion boards...
Loading this show's details and discussion boards...


ASIENCE 髪は女の命
Production I.G has created the animation for Kao Corporation's Asience shampoo creative challenge, entitled Asience: Hairy Tale. The 60-second animated film is directed by Kazuto Nakazawa, who gained international fame by directing the animation part in Quentin Tarantino's world hit Kill Bill: Vol. 1. Nakazawa also designed the characters and directed the animation. Art direction has been entrusted to Shuichi Hirata, the texture wizard behind the stunning artwork of Cannes-nominated Innocence and Annecy-selected xxxHOLiC - A Midsummer Night's Dream. The graphic style in Asience: Hairy Tale is visually inspired by XVIII century Japanese paintings, and personalized by Nakazawa's nervous and expressive brush touch used for the characters outlines. Without any support from 3D animation, the brush lines were painstakingly traced with pencil on paper by the in-between staff. The story concept, focusing on woman's hair as metaphor of feminine life, is portrayed as a tragic love story in a samurai drama fashion. (Source: AniDB)
Save this anime to any personal or shared list you can edit.
You do not have any editable lists yet. Create one first, then come back here to save this show.
Community rating: No ratings have landed yet. Be the first to score it.
Pick one clear status for this entry and only track episodes when it actually matters.
Pick a starting point
Known total: 1 episodes
Episodes watched
Only episodes that are open for discussion appear here. When the schedule is clear, Hero and Legend members can join the next simulcast thread one episode early.
Times shown in UTC
Episode 1
Discussable from completed-series metadata
You may also like
Recommendations stay rooted in the current show instead of broad seasonal popularity.
Active episode boards
Episode-specific threads that already have motion rise to the top here.
This board is for the current entry only. Use it for season-specific, movie-specific, or special-specific discussion without mixing the whole franchise.