Elfen Lied

Elfen Lied

Alternative Titles

Synonyms

Elfen Song
Elfic Song
Elf Song

Japanese

エルフェンリート

English

Elfen Lied

Information

Type

TV

Aired

Jul 25, 2004 to Oct 17, 2004

Episodes

13

Duration

25 min per ep

Broadcast

Sundays at 22:30 (JST)

Studios

Arms

Licensors

ADV Films

Status

Finished Airing

Source

Manga

Rating

R+ - Mild Nudity

Demographics

Seinen

Statistics

Rank

2083

Score

7.46

Scored by

892367

Popularity

77

Members

1550760

Favorites

24310

External Links

Synopsis

Lucy is a special breed of human referred to as Diclonius, born with a short pair of horns and invisible telekinetic hands that lands her as a victim of inhumane scientific experimentation by the government. However, once circumstances present her an opportunity to escape, Lucy, corrupted by the confinement and torture, unleashes a torrent of bloodshed as she escapes her captors. During her breakout, she receives a crippling head injury that leaves her with a split personality: someone with the mentality of a harmless child possessing limited speech capacity. In this state of instability, she stumbles upon two college students, Kouta and his cousin Yuka, who unknowingly take an injured fugitive into their care, unaware of her murderous tendencies. This act of kindness will change their lives, as they soon find themselves dragged into the shadowy world of government secrecy and conspiracy. [Written by MAL Rewrite]

Background

Elfen Lied follows the source manga through the first seven volumes, with several alterations to the story, and concludes with an original ending. In an interview, director Mamoru Kanbe expressed his disappointment in having to condense the story into 13 episodes and felt that more were needed to include significant plot details that would have made the series more emotive. The artistic design of both the opening and ending sequences are heavily inspired by the works of Austrian symbolist painter Gustav Klimt. Colors and patterns resembling Klimt's distinct style were used and characters of the series were drawn to recreate several paintings from the artist's golden period, including The Kiss. The opening theme, "LILIUM," which is sung in Ecclesiastical Latin, uses lyrics taken from The Bible, the Renaissance hymn "Ave mundi spes Maria," as well as the alchemical compendium Theatrum Chemicum.

Characters

Related

Adaptation

Elfen Lied

Trailer