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  1. Here's the translation: Lum 「Even if it takes my entire life, I'll make ya' say it.」 Ataru 「I'll say it on my deathbed.」 ?? 「Are you two going to fight over this for the rest of your life?!」 Lum 「だっちゃ!!」 ( (daccha - that's right)) Also small fun fact since I couldn't post the rest of the photos.

  2. Chased Off into the Sunset: The film ends not with Ataru and Lum running off to school, as in the manga, but with the entirety of Tomobiki chasing after them with the intent of beating them up after Lum concedes victory to Ataru without Ataru having professed his love to her.

  3. In my mind Lum the Forever will always be the end of the anime -- much as I enjoy Inaba the Dream Maker and some of the OVAs -- when Ataru is forcibly thrown by a crazy explosion into Lum's arms. And the closing credits, with "Melancholy no Kiseki" and the photo montage, are sublime.

  4. 12 Νοε 2015 · The last canonical scene in both the Urusei Yatsura anime and manga. One of my personal favorite anime/manga endings ever.

  5. Urusei Yatsura (うる星やつら)[a] is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Rumiko Takahashi. It was serialized in Shogakukan 's Weekly Shōnen Sunday from September 1978 to February 1987. Its 366 individual chapters were collected in 34 tankōbon volumes.

  6. Fifth movie is the ending from the manga. However I wouldn't go into the anime expecting a close manga adaptation. Urusei Yatsura has a lot of anime original episodes, has some episodes in different orders then the manga and most episodes have at least minor additions or changes.

  7. When Viz Media created the "2-in-1" manga volumes in the early 2020s, each volume, along with containing two volumes of the original manga translated into English, would end each internal volume with both a short, somewhat comedic, essay about Tomobiki and its cast of screwballs, as well as a single page discussing some detail about the setting ...

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