{{short description|Horror manga series}} {{Use mdy dates|date=May 2026}} {{Infobox animanga/Header | image = Vampire Princess Miyu vol 1.jpg | caption = First ''tankōbon'' volume cover of ''New Vampire Princess Miyu'' featuring Miyu | ja_kanji = 吸血姫 美夕 | ja_romaji = Kyūketsuhime Miyu | genre = {{ubl|Horror<ref name="THEM">{{cite web|last=Beard|first=Jeremy|title=Vampire Princess Miyu TV|url=https://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=623|website=THEM Anime Reviews|access-date=May 16, 2023|date=January 14, 2004}}</ref><!-- Date found at http://www.themanime.org/viewnews.php?m=1&y=2004 -->|Supernatural<ref name="THEM"/>}}<!-- Note: Use and cite reliable sources to identify genre/s, not personal interpretation. Please don't include more than three genres (per MOS:A&M). --> }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = {{English manga publisher|NA=Studio Ironcat}} | magazine = Suspiria | published = | first = 1989 | last = 2002 | volumes = 10 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Video | type = ova | director = Toshiki Hirano | producer = {{ubl|Kazufumi Nomura|Tōru Miura}} | writer = Shō Aikawa | music = Kenji Kawai | studio = AIC | licensee = {{English anime licensee|AUS=Madman Entertainment|NA=AnimEigo|UK=Manga Entertainment}} | first = July 21, 1988 | last = April 1, 1989 | runtime = | episodes = 4 | episode_list = List of Vampire Princess Miyu episodes }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Princess Yui | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = {{English manga publisher|NA=Studio Ironcat}} | magazine = | first = 1990 | last = 1995 | volumes = 5 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = New Vampire Princess Miyu | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = {{English manga publisher|NA=Studio Ironcat}} | magazine = Suspiria | first = 1992 | last = 1994 | volumes = 5 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = The Wanderer | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = {{English manga publisher|NA=Studio Ironcat}} | magazine = Horror Comics Special | first = October 1996 | last = February 1997 | volumes = 3 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Video | type = tv series | director = {{ubl|Toshiki Hirano|Keitarō Motonaga (assistant)}} | producer = {{ubl|Shigeto Yamazaki|Kazunori Takashiro}} | writer = Yuji Hayami | music = Kenji Kawai | studio = AIC{{efn|{{nihongo|Production assistance|制作協力}} for all episodes provided by Group TAC.}} | licensee = {{English anime licensee|AUS=Madman Entertainment|NA=Maiden Japan|UK=MVM Films}} | network = TV Tokyo | first = October 6, 1997 | last = March 30, 1998 | episodes = 26 | episode_list = List of Vampire Princess Miyu episodes }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Yui: Kanonshou | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = {{English manga publisher|NA=Studio Ironcat}} | magazine = Suspiria Mystery | first = 2002 | last = 2005 | volumes = 8 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Princess | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = SB Creative | publisher_en = | magazine = Flex Comix Flare | first = 2009 | last = 2012 | volumes = 5 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Yui: Saishuushou | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = | magazine = Champion Cross | imprint = Champion Red Comics | first = November 28, 2017 | last = March 20, 2018 | volumes = 2 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Miyu: Saku | author = Toshiki Hirano | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = Akita Shoten | publisher_en = | magazine = Champion Cross | imprint = Champion Red Comics | first = December 5, 2017 | last = September 9, 2020 | volumes = 7 | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Print | type = manga | title = Vampire Miyui | author = {{ubl|Toshiki Hirano|Chiaki J. Konaka}} | illustrator = Narumi Kakinouchi | publisher = SB Creative | publisher_en = | magazine = GA Comic | imprint = | first = January 31, 2025 | last = | volumes = | volume_list = }} {{Infobox animanga/Footer }} {{nihongo|'''''Vampire Princess Miyu'''''|{{ruby-ja|吸血姫|ヴァンパイア}} 美夕|Vanpaia Miyu|lead=yes}} is a Japanese horror manga series by Narumi Kakinouchi and Toshiki Hirano, as well as an anime adaptation by the same creators. The anime was originally adapted as a 4-episode original video animation (OVA) series released in 1988 and licensed by AnimEigo, and later as a 26-episode television series released in 1997 and licensed by Tokyopop and later Maiden Japan.
==Plot== The series takes place in Kyoto, and follows Miyu Yamano and her Western Shinma companion, Larva. The daughter of a human and a Shinma, Miyu was born a vampire and awakened as the Guardian. She is tasked with hunting down stray Shinma and sending them back to the darkness. Before she turns 15, she longs to return to the darkness herself, but not until she has banished the Shinma from Earth and learned who she truly is, as this information has been withheld from her since her awakening.
Most locations in the series evoke traditional Japan.<ref>{{cite book|last=Napier|first=Susan J.|author-link=Susan J. Napier|title=The Worlds of Japanese Popular Culture: Gender, Shifting Boundaries and Global Cultures |editor=Martinez, Dolores P.|year=1998|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=0-521-63128-9|chapter=Vampires, Psychic Girls, Flying Women and Sailor Scouts|page=[https://archive.org/details/worldsofjapanese0000unse/page/96 96]|chapter-url-access=registration|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/worldsofjapanese0000unse/page/96 }}</ref>
==Characters== thumb|right|Miyu and Larva, the two main characters, as depicted in the manga
===Main=== ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Miyu}}|美夕|}} : Miyu (OVAs) {{voiced by|Naoko Watanabe<ref name="ova liner notes"/>}} (Japanese), Pamela Weidner-Houle (English, AnimEigo dub),<ref name="ova liner notes">{{cite web|url=http://www.animeigo.com/liner/anime/vampire-princess-miyu/|title=Vampire Princess Miyu|work=AnimEigo|access-date=June 30, 2015|archive-date=July 11, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190711185511/https://www.animeigo.com/liner/anime/vampire-princess-miyu|url-status=dead}}</ref> Annemarie Zola (English, Manga Entertainment dub) : Miyu (anime) {{voiced by|Miki Nagasawa}} (Japanese), Kimberly J. Brown (English, ep 1–7), Dorothy Elias-Fahn (English, ep 8–26) : A girl who appears to be around 13<ref>In the OVA.</ref> or 15<ref>In later volumes of the manga.</ref> years old, but is actually much older because she is a vampire. Her origins and personality differ between adaptations: in the OVAs, she is the child of a human father and a vampire mother in post–World War II Japan, while in the anime she is the child of a human mother and a Shinma father, who was the previous Guardian, in pre-World War II Empire of Japan. In the OVAs, Miyu is childish, manipulative, and playful, while in the anime, she is more reserved yet kinder. In both adaptations, Miyu becomes the Guardian, also known as the Watcher, after losing her parents. She has the power to teleport, levitate, open dimensional portals, and attack with fire. In the OVAs, she fights in several attires, while in most media, she usually wears a short pale blue kimono with a red ribbon around her right foot. Although she is a vampire and must drink blood to survive, Miyu is unharmed by sunlight, holy water, or crucifixes, and her reflection is visible, which may be because she is half human. She chooses her victims carefully, as she usually chooses those who have suffered loss and offers them to be with their loved ones in their dreams in exchange for their blood, putting them into an endless state of daydream or sleep. Miyu is protective of Larva and, in the manga, is implied to have feelings for him. In the anime, when she disguises herself as a human, she goes by the name {{nihongo|'''Miyu Yamano'''|山野 美夕|Yamano Miyu}}. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Larva}}|ラヴァ|Rava}} : Larva (OVAs) {{voiced by|Kaneto Shiozawa|Zach Hanner}} : Larva (anime) {{voiced by|Shin-ichiro Miki|Ryan Alosio}} : A Western Shinma. In the OVAs, he arrives to kill Miyu and prevent her vampire blood from awakening. However, after he accidentally triggers it and she drinks his blood after he lowers his guard, his face and voice are sealed behind a mask as punishment for his failure. In the anime, Larva confronts Miyu after she becomes the Guardian, but she drinks his blood after he defeats her. In both cases, Larva starts out as an unwilling ally, but later pledges to be by Miyu's side because he can sense her sorrow, such as during their blood-bond, and in the manga, it is implied that he has feelings for her. Larva can use his nails to attack and, in the anime, also wields a scythe. In the anime and manga, he can access Miyu's flame powers but rarely does so, saying it reminds him of his greatest defeat. Unlike in the OVAs, in the anime and manga, Larva can speak and remove his mask. His name is derived from the lemures of Roman mythology, who are also known as larvae; his mask may derive from the fact that "larvae" is Latin for "mask". ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Shinma}}|神魔|}} {{Redirect|Shinma|the Japanese wrestling booker and promoter|Hisashi Shinma}} : Shinmas are demons from another dimension called the darkness who possess the powers of shapeshifting and flight and take advantage of human souls for their own gain, luring them with illusions of their dreams or desires. After escaping into the human world after being sealed in the darkness for thousands of years, it is the job of a Guardian vampire, such as Miyu, to return them to the darkness. While it is implied that they feed on human emotions, there are some instances of Shinma feeding directly on humans, such as Ga-Ryu, who drinks blood, and Koh-Waku, who devours them. Not all Shinma are inherently evil, however. Some use their abilities to interfere with humans for their own purposes, while others help humans by targeting others. Shinma can come from several countries, including Japan, China, and the Western side. The kanji for Shinma literally means "god-demon".
===OVA series characters=== ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Himiko Se}}|瀬 一三子|Se Himiko}} : {{voiced by|Mami Koyama<ref name="ova liner notes"/>|Stephanie Griffin<ref name="ova liner notes"/>}} : A cynical, stubborn and knowledgeable spiritualist who meets Miyu during a job in Kyoto. Their paths cross throughout the series as Himiko searches for her, initially convinced that she is a monster with no redeeming qualities, but later changing her mind after learning more about her and Larva. At the end of the fourth OVA, Himiko is shocked to realize she met Miyu as a child. It is implied that she has vampiric traits that have yet to manifest, as she was the first human to exchange blood with Miyu after she became the Guardian. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Miyahito}}|都人}} : {{voiced by|Katsumi Toriumi|Shaun O'Rourke}} : Appearing in Episode 1, ''Unearthly Kyoto'', he is a boy from Kyoto whom Himiko befriends. His girlfriend, Ryouko, was murdered by a "vampire", which he did not know was actually a Shinma, and he blames himself for being unable to protect her. Because of his grief, he later accepts Miyu's offer to exchange their blood, which Himiko witnesses. At the end of the episode, he is in a catatonic state; Miyu, disguised as a schoolgirl, tells a group of girls not to worry about him since he is happy now. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Aiko}}|藍子}} : Appearing in Episode 1, ''Unearthly Kyoto'', she is the only daughter of a rich, traditional family who has been in a coma for 60 days. Her parents call Himiko, believing her to be possessed, which Himiko confirms, but is unable to exorcise the demon and is attacked by a Shinma, but Miyu saves her. Himiko later learns that after Aiko and her parents were injured in a car accident, they donated their blood, which is implied to be hh blood, to save her life, after which she fell into a deep depression and blamed herself for their deaths. The "parents" that called Himiko were either ghosts or Shinmas, so she tries to exorcise Aiko again, and it is revealed that she made a deal with the Shinma that attacked Himiko, letting it roam in exchange for it recreating her former life, including her parents. Before Miyu banishes the Shinma, she tries to bite Aiko as she did to Miyahito, but Himiko interferes, and Aiko passes away after the Shinma is banished. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Ranka}}|爛火}} : {{voiced by|Mayumi Shō|Belinda Bizic-Keller}} : Appearing in Episode 2, ''A Banquet of Marionettes'', she is a Shinma of the second tier who places the essences of her victims into life-size dolls and hides them in a school's warehouse so she can drain their life over time. She fell in love with a student at the school, Kei Yuzuki, in whom Miyu is also interested. Kei, who has grown tired of his mundane life, wishes to be with Ranka even after discovering that she had been using him. Since he voluntarily gave himself to Ranka and she fell in love with him, Miyu is forced to banish them both after she transforms him into a creature like her at his request. In the manga, Ranka is portrayed as an ally of Miyu and the ruler of the second tier of Japanese Shinma. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Lemures}}|レムレス|Remuresu}} : {{voiced by|Yūji Mitsuya|Chad Carlberg}} : Appearing in Episode 3, ''Fragile Armor'', he is an old friend of Larva who seeks to release him from Miyu. He uses magic as well as a human who became a Shinma, with his soul trapped inside of a samurai armor. Miyu, believing that Lemures has targeted her to become the leader of the Shinma, confronts him with Himiko's help, but he seals Larva inside a wall. However, Larva breaks Lemures' spell after his puppet Shinma captures and injures Miyu. Instead of banishing Lemures into darkness, Miyu kills him with fire as punishment for kidnapping and harming Larva.
Lemures also becomes a recurring antagonist in the manga.
===TV series characters=== ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Chisato Inoue}}|井上 千里|Inoue Chisato}} : {{voiced by|Asako Shirakura|Anjuli Cain}} : Miyu's best friend at school and a student at Tokiwa School For Girls, who is unaware that she is a vampire or of her supernatural activities. In the final two episodes of the series, it is revealed that Chisato is a dormant stray Shinma and the main antagonist. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Shiina}}|死無}} : {{voiced by|Mika Kanai|Francesca Catalano}} : A Shinma who resembles a cartoonish bunny and is an ally of Miyu and Larva. Like all animal Shinma, she has one regular eye and one yellow eye usually covered by one of her ears; her yellow eye allows her to see great distances and dispel illusions. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Reiha}}|冷羽}} : {{voiced by|Megumi Ogata|Wendee Lee}} : A Yuki-onna who possesses the powers of levitation, teleportation, and manipulating wind and snow. Her widowed father, {{Nihongo|Kitjutsushi|鬼術師||{{voiced by|Shigeru Chiba|Jamieson Price}}}}, was the leader of a group of Shinma protectors who were tasked with ensuring that a guardian would emerge during the Taishō period, which turned out to be Miyu. After the Bird Shinma, Black Kite, killed him, she discovered her ice powers after encountering a feasting Shinma. Since then, she has been Miyu's rival and has sought to destroy Shinma because she believes Miyu is not up to the job. She is less sympathetic than Miyu and is willing to kill those who stand in her way of destroying Shinma. After freezing the city, she and Miyu fight each other in a final confrontation. After Matsukaze's sacrifice, Reiha unleashes a blizzard that overwhelms Miyu before Larva breaks free and decapitates her. Her body, however, picks up her head and leaves, vowing to return one day and defeat Miyu. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Matsukaze}}|松風}} : {{voiced by|Megumi Ogata|Mona Marshall}} : Reiha's talking doll companion, who, like Reiha, is hostile towards Miyu. During Miyu and Reiha's final confrontation, Matsukaze uses his ice abilities to trap Larva in an ice barrier so Reiha can fight Miyu, and later sacrifices himself to protect Reiha from Miyu's flame attack. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Yukari Kashima}}|鹿島 由加里|Kashima Yukari}} : {{voiced by|Chiharu Tezuka|Stephanie Denise Griffin}} : Miyu and Chisato's classmate, who is tomboyish and protective of Hisae and Chisato. Chisato kills her and Hisae soon after they discover Miyu's true nature. ; {{nihongo|{{visible anchor|Hisae Aoki}}|青木 久恵|Aoki Hisae}} : {{voiced by|Kokoro Shindou|Emmanuelle Chriqui}} : Miyu and Chisato's classmate, who is shy and intelligent and loves to read. She senses something strange about Miyu and tries to investigate. However, Chisato kills her, and Yukari soon after discovers Miyu's true nature.
===Manga characters=== ; {{visible anchor|Yuma Koizumi}} : A human who fell in love with a Shinma. After Miyu banished the Shima to the darkness, she later teamed up with other Shinma to take revenge on Miyu. It is later revealed that Yuma spent the rest of her life pursuing Miyu in order to destroy her and, on her travels, encountered several characters from whom Miyu had drunk from in earlier chapters. ; {{nihongo|Yui|夕維}} : The daughter of a human woman and a Shi, another type of demon, who physically appears to be twelve to thirteen years old. She is more shy and reserved than Miyu, and naive about the world. She is part vampire, as Miyu's blood runs in her veins after she fed on her mother while she was pregnant with Yui. Yui was drawn to Miyu's realm as part of a plan to resurrect her. Yui's weapon of choice is cherry blossoms, which she can manipulate; she grants this power to Miyu after giving up her own blood so Miyu can be resurrected. She is the protagonist of the spinoff manga series ''Vampire Princess Yui.'' ; {{visible anchor|Nagi}} : A Shinma and Yui's protector, who cares deeply for her. Despite his short temper, he is a loyal companion and allows Yui to feed on him as she refuses to feed on humans.
==Cast== {| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" |+OVA series cast ! colspan="2" rowspan="2"|Character ! rowspan="2"|Japanese<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title=Vampire Princess Miyu OVA|url=https://www.behindthevoiceactors.com/tv-shows/Vampire-Princess-Miyu-OVA/|access-date=April 4, 2021|website=Behind The Voice Actors|language=en-US}}</ref> ! colspan="2"|English<ref name=":0" /> |- !<small>AnimEigo/</small> <small>Swirl Films (1995)</small> !<small>Manga Entertainment/</small> <small>World Wide Group (1997)</small> |- ! colspan="5"|Principal cast |- ! colspan="2"|Narrator |Gorou Naya |David Stokes | |- ! colspan="2"|Himiko Se |Mami Koyama |Stephanie Griffin | |- ! colspan="2"|Miyu |Naoko Watanabe |Pamela Weidner-Houle |Annemarie Zola |- ! colspan="2"|Larva |Kaneto Shiozawa |Zach Hanner | |- ! colspan="5"|Episodic cast |- ! rowspan="10"|1 !Ryouko |Kiyoko Kobayashi |Connie Nelson | |- !Miyahito |Katsumi Toriumi |Shaun O'Rourke | |- !Female College Student |Rena Yukie |Sarah Wakild | |- !Clerk | |Greg Taylor | |- !Police Captain | |Steve Rassin | |- !Police Lieutenant | |Mac Ingraham | |- !Aiko's mother |Youko Matsuoka |Hope Brownewell | |- !Aiko's father |Hidetoshi Nakamura |Turner Knox | |- !Doctor |Tesshou Genda |Lee Domenick | |- !Schoolgirl (1) | |Amy Anderson | |- ! rowspan="10"|2 !Schoolgirl (2) | |Amy Anderson | |- !Schoolboy | |David Bjorkback | |- !Ranka |Mayumi Shou |Belinda Bizic-Keller | |- !Kei Yuzuki |Ryou Horikawa |Michael Granberry | |- !Giddy Schoolgirls |Hiromi Nakamura |Linda Carlisle Maggy Brownewell
Regan Forman | |- !Kei's mother |Toshiko Asai |Ellen Lee-Seltz | |- !Kei's brother |Masato Kubota |Robert Wailes | |- !Kayo |Emi Shinohara |Linda Carlisle | |- !Shiba |Toshiya Ueda |Tom Maddis | |- !Kei's girlfriend |Yuya Yoshikawa |Shelby Reynolds | |- ! rowspan="3"|3 !Armor Monster |Tesshou Genda |Rick Forrester | |- !Lemures |Yuuji Mitsuya |Chad Carlberg | |- !Policeman |Morimasa Murakuni |Ralph Brownewell | |- ! rowspan="4"|4 !Miyu's father |Kiyonobu Suzuki |Bob Sayer | |- !Miyu's mother |Masako Ikeda |Melissa Stanley | |- !Schoolgirl (3) | |Shannon Taylor | |- !Akiko |Yumi Takada |Jessica Watson | |}
==Media== ===Manga=== ====Original series==== {{Graphic novel list/header |WithTitle = no |OneLanguage = yes |SecondLanguage=|Language=Japanese}} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 1 |OriginalRelDate = July 25, 1989<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 1 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375347 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12662-5}} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 2 |OriginalRelDate = April 5, 1998<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 二 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375293 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12663-2}} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 3 |OriginalRelDate = August 5, 1998<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 三 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375292 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12664-9 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 4 |OriginalRelDate = January 5, 1999<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 四 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375289 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12665-6 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 5 |OriginalRelDate = August 20, 1999<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 五 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375288 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12682-3 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 6 |OriginalRelDate = April 30, 2000<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 六 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375287 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12683-0 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 7 |OriginalRelDate = January 5, 2001<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 七 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375295 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12684-7 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 8 |OriginalRelDate = July 15, 2001<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 八 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375314 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12685-4 |OriginalTitle = |LicensedTitle = |TranslitTitle = |ChapterList = |Summary = }} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 9 |OriginalRelDate = July 15, 2001<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 九 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375340 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12686-1}} {{Graphic novel list |VolumeNumber = 10 |OriginalRelDate = June 30, 2002<ref>{{Cite web |title=吸血姫美夕 十 |url=https://mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp/id/M375189 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=mediaarts-db.artmuseums.go.jp}}</ref> |OriginalISBN = 978-4-253-12692-2}} {{Graphic novel list/footer}}Spread out over ten volumes, this series storywise falls somewhere between the OAV and the television series. In this version, Ranka is the helpful second-tier Shinma, but Reiha is largely the same. Most volumes include several standalone stories regarding Miyu hunting and locating stray Shinma. However, there are several chapters in various volumes relating to the Western Shinma. In this version, it is Lemures who was Larva's companion previous to his coming to Japan. There is also Carlua, who is the daughter of Larva's adoptive uncle, Pazusu. Carlua is deeply in love with Larva (as is Lemures), but both fail in their attempts to "rescue" him from Miyu. These result in Lemures being banished to the darkness until after the events of New Vampire Miyu and Carlua being repelled, and her little sister Lilith being incinerated by Miyu. Additionally, there is a human girl named Yuma Koizumi, introduced in volume 4, who becomes a recurring antagonist. As a schoolgirl, Yuma was loved and marked by a Shinma named Tsubaki. Tsubaki belongs to a clan of Shinma called "Muma". When he starts to be hunted, Tsubaki is surprisingly accepting, although sad, at the fact that he will be parted from Yuma. However, when Miyu returns him to the dark, Yuma vows vengeance. With the help of Tsubaki's companions, Yuma attempts to kill Miyu, knowing Miyu would have difficulty attacking a human foe. The attack ultimately fails, and Yuma is left in her misery as Miyu refuses to feed from her (partly out of spite and partly out of respect for Tsubaki). In volume 10, it is discovered that Yuma spent the rest of her life pursuing Miyu and her mystery, but is never able to kill her. In the end, Miyu visits Yuma on her deathbed, finally drinking her blood.
The manga was licensed for a US release by Studio Ironcat; however, the company went out of business before the series was completed.
====''New Vampire Princess Miyu''==== : titled 新・吸血姫美夕 (''Shin Vanpaia Miyu'') with "Shin" meaning "new"
This series comprises five volumes and covers the events that Miyu glimpses at the end of volume 10 of the original series. It takes place between the first two volumes of the original series. The Western Shinma, led by Pazusu, and supported by Carlua (his daughter), Lemunia (Lemures' younger brother), and a powerful young Shinma called Cait Sith. The Western Shinma succeed in kidnapping Larva, purging Miyu's blood from him, and sealing his memory of his time with her. This results in a showdown in which Larva kills Miyu, though he is not entirely certain why he feels bothered by it. In actuality, Miyu is not quite dead, as her spirit survives in the blood passed from Yui's mom to Yui in utero (see ''Vampire Princess Yui'' below). Yui is then drawn to Miyu's realm to help her be reborn. In the meantime, it's discovered that the "rescue mission" was all a ploy by Cait Sith to reach Japan and retrieve a short sword in which his mother's spirit is sealed. It is revealed that not only was his mother sealed by the Watcher before Miyu, but also that Cait Sith (both are members of a nearly extinct clan called the Quarl) was actually responsible for putting the idea of challenging the Eastern Shinma into Lemures' and Larva's heads originally. As Cait Sith succeeds in resurrecting the queen (though not without a catch and mortally wounding Pazusu), the race is on to get Yui safely to the spot of Miyu's rebirth. With the help of the second-tier Eastern Shinma and Lemunia, she succeeds, and Miyu is brought back to life. After unsealing Larva's memories and reestablishing the blood bond, Miyu and the remaining Western Shinma join forces to defeat the Quarl and destroy the Queen. Afterward, Pazusu asks Larva to kill him so he doesn't die of his wounds, and Carlua makes one last attempt to wrest Larva away from Miyu by threatening to kill him. Miyu calls her bluff, and Carlua retreats, thanks to the newly freed Lemures. He explains that, as they leave, during Miyu's time being dead, many stray Shinma (including himself) took advantage of her absence to escape the Darkness once more. The series ends with Miyu and Larva heading off to start rounding these escapees up again.
This series was also licensed by Studio Ironcat for an English-language release, but the company actually completed the series before going out of business.
====''Vampire Princess Yui''==== Yui is the daughter of a human and a Shi (another type of demon, also described as anti-Shinma in some English translations). She is also part vampire as Miyu's blood runs in her veins, as Miyu fed on her mother while pregnant with Yui. Miyu describes Yui as both her sister and her daughter. Yui has long, dark hair and looks to be about 12 or 13 years old. Like Miyu, Yui has a tragic past and friends she had to abandon upon her awakening. Yui faces the additional challenge of being hunted and supported by rival Shi factions that disapprove of her existence. Also like Miyu, Yui has a blood-bonded protector, a younger Shinma named Nagi. Yui's personality is much more shy and timid than Miyu's, and she is still largely naive about the world at large. Nagi is very hot-headed but a faithful companion, allowing Yui to feed on him because she refuses to feed on humans. Yui's weapon of choice is cherry blossoms, which she can bend to her will in a variety of ways. She passes this power to Miyu upon giving up her own blood for Miyu's rebirth.
Another series licensed by Studio Ironcat for an English-language release. Despite publishing the series in full as monthly comic installments, the company released only one collected volume before going out of business.
====''Vampire Yui: Kanonshou''==== The sequel to ''Vampire Princess Yui''. A mysterious girl arrives at the door of a church covered in blood, crying out the name "Nagi" before collapsing. The church's priest takes in the silent, amnesiac girl and gently cares for her. Soon, the girl starts to have strange dreams about her past, dreams that name her as the Vampire Princess Yui.
Yui lives at a mountain church surrounded by sakura trees. Villagers in the area report vampire attacks.
Another series licensed by Studio Ironcat for an English-language release. Of the eight collected volumes, only one was published before the company went out of business.
====''Vampire Yui: Saishuushou''==== This series is the sequel to ''Vampire Yui: Kanonshou'', serving as the "final chapter" of Yui's story.<ref name="2-New-Manga">{{cite web|last=Pineda|first=Rafael Antonio|title=Vampire Princess Miyu, Vampire Yui Both Get New Manga Series|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2017-12-07/vampire-princess-miyu-vampire-yui-both-get-new-manga-series/.124887|website=Anime News Network|access-date=April 3, 2023|date=December 7, 2017}}</ref> The series had two collected volumes that were released in June 2018.<ref>{{cite web|last=Pineda|first=Rafael Antonio|title=Vampire Yui - Saishūshō Manga Listed With 2 Volumes|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2018-04-11/vampire-yui-saishusho-manga-listed-with-2-volumes/.130220|website=Anime News Network|access-date=April 3, 2023|date=April 11, 2018}}</ref>
====''Vampire Miyu: Saku''==== This series is about Miyu transferring to a certain middle school.<ref name="2-New-Manga"/> It is described as "one of the earliest stories in the series, and it depicts the encounter and fateful bond between the protagonist Miyu and the vampire Lara," so it may be a prequel to the original manga.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.valuebooks.jp/%E5%90%B8%E8%A1%80%E5%A7%AB%E7%BE%8E%E5%A4%95-%E6%9C%94/bp/VC8777323425 | title=吸血姫美夕 朔 }}</ref> But it is more likely to be a separate continuity.
====''Vampire Miyui''==== This series features protagonists Miyu and Yui meeting for the first time.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Inc |first=Natasha |title=「吸血姫美夕」シリーズ最新作「吸血姫 美夕維」連載開始!美夕と夕維の運命が交わる(コメントあり / 試し読みあり) |url=https://natalie.mu/comic/news/609739 |access-date=November 9, 2025 |website=コミックナタリー |language=ja}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Mateo|first=Alex|title=Narumi Kakinouchi, Toshiki Hirano Launch New Vampire Princess Miyu-Yui Manga|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2025-01-31/narumi-kakinouchi-toshiki-hirano-launch-new-vampire-princess-miyu-yui-manga/.220700|website=Anime News Network|access-date=May 5, 2025|date=January 31, 2025}}</ref>
===Anime=== {{main|List of Vampire Princess Miyu episodes}}
AnimEigo originally released the OVA series on two VHS tapes in 1992, with separate editions containing English audio and English subtitles, each accompanied by a sheet of liner notes related to the series. The liner notes were eventually redone for the DVD release and included in Volume 1. The Volume 2 DVD includes a card with a humorous message stating that the complete liner notes are available in the first volume and that if no insert were included in the second volume, consumers would undoubtedly start complaining. In the UK, the series was licensed by Manga UK, which produced an alternate English dub for VHS (this dub was also shown on the British Sci-Fi Channel). However, AnimEigo's dub was used for the UK DVD release.
Tokyopop originally released the TV series on VHS and DVD in 2001–2002. The first DVD volume of their release is notable for retaining only the opening of episode 1 and the end credits of episode 3. This practice, which was fairly common in the VHS era of anime releases, apparently received significant criticism, as the remaining five DVDs were released with all episodes featuring the opening and ending credit sequences.
Tokyopop's license later expired, and the series was re-licensed by Maiden Japan in 2013, which re-released the series in one box set.<ref>{{cite web|title=Maiden Japan Licenses Vampire Princess Miyu|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2012-12-05/maiden-japan-licenses-vampire-princess-miyu-tv-anime|publisher=Anime News Network|access-date=January 4, 2013}}</ref>
==Reception== Critical reception of the ''Vampire Princess Miyu'' OVA series has been generally positive. Anime News Network praised the OVA series for its "dark, surreal tour of the occult", while it criticizes the dub, saying "the casting was off-center". Overall, the English dub was given a C− and the subtitled version was given an A−.<ref>{{cite web|first=Bamboo|last=Dong|date=December 8, 2001|title=Vampire Princess Miyu OVA DVD 1 - Review|url=http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/review/vampire-princess-miyu-ova/dvd-1|publisher=Anime News Network|access-date=March 4, 2012}}</ref> Raphael See of THEM Anime Reviews gave the OVA series a rating of 4 out of 5 stars, praising the animation, art, action scenes, story, and soundtrack but criticized the backgrounds, saying that they were "a bit on the sketchy side."<ref>{{cite web|first=Raphael|last=See|title=THEM Anime Reviews 4.0 - Vampire Princess Miyu|url=https://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=390|publisher=THEM Anime Reviews|access-date=July 22, 2022}}</ref>
Critical reception of the ''Miyu'' TV series has also been generally positive. Jeremy A. Beard of THEM Anime Reviews gave the series a rating of 3 out of 5 stars, praising the characters, atmosphere, soundtrack, character and Shinma designs, and the story, but criticized the show for having too much unnecessary filler, stating that "I think that if ''Vampire Princess Miyu'' was only 13 episodes long, it would have been a better experience overall. The main plot episodes are the most enjoyable and it would not have seriously harmed the show to cut out a lot of the more extraneous Shinma hunts."<ref>{{cite web|first=Jeremy|last=Beard|title=THEM Anime Reviews 4.0 - Vampire Princess Miyu TV|url=https://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=623|publisher=THEM Anime Reviews|access-date=July 22, 2022}}</ref> Another reviewer from THEM Anime Reviews, Carlos Ross, also gave the ''Miyu'' TV series a rating of 3 out of 5 stars, praising the story, soundtrack, and voice actors, but noted that the animation was a step down from the OVA series, and criticized the ''Sailor Moon''-style "Monster-of-the-Day" formula of the series. Overall, Ross concludes that "this is no ''Goosebumps'' story, folks. This can be really creepy, and it's definitely not for the under-twelves."<ref>{{cite web|first=Carlos|last=Ross|title=THEM Anime Reviews 4.0 - Vampire Princess Miyu TV|url=https://www.themanime.org/viewreview.php?id=391|publisher=THEM Anime Reviews|access-date=July 22, 2022}}</ref> Cody J. Riebe of ''PopMatters'' gave the ''Miyu'' TV series a positive review, praising the story, soundtrack, atmosphere, and animation, with his only criticisms being the series' first episode and the poor localization by Tokyopop. Riebe also notes that the series never gained any traction in Western regions, stating that "the real tragedy of ''Vampire Princess Miyu'' is that one of the more interesting series of the '90s is out of print and largely reduced to a horror anime footnote."<ref>{{Cite web|first=Cody|last=Riebe|title=The Catharsis of the Void in Anime Horror, 'Vampire Princess Miyu'|url=https://www.popmatters.com/vampire-princess-miyu-2636102293.html|website=PopMatters|date=May 2, 2019|accessdate=July 22, 2022}}</ref>
Erica Friedman from Okazu in her review of the spin-off manga ''Vampire Princess'' noted that this part of the series is close enough to the fact that it could be interpreted as yuri, and the relationship between the two main characters as a kind of sexual seduction, also pointing at obvious homoerotism of the image of vampirism in the work.<ref>[http://okazu.yuricon.com/2011/10/03/vampire-princess-吸血姫ヴァンパイア・プリンセス-manga/ Vampire Princess 吸血姫(ヴァンパイア・プリンセス) Manga]</ref> At the same time, reviewing the anime adaptation of the original series, she described the end of the series as "Volume 6 of Vampire Princess Miyu answers a lot of questions. But it answers those questions in the bizarrest and least logical way, for which I give it a lot of credit", while noting absence of any romantic resolution or even confirmed affection in the work.<ref>[http://okazu.yuricon.com/2009/03/05/vampire-princess-miyu-anime-volume-6/ Vampire Princess Miyu Anime, Volume 6]</ref>
==See also== * Vampire film * List of vampire television series
==Notes== {{notelist}}
==References== {{reflist}}
==Further reading== * {{Cite news|author=Beveridge, Chris|url=http://www.mania.com/vampire-princess-miyu-vol-1_article_73341.html|title=Vampire Princess Miyu Vol. #1|work=Mania.com|date=May 29, 2001|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121019193758/http://www.mania.com/vampire-princess-miyu-vol-1_article_73341.html|archive-date=October 19, 2012|url-status=dead }} * {{Cite news|author=Divers, Allen|url=https://www.animenewsnetwork.com/tankobon-tower/2003-07-02|title=A New Beginning - TT|work=Anime News Network|date=July 2, 2003 }} * {{Cite news|author=D'Ornellas, Danielle|url=http://www.animefringe.com/magazine/01.12/reviews/2/index.php3|title=Vampire Princess Miyu Vol.2: Haunting|work=Animefringe|volume=2|issue=12|date=December 2001 }}
==External links== {{Portalbar|Japan|Anime and manga|Horror|1980s|1990s|2000s|2010s|2020s}} * [http://www.animeigo.com/liner/anime/vampire-princess-miyu/ Official AnimEigo site] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190711185511/https://www.animeigo.com/liner/anime/vampire-princess-miyu |date=July 11, 2019 }} * {{Anime News Network|manga|1625}}
{{AIC TV series}} {{Anime International Company}} {{Champion Cross}}{{Chiaki J. Konaka}} Category:Vampire Princess Miyu Category:1988 anime OVAs Category:1997 anime television series debuts Category:Akita Shoten manga Category:Anime International Company Category:Horror anime and manga Category:Madman Entertainment anime Category:Maiden Japan Category:Seinen manga Category:Shōjo manga Category:Animated television series about princesses Category:Tokyopop titles Category:TV Tokyo original programming Miyu Category:Animated films about vampires Category:Animated television series about vampires Category:Vampires in anime and manga Category:1980s vampire films