OVA
Description
Hitoshi Sora belongs to an extraterrestrial species that shed emotions to avert self-destruction, inadvertently triggering reproductive decline and impending extinction. Tasked with studying human emotions—especially love—to salvage his kind, he crash-lands on Kashima Mountain due to navigational failure, accidentally killing Hazumu Osaragi. Forced to act swiftly with limited knowledge of human biology, he revives Hazumu in a female form using a gynoid blueprint, the sole available template resembling a human female.
Adopting a human guise as a biology teacher at Hazumu’s school, he monitors social interactions with detached logic, though prolonged exposure sparks faint emotional shifts, like flickers of compassion. He strategically intervenes in Hazumu’s romantic entanglements with Yasuna and Tomari, analyzing love’s mechanics for his mission.
A critical discovery reveals Hazumu’s imperfect resurrection grants only a month of life unless someone donates “life grains”—vital energy. During a perilous fall in the manga, he orchestrates Tomari’s grain transfer to save Hazumu, breaching his species’ non-interference mandate. His punishment entails a century-long exile on Earth.
His appearance alternates between two forms: a towering alien figure clad in a yellow catsuit with antenna and glasses, and a human disguise of lab coat and tie. Residing with Hazumu’s family, he coexists with Jan Pu, an AI gynoid piloting his ship. Jan Pu’s humanoid body replicates Hazumu’s post-resurrection form, a consequence of the reconstruction blueprint.
Anime adaptations diverge slightly: he devises a cure for Yasuna’s male-blindness by harnessing emotional bonds between characters. The OVA concludes with him officiating Hazumu and Tomari’s wedding, tacitly embracing human traditions despite his species’ norms.
His people’s history mirrors broader themes of hyperlogical societies confronting existential collapse, distinguished by their total erosion of emotion and procreation. This existential urgency fuels his obsessive study of love, casting him as both clinical analyst and inadvertent catalyst within human relationships.
Adopting a human guise as a biology teacher at Hazumu’s school, he monitors social interactions with detached logic, though prolonged exposure sparks faint emotional shifts, like flickers of compassion. He strategically intervenes in Hazumu’s romantic entanglements with Yasuna and Tomari, analyzing love’s mechanics for his mission.
A critical discovery reveals Hazumu’s imperfect resurrection grants only a month of life unless someone donates “life grains”—vital energy. During a perilous fall in the manga, he orchestrates Tomari’s grain transfer to save Hazumu, breaching his species’ non-interference mandate. His punishment entails a century-long exile on Earth.
His appearance alternates between two forms: a towering alien figure clad in a yellow catsuit with antenna and glasses, and a human disguise of lab coat and tie. Residing with Hazumu’s family, he coexists with Jan Pu, an AI gynoid piloting his ship. Jan Pu’s humanoid body replicates Hazumu’s post-resurrection form, a consequence of the reconstruction blueprint.
Anime adaptations diverge slightly: he devises a cure for Yasuna’s male-blindness by harnessing emotional bonds between characters. The OVA concludes with him officiating Hazumu and Tomari’s wedding, tacitly embracing human traditions despite his species’ norms.
His people’s history mirrors broader themes of hyperlogical societies confronting existential collapse, distinguished by their total erosion of emotion and procreation. This existential urgency fuels his obsessive study of love, casting him as both clinical analyst and inadvertent catalyst within human relationships.