I tend to answer this like I’m chatting with a friend in a forum: the live-action 'Tomie' series doesn’t have one single cast — it’s a collection of films and V-cinema pieces where different actresses take on the titular Tomie. The most commonly cited portrayer from the early mainstream film is Miho Kanno, who’s often associated with the original adaptation. After that, each movie or episode casts its own Tomie and a largely different supporting cast, so you’ll see a bunch of names across titles like 'Tomie: Another Face', 'Tomie: Replay', 'Tomie: Re-birth', and 'Tomie: Unlimited'.
If you’re trying to match a specific film to its actors, I recommend checking the individual film entry on IMDb or Japanese film databases — they list full casts and release years. I love doing that when I want to compare how each actress handles the eerie, seductive side of Tomie, or when hunting down a rare installment with a favorite supporting actor.
I've always been a little obsessed with Junji Ito's creepy work, and the live-action 'Tomie' films are a wild example of how one unsettling manga can be interpreted in so many different ways. The series isn’t a single straight-up franchise with one permanent cast; instead, it’s a string of low-budget theatrical and V-cinema adaptations where the character Tomie is reinvented by different directors and actresses for each entry. The one name that keeps popping up in conversations and retrospectives is Miho Kanno — she played Tomie in the original big-screen adaptation and is often the first face people think of when they talk about live-action Tomie.
Beyond that, the films are anthology-like or episodic, so many actresses rotate through the role and the supporting casts change from film to film. Titles in the live-action run include 'Tomie' (the original), 'Tomie: Another Face' (an anthology-style follow-up), 'Tomie: Replay', 'Tomie: Re-birth', and later reinterpretations like 'Tomie: Unlimited'. Each of those entries has its own cast lists and guest stars — some are lesser-known actors from the Japanese horror circuit, others are familiar faces from J-drama and modeling who crossed over into film. Because of the scattershot production style, you’ll find different actresses credited as Tomie across the films rather than one continuous portrayer.
If you want a complete, film-by-film breakdown of who starred where, I usually track down the individual film pages on sites like IMDb, Japanese Movie Database, or the Japanese-language Wikipedia for exact credits. Those pages give you the full supporting cast and which actress played Tomie in each installment. Personally, I love seeing how each actress brings a slightly different energy to the same monstrous charisma — it’s part of what keeps the series so strangely addictive to watch.
2025-08-28 14:51:29
4
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
The Bride They Sacrificed: Reborn To Love And Kill
Self-love
10
9.8K
Twelve years as the perfect adopted daughter... All was erased the moment the Vaughn family’s real daughter returned.
Overnight, Elara Vaughn became a thief in their eyes. Everything she had was suddenly someone else’s.
Love turned to hatred, and home turned into a cage.
To atone for a life she never stole, Elara was forced into a marriage that destroyed her... Humiliated, broken, and discarded until death finally claimed her.
But fate gives her a second chance.
Reborn one day before the wedding, Elara woke up with every memory of her past life intact, and a heart that refuses to break again... VENGEANCE!
This time, she will pretend to submit.
This time, she will control every move.
And this time, she reaches out to the one man she rejected in her past life... the only person who once offered her salvation and love... Lucien Hale, the most powerful and ruthless man in the country.
As secrets unravel and the Vaughn family’s hypocrisy is exposed, Elara learns that revenge doesn’t only require truth, but it also requires cruelty.
They wanted a sacrifice...
Instead, they created a monster, who will bring their downfall.
Rose Johnson Kapoor
He called me a lioness. He taught me how to be one. But what he failed to understand was that I'm more than just the lioness—I'm a rose with thorns-who'll bring him to his knees.
Ryan Johnson walked away, left without a second glance shattering my heart and left me bleeding. But I’m done waiting. Done crying for someone who easily discarded me.
I’ve crossed oceans to claim what’s mine and make him suffer.
He'd forced me to submit—to bend, to surrender. But this time, he’ll be kneeling and begging.
What he doesn’t know, that I’m not just here to ruin him—I’m here to own him. To carve my name into his world the way he once carved himself into my soul. He'll feel every ounce of my wrath. And when I'm done, he'll beg to be mine.
Yet, there's something I can't escape-a truth, I refuse to face.
A question-For how long I'll be able to hold on to my hate-or-the secret I'm hiding. Especially when he shows the side of him that I'd never seen before.
____
Ryan Johnson
I knew she’d come.
My lioness never accepts defeat. I thought leaving was right, but all I did was destroy the only thing that mattered.
Now, she’s here. And she wants war.
She wants me to suffer, to pay. What she doesn’t realize is, I already have. I’ve been on my knees for her since the day I walked away.
But she won’t break me. If she wants a fight, I’ll give her one.
Because I don’t just want her rage—I want all of her.
Yet, as I pull her back into my world, something lurks in the shadows-A threat we've to fight.
After defeating Yami, Hikari chooses to live with him. Before this, Hikari only has himself to face everything. But this time, fate has brought him to meet with a group called Hitaku.
All of them have their own story. no matter what kind of things they need to do. Sometimes, they smile, cry, and... well,
no matter what kind of situation they're in. they always have their way to face it.
but the question is, Can they succeed in achieving their dreams in their way?
In the middle of Tokyo’s relentless rush, two strangers cross paths—by accident, in the most ridiculous way, and at the most unexpected moment—yet it feels as if the universe had quietly arranged it all. What follows are hesitant steps, faltering words, and small messages that slowly create a warm, quiet space between them.
Tokyo Love Letter: Hibiki is a story where silence speaks, where ordinary days suddenly begin to matter, and where someone appears out of nowhere… only to become a place to return to, and a space to simply be oneself.
This isn’t a story about falling in love quickly, but about feeling it grow—quietly, unexpectedly—through coincidences, through distance, and through the little things we never meant to hold on to.
The Raikiri clan, which was famed as the most prominent military and tactical geniuses, existed since the feudal Japanese period during the reign of Minamoto Yoritomo.
Bestowed with great power, the descendants of Iwasaki Senju yielded the Amaterasu, the power which awakens under emotional stress.
Kenjirou Subaru was hailed as a legend for saving the clan at the tender age of six from a unit of 70 yakuza. However, all good things must come to an end eventually as the ancient Ninjutsu clan was assassinated in cold blood, probably by an external group fearful of the clan's prominence and place in modern Japanese culture.
The horror of the heinous tragedy at his birthplace, the Village of Raden in Osaka rendered his mental condition unstable thus causing Izanami to go rouge.
Unbeknownst to him, he ends up in Tokyo, involving in a frenzy of incidents, gathering to find the intel on the person or the organization responsible for the eradication of his people. Therefore, eking out an existence and pursuing an education.
He would eventually make his way to Mitsushiba. He enrolls in high school and thus begins his quest to discover himself again. Eventually, he would be befriended by a group of students who change Subaru's view of life and show him that life this beautiful is worth living or is it really the case....
Disclaimer: Book one of the series, titled The Girl Who Loved Two Princes, is also available on Goodnovel. Read in order for best enjoyment❤️❤️❤️
Book TWO (The Her Before You)
Aria Maine is a new queen in need of a king consort to claim her throne. All three of her suitors come with... complications
Her brother's best friend… is engaged
The bad boy prince she fell for long ago… broke her heart.
Prince charming, her ally in war… his brother slaughtered her entire family.
Three suitors. A ticking clock. Boy oh boy, (oh boy) how does a girl choose?
***
Book THREE (You, Me, Her and Him)
A one night stand. That was all Keira Dormer should have been. Six months later, Aaron Condor is hopelessly in love.
Life robs the young lovers of their moment when Keira's mother, The Queen of Assassins, is murdered.
Now it's six months later. Aaron is on the precipice of giving Emily Maine her shot when Keira crashes their first date to save his life from Kate, her vengeful twin assassin.
In a desperate move to keep Aaron safe, she kidnaps and forces him into a fake engagement.
One week together to put her mother's murder to bed. Then they would part ways forever. This was the deal.
Keira isn't the only one who has a past with Aaron though. Lady Emily Maine has loved him for years. She's so smitten she plans to get him back from his fake fiancée.
But will her crusade be successful when she keeps clashing with her former flame, notorious playboy assassin, Duke Nathan Dormer?
A murder to solve. A second chance to claim a lost love. But which woman is Aaron's HEA? The assassin with one foot out the door or the CEO with one too many secrets?
From what I've gathered, the 'Tomie' manga series by Junji Ito is indeed connected to a couple of adaptations, though not in the way one might expect from a traditional anime series. Instead of a full-fledged anime, 'Tomie' has seen some fascinating live-action adaptations that capture the eerie and captivating essence of the original manga. One notable mention is the live-action film that debuted in the early 90s and has since garnered a cult following. It takes the chilling narrative of Tomie, a mysterious girl who drives those around her to madness, and visually translates it into a haunting experience.
Additionally, there are a few other films that embody Junji Ito's unique style, and some short anime adaptations featuring Tomie have popped up too. These shorts often pull from various stories, including parts of the 'Tomie' series. It’s a treat for fans to see such iconic horror translated through different mediums, even if they aren’t typical anime adaptations.
What's super fascinating about 'Tomie' is the psychological layers; it's not just about horror for the sake of it, but about how obsession can lead to a person's destruction. The live-action films bring that intensity to life, resonating well with fans of the manga, especially if they enjoy a bit of horror mixed with psychological drama. If you're looking to delve deeper into this series, these adaptations can provide an interesting perspective!
I get a little giddy talking about this franchise — there's something deliciously creepy about the way the 'Tomie' films kept getting reinvented. If you want to watch them in release order (which I usually recommend so you can feel the tonal shifts across years), here's the sequence I follow:
1. 'Tomie' (1999)
2. 'Tomie: Another Face' (1999)
3. 'Tomie: Replay' (2000)
4. 'Tomie: Re-birth' (2001)
5. 'Tomie: Last Chapter - Forbidden Fruit' (2002)
6. 'Tomie: Unlimited' (2011)
A few notes from someone who’s binged these late at night: 'Tomie: Another Face' is an anthology-style set of short episodes (so it feels different from the theatrical first film). 'Tomie: Replay' and some of the early-2000s entries were released more as direct-to-video or V-cinema projects, which explains why their production values and approaches vary. The continuity is loose — the central hook is Tomie herself, an immortal, regenerating girl who drives people mad — so you can watch bits out of order and still enjoy it, but watching chronologically highlights how filmmakers toyed with the character over time.
If you’re hunting these down, expect some to be harder to find with official subtitles; I tended to track them through specialty horror collections and physical DVDs. My personal favorite is the original 'Tomie' for its uncanny atmosphere, but 'Tomie: Unlimited' gives a modern, stranger spin that I love for its boldness. If you want, I can point you toward which ones are easiest to find on streaming or flick through which entries feel most faithful to Junji Ito’s vibe — I’ve learned a few tricks while collecting them.
The 'Totto-Chan: The Little Girl at the Window' anime adaptation is such a nostalgic gem! The voice cast really brought the characters to life, and I love how each actor matched the energy of their roles. Totto-Chan herself was voiced by Rie Kugimiya, who's famous for her spirited, youthful roles like 'Shakugan no Shana' and 'Fullmetal Alchemist's Alphonse Elric. Her performance captured Totto-Chan's boundless curiosity perfectly. The headmaster, Sosaku Kobayashi, was voiced by the legendary Akio Otsuka—his deep, warm voice made the character feel like a wise grandfather.
Other standout performances include Mitsuaki Madono as Tai-chan, Totto-Chan's classmate, and Sumi Shimamoto as her mother. The casting choices were spot-on, balancing the whimsy and heart of the story. It's one of those rare adaptations where the voices align so well with the book's spirit that it feels like the characters stepped right off the page. I still revisit clips sometimes just to hear Kugimiya's infectious laughter as Totto-Chan—it's pure joy.