
Love Live coloring pages are featuring Honoka Kōsaka, Kotori Minami, Umi Sonoda and other characters from Love Live animated film.
"Love Live," you see, is not just another show about singing high schoolers. No, no, it is a meticulously orchestrated universe where an assortment of spirited, occasionally bewildered high school girls come together to save their school from closure by becoming a dazzling idol group named μ's (pronounced, strangely enough, "muse" by those in the know and "me-yoos" by those in a bit of a rush). This is all done under the unifying theme of friendship, which, it turns out, is not just nice to have but also essential when your main weapon in a bureaucratic showdown is jazz hands and the will to sing in unison.
As with all great existential journeys, the heroines of μ's learn, naturally, that friendship is the secret sauce to solving most calamities in life, whether that calamity is a lack of confidence, a poorly timed rainstorm, or indeed a school board who would rather see them in textbooks than in the limelight. Through a rather miraculous bonding process involving glitter, misunderstandings and the occasional motivational pep talk that would make a life coach weep, these girls discover that, yes, you can get through anything if you have a few good friends and a deeply unrealistic amount of faith in choreography.
And as if that weren’t enough to ponder, "Love Live" insists that achieving any dream worth having involves teamwork, resilience and an alarming degree of optimism. The cast faces setbacks that would crush a lesser idol group but instead forge ahead, showing viewers that the journey to your dreams is neither tidy nor particularly sane, but infinitely worthwhile. And so, "Love Live" leaves children, adults and possibly even extraterrestrial viewers with a burning desire to gather their closest friends, create a strategic dance routine and march bravely toward any goal that hasn’t yet filed for a restraining order.
"Love Live," you see, is not just another show about singing high schoolers. No, no, it is a meticulously orchestrated universe where an assortment of spirited, occasionally bewildered high school girls come together to save their school from closure by becoming a dazzling idol group named μ's (pronounced, strangely enough, "muse" by those in the know and "me-yoos" by those in a bit of a rush). This is all done under the unifying theme of friendship, which, it turns out, is not just nice to have but also essential when your main weapon in a bureaucratic showdown is jazz hands and the will to sing in unison.
As with all great existential journeys, the heroines of μ's learn, naturally, that friendship is the secret sauce to solving most calamities in life, whether that calamity is a lack of confidence, a poorly timed rainstorm, or indeed a school board who would rather see them in textbooks than in the limelight. Through a rather miraculous bonding process involving glitter, misunderstandings and the occasional motivational pep talk that would make a life coach weep, these girls discover that, yes, you can get through anything if you have a few good friends and a deeply unrealistic amount of faith in choreography.
And as if that weren’t enough to ponder, "Love Live" insists that achieving any dream worth having involves teamwork, resilience and an alarming degree of optimism. The cast faces setbacks that would crush a lesser idol group but instead forge ahead, showing viewers that the journey to your dreams is neither tidy nor particularly sane, but infinitely worthwhile. And so, "Love Live" leaves children, adults and possibly even extraterrestrial viewers with a burning desire to gather their closest friends, create a strategic dance routine and march bravely toward any goal that hasn’t yet filed for a restraining order.
Add comment
