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Ape Escape, known in Japan as Let's Get Saru Getchu (レッチュ ゲッチュ サルゲッチュ, Retchu Getchu Saru Getchu), is a series of computer-generated anime shorts produced by Shogakukan Music & Digital Entertainment and Sony Computer Entertainment for TV Tokyo in 2002.
Ape Escape -On Air-(サルゲッチュ 〜オンエアー〜, Saru Getchu -On Eā-) is a CGI anime television series produced by Xebec based on Sony's Ape Escape video game franchise. The series and its sequel ( Ape Escape -On Air- 2nd ) aired on TV Tokyo between April 8, 2006 and September 29, 2007, and loosely adapt storylines from Million ...
Specter arrives via video broadcast and mocks Tomoki, who, in response, takes the side of Kei and Yumi, granting them permission to take his rocket to space to defeat his former partner. Once they reach Specter's outer space base of operations, Space Station SARU-3, they capture all the monkeys and deactivate the movie sets on their way to Specter.
Ape Escape (Japanese TV series): a 2002 series of computer-generated anime shorts for Tokyo TV; Ape Escape (American TV series): a 2009 series of animated shorts created by American studio Frederator Studios for Nicktoons; Saru Get You -On Air-: a 2006 Japanese anime television series based on the franchise
Ape Escape (Japanese TV series), a 2002 series of computer-generated anime television shorts for Tokyo TV based on the video games; Saru Get You -On Air-, also known as Ape Escape -On Air-, a 2006 Japanese CGI-anime television series produced by Xebec (now Sunrise Beyond), and based on the video games
Saru Get You -On Air-2 77 Xebec: Japan 2006–2007 TV Tokyo: The Save-Ums! 2 52 The Dan Clark Company C.O.R.E. Decode Entertainment: Canada 2003–2006 Discovery Kids (United States) CBC (Canada) Discovery Kids (Latin American) Scarecrowman [1] 1 26 TMS Entertainment: Japan 2008 Tokyo MX: Shelldon: 2 52 Qubo: Thailand 2008–2014? Qubo: Sid the ...
Saru! Get You! Million Monkeys [a] is a 2006 platform video game developed and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 2 as part of the Ape Escape series. It was released throughout Asia a year after the series' previous title Ape Escape 3. The game was planned to be released in the United Kingdom in late 2006. Ultimately ...
With time running out, Asakusa proposes changing the end of the anime to match the music track they have and keeping the dance party scene as a DVD extra. After working heavily through the night to finish their tasks, Eizouken manages to finish the anime and Kanamori takes extreme measures to get DVDs printed in time for the Comet-A convention.