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One Piece (also known as One Piece: The Movie in some markets) is the first animated feature film of the franchise, starring Mayumi Tanaka as Monkey D. Luffy, Kazuya Nakai as Roronoa Zoro, Akemi Okamura as Nami, and Kappei Yamaguchi as Usopp. It premiered in Japan on March 4, 2000 and was released to DVD on January 21, 2001. [3]
One Piece (also referred to as One Piece: The Movie) is a 2000 anime film released by Toei Company. It is the first film based on the manga series of the same name, and the only film in the series to use cel animation. It was originally released on March 4, 2000 as part of the Spring 2000 Toei Anime Fair, alongside Digimon Adventure: Our War Game!.
Notable areas of fan translation include: Fansubbing – The subtitling of movies, television programs, video games and other audiovisual media by a network of fans. [1] [2] For many languages, the most popular fan subtitling is of Hollywood movies and American TV dramas, while fansubs into English and Hindi are largely of East Asian entertainment, particularly anime and tokusatsu.
1 One Piece Omake: 1999 – 2017 Eiichiro Oda: 13 Various, Shueisha Random Yonkoma shorts No formal announcement of completion 2 One Piece Movie: Dead End Adventure (劇場版ONE PIECE デッドエンドの冒険) 2003 N/A 2 Shueisha: One-time release Adaption of One Piece The Movie: Dead End no Bōken: 3 One Piece Movie: Curse of the Sacred Sword
Prior to being cast in One Piece, Godoy primarily acted in Spanish-language Mexican TV shows, before taking on a main role in Canadian superhero series The Imperfects in 2022.
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The One Piece film at issue was a fansub, an unauthorized copy distributed with fan-produced, translated subtitles. Soon after the lawsuit was abandoned, Funimation was reported to have long been deriving dubs from fansubs. [125]
A fansub (short for fan-subtitled) is a version of a foreign film or foreign television program, typically anime or dorama which has been translated by fans (as opposed to an officially licensed translation done by paid professionals) and subtitled into a language usually other than that of the original. [1]