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Tara Sands is an American voice actress and co-host of Cartoon Network's Fridays from 2005 to 2007. [1] Sands has voiced in anime dubs and cartoons, including Bulbasaur in the Pokémon anime series, Spyler in I Spy, Kari Kamiya in Digimon Adventure tri., Anna Kyoyama in Shaman King, Mokuba Kaiba in Yu-Gi-Oh!
The first nineteen animated films are based on the anime television series of the same name, while the twentieth, twenty-first, and twenty-third are set in an alternate continuity to the anime. The films are produced by animation studios OLM , Production I.G , Xebec , and Wit Studio , and distributed in Japan by Toho , with various studios ...
Pokémon Chronicles [a] is a spin-off series of the Pokémon anime, revolving around characters other than Ash Ketchum. It first aired in Japan on December 3, 2002, on TV Tokyo and concluded on September 28, 2004.
March 1, 1962 [2] The Littlest Warrior Taiji Yabushita [3] Toei Animation [4] Signal International N/A N/A July 21, 1962 [2] [5] Sinbad the Sailor Taiji Yabushita [6] Yoshio Kuroda [7] Toei Animation [8] Signal International [2] January 1, 1964: The Little Prince and the Eight-Headed Dragon: Yūgo Serikawa Toei Animation: Columbia Pictures ...
Bulbasaur first appeared as one of three Pokémon the player could choose as their first at the beginning of the initial Game Boy games, Pokémon Red and Blue, released in Japan in 1996. [9] Its Japanese name, Fushigidane, is a combination of the Japanese words for mystery or miracle (fushigi) and seed (tane). [10]
On April 17, 2019 as part of the Black and White Movie Collection, along with the other two Black and White movies; Pokémon the Movie: Kyurem vs. the Sword of Justice and Pokémon the Movie: Genesect and the Legend Awakened, before both being re-released again as a separate single disc release on September 2, 2019.
The film topped Japanese box office records, earning first place and grossing more than ¥516 million ($4.61 million) in the first two days, beating Gintama on its premiere. [25] The movie earned ¥2.14 billion ($19.6 million) in its fourth week and remained at the sixth position. [26]
The first season of the anime series aired on NHK between April 9, 2005 and October 15, 2005 spanning twenty-six episode. [2] The anime film aired in Japanese theaters on August 20, 2005. The second season of the anime series aired on NHK between April 29, 2006 and November 4, 2006 spanning twenty-six episodes. [3]