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BanG Dream! is a Japanese music media franchise owned by Bushiroad that includes an anime television series. The anime currently has three seasons, five films, one OVA and two spin-offs. The first season was produced by Issen and Xebec, while the main production staff included director Atsushi Ōtsuki and screenwriter Yuniko Ayana.
The first Vietnamese animation was Đáng đời thằng Cáo (The Welldeserved Fox) [5] based on a poem called Con cáo và tổ ong (The fox and the beehive) produced in 1959, with a length of 300 meters, it was the first film of the Vietnamese animation industry.
Bilibili hosts videos on various themes, including anime, music, dance, science and technology, movies, drama, fashion, and video games, but it is also known for its extensive kuso-style parodies by subcultural content creators.
An anime following MyGO!!!!! titled It's MyGO!!!!! aired from June to September 2023. The sequel to It's MyGO!!!!! titled Ave Mujica - The Die is Cast - is set to premiere in January 2025. The series has enjoyed international popularity for its live performances and mobile game, while the anime has seen mixed but improving reviews with later ...
Ohma Tokita (十鬼蛇 王馬, Tokita Ōma) Voiced by: Tatsuhisa Suzuki [3] (Japanese); Kaiji Tang [4] [5] (English) A fighter in his late 20s. After defeating another fighter in a dark alley one night, a representative of the Nogi Group for the Kengan Association, he was picked by the Nogi group to be its new representative with Kazuo Yamashita as his caretaker.
Gag Manga Biyori is a nonsensical comedy series known for its bizarre plot setups and non-sequitur humor. [1] It has also been described as a "Monty Python-esque weirdness."[2] In the anime adaptation, its various characters are mostly voiced by Yūji Ueda, Kaori Nazuka and Takeshi Maeda.
Meet the top turkey of the dog world. Vito the Pug won Best in Show at the 23rd annual National Dog Show Presented by Purina, which aired on Nov. 28 after the Macy's Thanksgiving Day parade. The ...
The history of anime can be traced back to the start of the 20th century, with the earliest verifiable films dating from 1917. [1] Before the advent of film, Japan already had a rich tradition of entertainment with colourful painted figures moving across the projection screen in utsushi-e (写し絵), a particular Japanese type of magic lantern show popular in the 19th century.