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Kantai Collection (Japanese: 艦隊これくしょん, Hepburn: Kantai Korekushon, translated as "Fleet Collection", subtitled as "Fleet Girls Collection"), known as KanColle (艦これ, KanKore) for short, is a 2015 Japanese anime television series created by Diomedéa, based on the game of the same name by Kadokawa Games.
For instance, some manga anthology depictions show the ship girls as ship-sized giants, while other serialized manga show them as human-sized. The television animation explains the ship girls as humans born with the ability to possess the spirits of World War II warships, while within the Bonds of the Wings of Cranes light novel, the girls ...
The film is produced by A-1 Pictures and directed by Jun Nakagawa, with Yuu Nobuta serving as chief director. Takaaki Suzuki and Kunihiko Okada are credited as the film's scriptwriters. The rest of the main staff and cast from the anime series are returning to reprise their roles. [33] It was released in Japan on January 18, 2020. [34]
Q Boat – Q's fishing boat, The World Is Not Enough, 1999; Queen Anne's Revenge – Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, 2011; Queen Conch – To Have and Have Not, 1944; Rachel – Moby Dick, 1956, 1998; Reaper – Dog's ship in Cutthroat Island, 1995; Red Dragon – civilian yacht, Rush Hour 2, 2001
An anime television series adaptation of the Azur Lane: Slow Ahead! manga by studios Candy Box and Yostar Pictures aired from January to March 2021; a second season has been announced. A two-episode original video animation adaptation of the Azur Lane Queen's Orders manga was released in July 2023.
Zipang (Japanese: ジパング, Hepburn: Jipangu) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Kaiji Kawaguchi.It was serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Morning from 2000 to 2009, with its chapters collected in forty-three tankōbon volumes.
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The anime was selected by The Verge as one of the best anime of 2018, saying that it is "genuine", [23] and by The New York Times as the #8 International Show of the Year, with TV critic Mike Hale describing it as "a funny and moving coming-of-age story that should translate across all boundaries of age or culture."