Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of Samurai 7 episodes, an anime series based on Akira Kurosawa's Seven Samurai, but with a steampunk setting. It was directed by Toshifumi Takizawa. [citation needed] It consisted of twenty-six 25-minute episodes. [1]
Samurai 7 (stylized as SAMURAI 7) is a 2004 anime television series produced by Gonzo and based on the 1954 Akira Kurosawa film Seven Samurai.The seven samurai have the same names and similar characteristics to their counterparts from the original.
in-between animation on episode 26 only 2003 .hack//Liminality vol. 1: In the Case of Mai Minase: Bee Train: in-between animation 2003–2004 Fullmetal Alchemist: Bones: series in-between animation 2004 Samurai 7: Gonzo: background art on episodes 6–9, 11, 12, 15, 16 and 18–23 2004–2005 Gankutsuou: The Count of Monte Cristo: Gonzo
List of Samurai 7 episodes; M. The Magnificent Seven; The Magnificent Seven (TV series) The Magnificent Seven (2016 film) List of Samurai 7 media and materials; S.
Samurai 7 is animated by GONZO and directed by Toshifumi Takizawa.The series premiered across Japan on the anime satellite television network, Animax, as an exclusive high definition CS-PPV broadcast, and was also later aired by the network across its other respective networks worldwide, including Southeast Asia, South Asia, Latin America and other regions.
Part I: The Beginning – Aku, an evil shape-shifting demon, devastates a child Japanese prince's land and abducts his father. After years of training in exile around the world, the prince returns as a young man, receives a mystical katana able to cut through virtually anything, frees his people from Aku's minions, and battles Aku despite his father's warnings.
Seven Samurai (Japanese: 七人の侍, Hepburn: Shichinin no Samurai) is a 1954 Japanese epic samurai action film directed by Akira Kurosawa from a screenplay co-written with Shinobu Hashimoto and Hideo Oguni.
[6] [7] [8] The first seventeen episodes of Samurai Champloo premiered on Fuji TV on May 20, 2004, with its broadcast being cancelled on September 9. [2] [9] [10] The series, complete with the remaining episodes referred to as a "second season", was broadcast on BS Fuji from January 22 to March 19, 2005.