Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The fourteenth season of the Bleach anime series is based on Tite Kubo's Bleach manga series. It is known as the Arrancar: Downfall arc (破面・滅亡篇, Arankaru Metsubō Hen), [1] is directed by Noriyuki Abe, and produced by TV Tokyo, Dentsu and Studio Pierrot. [2]
The season's twenty-six episodes are based on the Bleach manga series by Tite Kubo, but follow original storylines exclusive to the anime. In this arc, Soul Reaper Ichigo Kurosaki and his friends discover a series of strange events in the Soul Society where numerous Soul Reapers have disappeared without a trace, with a seemingly large ...
The episodes are directed by Noriyuki Abe, and produced by TV Tokyo, Dentsu and Studio Pierrot. [1] In the English release by Viz Media, the title is changed to The Substitute. [2] The season adapts the first eight volumes (chapters 1–70) of Tite Kubo's Bleach manga series, spanning twenty episodes.
After Ichigo's return from Soul Society, the hollow-based characters known as arrancar are introduced, with the basic hollows having lesser roles and rarely used as villains except in the anime side-story episodes. Fishbone D (フィッシュボーン D, Fisshubōn Dī) Voiced by: Yutaka Aoyama (Japanese); Michael Sorich (English)
Sōsuke Aizen (藍染 惣右介, Aizen Sōsuke) is a fictional character in the Japanese manga series Bleach created by Tite Kubo. He is the main antagonist of the first part of the story of Bleach .
Kisuke Urahara (浦原 喜助, Urahara Kisuke) is the owner of the Urahara Shop, whose habit of wearing traditional Japanese wooden sandals and a bucket hat earned him the nickname "Mr. Hat-and-Clogs" (ゲタ帽子, geta-bōshi). Kisuke is usually quite laid-back and has a jovial if not comical attitude, tendencies that tend to drive away ...
The English adaptation of the season began airing in July 2007 on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim in the United States. [3] In October 2007 the series went on a hiatus; episodes resumed airing in March 2008 and finished in May of the same year. [4] The episodes use four pieces of theme music: two opening themes and two ending themes.
The episodes' plot follows the flashback arc of the series' storyline which retells the Vizard's past. The season aired from February to March 2009 on TV Tokyo. [3] The English adaptation of the anime is licensed by Viz Media, [4] which aired on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim from May to July 2011. [5]