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In their absence, Yut-Lung and a reluctant Shorter kidnap Eiji and return to New York to be received by Golzine. Ash and Max return to the Dawson home, where they encounter the real Alexis Dawson. Alexis explains that Banana Fish induces a hypnosis-like state that makes its users susceptible to brainwashing. The drug was created accidentally by ...
New York City in the 1980s, the primary setting of the series. Banana Fish is set in the United States during the mid-1980s, primarily in New York City. Seventeen-year-old street gang leader Ash Lynx cares for his older brother Griffin, a Vietnam War veteran left in a vegetative state following a traumatic combat incident in which he fired on his own squadron and uttered the words "banana fish".
A kingpin in the Unione Corse who aims to expand his power by selling banana fish to the United States government. [7] Ash's former patron and later adopted father, he has groomed Ash since he was a child to be his sex slave and heir to his criminal empire. Frederick Arthur (フレデリック・オーサー, Furederikku Ōsā)
Anyways, the inclusion doesn't fit the format for WP:EPISODE, since these pages are supposed to focus on television episodes or shorts. lullabying 18:49, 27 September 2019 (UTC) The Digimon Tamers Blu-ray example appears to be a one-off single episode release, rather than a multi-episodic release as Banana Fish was.
Yuma Uchida (内田 雄馬, Uchida Yūma, born September 21, 1992) is a Japanese voice actor and singer who works for Intention. He is best known for his roles as Jun Sazanami in Ensemble Stars!!, Yuuma Kousaka in Gundam Build Fighters Try, Nagisa Kiryū in Classroom Crisis, Megumi Fushiguro in Jujutsu Kaisen, Eishirō Yabuki in The Asterisk War, Hayate Immelmann in Macross Delta, Ein Dalton ...
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[2] [3] Her following series were critical successes. Her series Sakura no Sono was adapted as a live-action film in 1992. [4] Yoshida is best known for the crime thriller series Banana Fish, which she published between 1985 and 1994.
Bananafish or banana fish may refer to: "A Perfect Day for Bananafish", a short story by J. D. Salinger; Banana Fish, a manga series by Akimi Yoshida;