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The season was released on three DVDs in Japan between September 3 and November 5, 2008 by Aniplex. [4] The English dub began airing on Disney XD on October 28, 2009, [5] with the season aired between November 3, 2010 and March 9, 2011. [6] The season ran on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block from February 15 to June 21, 2015.
Boruto follows the exploits of Naruto Uzumaki's son Boruto and his comrades from the Hidden Leaf Village's ninja academy while finding a path to follow once they grow up. Despite being based on the manga, the anime explores original storylines and adaptations of the spin-off manga, Naruto: The Seventh Hokage and the Scarlet Spring ; [ 1 ...
Boruto finds Temari and Shikadai, who learned about Gaara's weakened state and Sasuke's disappearance. Temari lectures Boruto for not believing in Shinki's love for his uncle but still goes with Shikadai and Boruto to catch up with Shinki. As this happens, Urashiki breaks free once Gaara's seal is broken.
Naruto: Shippuden is an anime television series mainly adapted from Part II of Masashi Kishimoto's original Naruto manga series, with exactly 500 episodes. It is set two and a half years after the original series in the Naruto universe, following the teenage ninja Naruto Uzumaki and his allies.
Kiseru begins seeing clearly again and reveals his mission. Believing the clues the ANBU received from a previous agent, who went missing, Kiseru realizes the whole ordeal is a genjutsu, so he stabs Boruto and uses healing ninjutsu, to wake him up from it. Boruto awakens in a lab, with everyone still alive, and inside pods.
The episodes for the fourteenth season of the anime series Naruto: Shippuden are based on Part II for Masashi Kishimoto's manga series. The season follows Naruto Uzumaki helping the ninja alliance fight against Kabuto's army. It was directed by Hayato Date, and produced by Pierrot and TV Tokyo. [1] The season aired from January to July 2013. [2]
[3] [4] The original series' creator, Masashi Kishimoto supervises the manga, which is illustrated by his former chief assistant and written by the co-writer of the Boruto: Naruto the Movie screenplay. [5] In order to keep the entire Naruto saga within a hundred volumes, Ikemoto hopes to complete the manga in fewer than 30 volumes. [6]
The designs used for the film were the designs Kishimoto made for a planned Part 3 of Naruto, however that idea was scrapped for Boruto so they were repurposed for The Last. [40] To promote the film, Kishimoto worked in Motion Comic Naruto, a DVD that showed scenes from the manga in 3D that was given to the first 1.5 million people who went to ...