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JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is an anime series adapted from Hirohiko Araki's manga of the same name, which was serialized in Weekly Shōnen Jump from 1987 to 2004, and was transferred to the monthly seinen manga magazine Ultra Jump in 2005.
Phantom Blood was again adapted into anime in 2012, as part of the first season of David Production's JoJo's Bizarre Adventure TV anime series. [ 59 ] In 2023, a stage musical adaptation produced by Toho was announced, which was to be directed by Ney Hasegawa with the script written by Tsuneyasu Motoyoshi.
The first opening theme is the song "JoJo (Sono Chi no Sadame)" (ジョジョ~その血の運命~, "JoJo ~That Blood's Destiny~") performed by Hiroaki "Tommy" Tominaga, vocalist of Japanese "brass rock" band Bluff, as the opening theme for the Part 1 episodes. The score for Part 1 was composed by Hayato Matsuo, and was released in two parts ...
The JoJo's Bizarre Adventure anime television series was named one of the best of 2012 by Otaku USA. [31] It was added to the list by Joseph Luster, however, in his review he cited David Production having a small budget for several of his problems with the series, stating some portions of the animation are a "butt hair above motion comic ...
Dio Brando (Japanese: ディオ・ブランドー, Hepburn: Dio Burandō), later known mononymously only as Dio (DIO ( ディオ )), is a fictional character and the main antagonist of the Japanese manga series JoJo's Bizarre Adventure written and illustrated by Hirohiko Araki.
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure is the largest ongoing manga series published by Shueisha by number of volumes, with its chapters collected in 134 tankōbon volumes as of April 2024. A 13-episode original video animation series adapting the manga's third part, Stardust Crusaders, was produced by A.P.P.P. and released from 1993 to
It was released on six DVD volumes from 2003 to 2005, dubbed in English, with all 13 episodes also featured in chronological order. [1] In 2008, distribution for the Jojo's Bizarre Adventure OVA series was indefinitely suspended following the controversy over the presence of the Qur'an in Episode 6. [2] [3]
However, instead of starting with Part 1, they chose to only release Part 3: Stardust Crusaders, which is the most well-known. The first volume was released on November 8, 2005, [ 2 ] with the first twelve volumes summarized in an eight-page summary written and drawn by Araki himself, [ 3 ] and the last on December 7, 2010. [ 4 ]