Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As of January 15, 2016, 73 volumes in total have been released in Japan. A manga omake titled Unusual Case Files of Young Kindaichi: Kaijingyō Legend Murder Case ( 金田一少年の怪奇事件簿 海人漁伝説殺人事件 , Kindaichi Shōnen no Kaiki Jikenbo Kaijingyō Densetsu Satsujin Jiken ) is only included as a bonus feature in The ...
Another manga series, 37 Year Old Kindaichi Case Files, was serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Evening from January 2018 to February 2023, and is set to continue on Comic Days manga app. It is set 20 years later, in which Hajime graduates high school, and becomes a manager of a PR firm, but is swung back into mysteries, despite ...
Bunkoban are generally A6 size (105 mm × 148 mm, 4.1 in × 5.8 in) and thicker than tankōbon and, in the case of manga, usually have a new cover designed specifically for the release. In the case of manga, a bunkoban tends to contain considerably more pages than a tankōbon and usually is a republication of tankōbon of the same title which ...
Wata no Kunihoshi was adapted as an anime movie that was produced by Mushi Production. The movie was directed by Shinichi Tsuji from a script by Masaki Tsuji and Yumiko Ōshima, with music by pianist Richard Clayderman. [4] The movie was released in theaters on February 11, 1984. The movie was later released on VHS, [5] and VHD by Victor Japan.
[7] [8] A 19 volume bunkoban edition was released between July 17, 1998 and March 16, 1999. [9] [10] A twenty-volume kanzenban edition was released between December 27, 2013 and April 30, 2015. [11] [12] Urasawa created a spin-off manga series titled Jigoro! that ran in Zōkan Big Comic Spirits from October 20, 1988 to
A To Love Ru one-shot was released on the Shōnen Jump+ website on January 13, 2023, to commemorate an art exhibition held as a conclusion to the manga's 15th anniversary celebrations. [6] A continuation of the manga, titled To Love Ru Darkness, was serialized in Shueisha's monthly Jump Square magazine from October 4, 2010 to March 4, 2017.
The manga was also published in English by Chuang Yi in Singapore. [21] In March 2011, Raiku released a one-shot chapter of Zatch Bell! to promote the repackaging of the manga in a new bunkoban format under Kodansha. [22] Sixteen volumes were published between March 8, 2011, and June 7, 2012.
The protagonist joins the movie circle, but his ideas for films are rejected by Jogasaki, the circle’s president. Encouraged by Ozu, the protagonist spends the next two years shooting a documentary exposing the worst aspects of Jogasaki's character, including his love doll Kaori. He becomes fond of Akashi, the only member of the circle who ...