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The short film Namakura Gatana (1917), the oldest extant animated film made for cinemas known to exist.. This is a list of anime by release date which covers Japanese animated productions that were made between 1917–1938.
A title by the name of New Art Book of Tokobo: Imosuke's Boar Hunt ( 凸坊新畫帖 芋助猪狩の巻) is the first anime domestic film. [1] The first anime short-films were made by three leading figures in the industry. Ōten Shimokawa was a political caricaturist and cartoonist who worked for the magazine Tokyo Puck.
"Within the World of Power and Women" or "The World of Power and Women") is a 1933 anime short film by Kenzō Masaoka and the first Japanese anime of any type to feature voiceovers. [1] [2] [3] The film was released in black and white. There are no known prints of this film available, and it is considered a lost film. [2]
Three Tales (新しい動画 3つのはなし, Mittsu no Hanashi) was a black and white Japanese anime direct-to-TV short film aired in 1960. It was thought to be the first domestic anime ever televised until the discovery of Mole's Adventure.
Though not the earliest animation created in Japan, it is considered to be the first "true" Anime film, as it was the first to be publicly shown in a theater. The film ran only five minutes. As with many animation works created in Japan before the mid-1920s, no trace of the film, or any of Shimokawa's five other short films, has survived.
Krtek (Mole) (Czechoslovakia, 1956 short film series) 白蛇伝 (Panda and the Magic Serpent) (Japan, 1958 feature) 少年猿飛佐助 (Magic Boy) (Japan, 1959 feature, first anime released in the U.S. in 1961)
Katsudō Shashin. Katsudō Shashin consists of a series of cartoon images on fifty frames of a celluloid strip and lasts three seconds at sixteen frames per second. [1] It depicts a young boy in a sailor suit who writes the kanji characters "活動写真" (katsudō shashin, "moving picture" or "Activity photo") from right to left, then turns to the viewer, removes his hat, and bows. [1]
[b] [27] The first talkie anime was Chikara to Onna no Yo no Naka (1933), a short film produced by Masaoka. [28] [29] The first feature-length anime film was Momotaro: Sacred Sailors (1945), produced by Seo with a sponsorship from the Imperial Japanese Navy. [30] The 1950s saw a proliferation of short, animated advertisements created for ...