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UFO Robot Grendizer (UFOロボ グレンダイザー, Yūfō Robo Gurendaizā), also known as Grandizer, Ufo Robot Grendizer Raids, [3] Goldrake and Goldorak, is a Japanese manga and animated television series created by Go Nagai.
This is a list of characters from the anime and manga series Mazinger Z, Great Mazinger, Grendizer, and Mazinkaiser, as well as the Shin Mazinger reboot. It lists the main players of the plots as well as minor characters or others that did not appear in more than one chapter.
UFO Robot Grendizer vs. Great Mazinger ( UFOロボ グレンダイザー対グレートマジンガー , UFO Robo Gurendaizā tai Gurēto Majingā ) is a 1976 animated short film that crosses over Go Nagai 's super robots Grendizer and Great Mazinger .
Dynamic Heroes (Japanese: ダイナミックヒーローズ, Hepburn: Dainamikku Hīrōzu), also known as Nagai Go Manga Gaiden - Dynamic Heroes (永井豪まんが外伝 ダイナミックヒーローズ, Nagai Gō Manga Gaiden Dainamikku Hīrōzu) and as Go Nagai manga heroes crossover collection - Dynamic Heroes, is a Japanese manga based in several works of Go Nagai, including most of his ...
Grenadier (Japanese: グレネーダー, Hepburn: Gurenēdā) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Sōsuke Kaise.It was serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's shōnen manga magazine Monthly Shōnen Ace from April 2002 to March 2005, with its chapters collected in seven tankōbon volumes.
He made his official debut as a mangaka in 1969 with the shōjo manga Bōifurendo yai! ("Hey boyfriend!"). [2] Ota is best known for co-creating with Go Nagai the shōnen manga Groizer X, later adapted in an anime, and for the manga adaptations of other Nagai's works such as Mazinger Z, Great Mazinger, Getter Robo, Grendizer, Steel Jeeg.
Great Mazinger was also the star of the short theatrical "team-up movie features" released in Japan such as Great Mazinger versus Grendizer, and Great Mazinger versus Getter Robo G among others. They were based on the anime crossovers of the manga creations of Go Nagai. For example, Tetsuya pilots an earlier version of Mazinger Z called Energer Z.
Possibly the first anime introduced into France: UFO Robot Grendizer (1978), an introduction to manga culture. The opening theme, by Saban, became an instant hit. Producer Jean Chalopin contacted some Japanese studios, such as Toei [9] (who did Grendizer); and Tokyo Movie Shinsha, Studio Pierrot and Studio Junio produced