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Free! is a Japanese anime television series produced by Kyoto Animation and Animation Do. The series is loosely based on the light novel , High Speed! ( Japanese : ハイ☆スピード!
Viz Media obtained the foreign television, home video and merchandising rights to the Bleach anime from TV Tokyo Corporation and Shueisha on March 15, 2006. [2] Subsequently, Viz Media contracted Studiopolis to create the English adaptation of the anime, and has licensed its individual Bleach merchandising rights to several different companies. [3]
The anime resulted in animated feature films, original video animations, video games, audio disc releases and live action episodes. Funimation licensed the anime series for North American broadcast in 2003 under the name Case Closed with the characters given Americanized names. The anime premiered on Adult Swim but was discontinued due to low ...
Later this week, you’ll be able to watch the series with a proper English dub. Crunchyroll has revealed the release date of the English dub for the first episode of Solo Leveling, and it’s ...
Basic cable provided a frequent broadcast outlet for juvenile-targeted anime during the 1980s, in particular Nickelodeon and CBN Cable Network (now as Freeform).. In the early 1980s, CBN aired an English dub of the Christian-themed anime series Superbook and The Flying House, as well as the female-aimed drama series Honey Honey and an uncut, Honolulu-dubbed version of Go Nagai's super robot ...
Spirited Away was a co-recipient of the Golden Bear with Bloody Sunday at the 2002 Berlin International Film Festival and became the first hand-drawn, Japanese anime and non-English-language animated film to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature at the 75th Academy Awards. [16]
Both an English-subtitled and English-dubbed version by Red Angel Media began airing on March 16, 2010, on Animax Asia. [86] At their industry panel at Anime Expo 2010, anime distributor Bandai Entertainment announced that they have acquired K-On! for a DVD and Blu-ray release, [87] with Bang Zoom! Entertainment producing an English dub for the ...
Since then, 4Kids established a stricter set of guidelines, checks, and balances to determine which anime the company acquires. [14] On April 13, 2007, Funimation (later Crunchyroll, LLC) licensed the series and started production on an English-language release of One Piece [15] which also included re-dubbing the episodes previously dubbed by ...