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The original series films were directed by Hiroshi Fukutomi in 1980, Hideo Nishimaki from 1981-1982, and Tsutomu Shibayama from 1983-2004. Shunsuke Kikuchi was the music composer of the movies from 1980-1997, Senri Oe served as music composer from 1998-1999, Katsumi Horii served as music composer from 2000-2004.
Hindi-dubbed episodes started with the 1979 Doraemon series. Later episodes of the 2005 Doraemon series started airing on Hungama TV and Disney Channel India in October and November 2013. [ 8 ] New seasons of Doraemon are available on Disney+ Hotstar in Hindi, Tamil and Telugu. [ 9 ]
Doraemon: Nobita's New Great Adventure into the Underworld [1] (映画ドラえもん のび太の新魔界大冒険 〜7人の魔法使い〜, Doraemon: Nobita no Shin Makai Daibōken ~7-nin no Mahō Tsukai~), also advertised as Doraemon the Movie 2007, is a 2007 Japanese animated science fantasy film.
Doraemon: Nobita and the Birth of Japan 2016; Doraemon: Nobita and the Castle of the Undersea Devil; Doraemon: Nobita and the Galaxy Super-express; Doraemon: Nobita and the Haunts of Evil; Doraemon: Nobita and the Island of Miracles—Animal Adventure; Doraemon: Nobita and the Kingdom of Clouds; Doraemon: Nobita and the Knights on Dinosaurs
As Shizuka cries over Doraemon, Buggy suddenly appears from Doraemon's pocket due to Shizuka crying, and goes straight into Poseidon, crashing and destroying both of them. With Poseidon destroyed, the iron guards stops working, allowing Shizuka and Doraemon to rescue the others and leave before the erupting volcano destroys the castle.
Doraemon's 37th film made highest second weekend gross and highest total after second weekend in the franchise and is the fastest Doraemon's film to reach ¥4 billion milestone within 37 days of release. Here is a table which shows the box office of this movie of all the weekends in Japan: #
Doraemon: Nobita and the Kingdom of Clouds [2] (ドラえもん のび太と雲の王国, Doraemon Nobita to Kumo no Ōkoku), also known as Doraemon and the Kingdom of Clouds, [3] is a feature-length Doraemon film which premiered on March 7, 1992, in Japan, based on the 12th volume of the same name of the Doraemon Long Stories series.
It was the last Doraemon film written and supervised by series creator Fujiko F. Fujio before he died in September 1996, the remainder of the manga being completed and released in serialization after he died by apprentices (he died while inking and illustrating the manga) with the movie releasing months after his death.