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The logo for the English dub, released by Funimation. The episodes of the Japanese animated television series Yu Yu Hakusho (幽☆遊☆白書, YūYū Hakusho, lit. "Ghost Files" or "Poltergeist Report", romanized as Yu Yu HAKUSHO), part of the Yu Yu Hakusho media franchise are directed by Noriyuki Abe and produced by Fuji Television, Yomiko Advertising and Studio Pierrot. [1]
The English episodes aired from February 2002 to April 2003. The first twenty-one episodes were shown on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim programming block, with reruns playing after the broadcast night of July 6, 2002. [1] New episodes began airing in April 2003, when the episodes began showing on Cartoon Network's Toonami programming block. [2]
An English translation of the YuYu Hakusho manga was serialized in North America by Viz Media in the American Shonen Jump magazine, where it debuted in its inaugural January 2003 issue and ended in January 2010. [28] Viz released all 19 collected volumes of the English manga between May 1, 2003, [29] and March 2, 2010. [30]
Netflix screened the first episode of YuYu Hakusho to an estimated 5,000 people at the Ariake Arena in Tokyo, Japan on December 13, 2023. [5] According to Zoe Leung of Hypebeast, this made it the streaming service's biggest world premiere event to date. [5] The entire five-episode series premiered on Netflix on December 14, 2023. [12] [13]
The movie was English dubbed by Anime Works and Animaze and released on VHS on June 9, 1998 and on a single DVD with Ninku: The Movie on January 30, 2001. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Funimation Entertainment later released the film to DVD, along with the Eizou Hakusho OVAs, on December 13, 2011 as Yu Yu Hakusho: The Movie & Eizou Hakusho , featuring a new ...
[1] [3] Viz Media said that it is also a pun on "Kuwabara kuwabara", a phrase uttered by superstitious people when they are scared. [2] Mari Kitayama, a lead character designer for the anime adaptation of Yu Yu Hakusho, stated that she considers Kuwabara to be the most difficult character to design. [4]
The first twenty-eight episodes of the English adaptation of the anime were aired between April and May 2003 on Cartoon Network's Toonami programming block. Yu Yu Hakusho was then removed from Toonami's listings until January 2004, when re-runs of the old episodes were shown. [1]
The first twenty-three English episodes were originally shown from July 2004 to January 2005 on Cartoon Network's Toonami programming block. [1] New episodes began airing in October 2005, with the saga concluding in November 2005. Three pieces of theme music are used for the episodes