When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ghost Stories (Japanese TV series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_Stories_(Japanese_TV...

    Ghost Stories follows Satsuki Miyanoshita, who moves with her family to the hometown of her deceased mother. On her first day of school, Satsuki, her brother Keiichirou (a first-grader), Hajime Aoyama (their neighbor), Momoko Koigakubo (an older schoolmate), and Leo Kakinoki (a classmate and friend of Hajime's with a penchant for the paranormal) visit the abandoned school building adjacent the ...

  3. List of Ghost Stories (Japanese TV series) episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ghost_Stories...

    The cover art for the first volume of the anime series, published by Aniplex, featuring the main characters. Ghost Stories (学校の怪談, Gakkō no Kaidan), also known as Ghosts at School, is a 2000 Japanese anime series directed by Noriyuki Abe and produced by Pierrot.

  4. Yamishibai: Japanese Ghost Stories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamishibai:_Japanese_Ghost...

    In Season 6, the old man tells his stories in a forest instead of a school. A shadow takes the form of the old man then puts on the mask as he introduces the story. In Season 7, the old man tells his stories in a creepy dark apartment. In Season 8, he tells his stories at a busy urban intersection, surrounded by vague shadowy passersby.

  5. Arashi no Yoru ni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arashi_no_Yoru_ni

    Arashi no Yoru ni (あらしのよるに, lit. One Stormy Night) is the first in a series of children's books authored by Yūichi Kimura and illustrated by Hiroshi Abe. In 1995, the book won the 26th Kōdansha Literature Culture Award and the 42nd Sankei Children's Literature Culture Award.

  6. Obake no Q-Tarō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obake_no_Q-Tarō

    The story is usually focused on the antics of Q-Tarō and his friends. The manga was drawn in 1964–1966, 1971–1974, 1976 by the duo Fujiko Fujio (Hiroshi Fujimoto and Motoo Abiko). An English manga volume was published in Japan as Q the Spook. [1] There are three anime series adaptations of Obake no Q-Tarō.

  7. Goat Story - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goat_Story

    Goat Story was released in theatres in the Czech Republic on 16 October 2008 by Bontonfilm, and it won the main prize at the 2010 Buenos Aires International Children's Film Festival, [3] and received nominations at other film festivals. A sequel, Goat Story 2, was released in 2012.

  8. GeGeGe no Kitarō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GeGeGe_no_Kitarō

    GeGeGe no Kitarō focuses on the young Kitarō—the last survivor of the Ghost Tribe—and his adventures with other ghouls and strange creatures of Japanese mythology. Along with: the remains of his father, Medama-Oyaji (a mummified Ghost tribesman reincarnated to inhabit his old eyeball); Nezumi-Otoko (the rat-man); Neko-Musume (the cat-girl ...

  9. Susuwatari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susuwatari

    Susuwatari (Japanese: ススワタリ, 煤渡り; "wandering soot"), also called Makkuro kurosuke (まっくろくろすけ; "makkuro" meaning "pitch black", "kuro" meaning "black" and "-suke" being a common ending for male names), is the name of a fictitious sprite that was devised by Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli, known from the famous anime-productions My Neighbor Totoro (1988) and ...