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Kinema Junpo ranked Beautiful Dreamer as the 17th best Japanese film of 1984. [34] That same publication later ranked it as one of the best Japanese animated movies. [citation needed] The film was the runner-up for the "Best 10" films in the 6th Yokohama Film Festival. [35] In the 1984 edition of the Anime Grand Prix, the film was ranked third ...
The Ibusuki no Tamatebako service was introduced on 12 March 2011, coinciding with the full opening of the Kyushu Shinkansen. A third car, KiHa 140-2066, was modified and added to formations at weekends and busy seasons from 24 March 2012. [2]
Urusei Yatsura: Only You was directed by Mamoru Oshii and began showing in Japanese cinemas on February 11, 1983. [1] Urusei Yatsura 2: Beautiful Dreamer was also directed by Mamoru Oshii and was released on February 11, 1984. [2] Urusei Yatsura 3: Remember My Love was directed by Kazuo Yamazaki and released on January 26, 1985. [3]
Suzume Iwato is a seventeen-year-old orphaned high-school girl living with her aunt in a town in Kyushu.She has recurring dreams of her childhood self walking through a ruined cityscape at night, before running into a shadowy figure she believes to be her late mother.
Eureka is a drama set mainly in rural Kyushu, Japan, and is almost entirely shot in sepia tone. It tells the story of the lasting effects of a violent experience on three people, a teenage brother and sister, Naoki and Kozue Tamura and a bus driver, Makoto Sawai. These three are the sole survivors after the bus is hijacked by a gunman.
The contract chipmaker’s new chip plants on the southern island of Kyushu have been instrumental in driving up land prices by 33.3%, Bloomberg cites Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport ...
The song was written and co-produced by Utada, while Akira Miyake and the singer's father Teruzane Utada served as producers. In 2009, a remix of the song, "Beautiful World (Planitb Acoustica Mix)" served as the theme song of the second film in the series, Evangelion: 2.0 You Can (Not) Advance.
The film's theme song, "Ren'ai Shashin" (Love Photo), is a ballad sung by Ai Otsuka. The title of the movie was taken from the lyrics of the song. [citation needed] The single was released by Ai Otsuka on October 25, 2006. In its first week of sales, the single debuted at number 2, being Otsuka's highest debut sales of the year with 77,570 ...