List Of Digimon Films
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List Of Digimon Films
Several films have been released in the ''Digimon'' franchise. Of those films, two short films animated completely in CGI have never been screened outside Japan, while ''Digital Monster X-Evolution'', which was not related to any of the ''Digimon'' television series, was first broadcast on television. The other films are primarily hand-drawn and related to the television series. The first three films were localized into English and compiled into a single film, '' Digimon: The Movie''. Subsequent films up to '' Digimon Frontier: Island of Lost Digimon'' were also released in English as well. The ''Digimon Adventure tri.'' film series, whose films are streamed worldwide with English subtitles on the same day as they were released in Japanese theaters, were also later released in dubbed versions outside Japan. ''Digimon Adventure'' films ''Digimon Adventure'' ''Digimon Adventure'' is the first ''Digimon Adventure'' film. It was released in Japan on March 6, 1999. It was release ...
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Digimon Adventure (film)
is a 1999 Japanese animated short film, directed by Mamoru Hosoda in his directorial debut. A part of the ''Digimon'' media franchise, ''Digimon Adventure'' is the first ''Digimon'' film, and serves as a prologue to the 1999 anime television series of the same name. The film was released in theaters in Japan on March 6, 1999, the day before the release of the ''Digimon Adventure'' television series. Plot In Tokyo, a creature hatches from an egg that emerges from a computer screen in the home of Taichi Yagami and his younger sister Hikari Yagami. Upon being cared for by the children, it transforms into a dinosaur-like creature that begins wandering the streets of the city. A second egg appears in the sky over Tokyo, from which a bird-like creature emerges. Taichi, Hikari, and several other children witness the two creatures fight; with Taichi and Hikari's encouragement, the dinosaur emerges victorious and both creatures vanish. Cast * Toshiko Fujita as Taichi Yagami * Kae ...
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Ojamajo Doremi
, alternatively titled ''Magical DoReMi'' in English, is a Japanese magical girl anime television series created by Toei Animation. It focuses on a group of elementary school girls, led by Doremi Harukaze, who become witch apprentices. The series aired in Japan on TV Asahi between February 1999 and January 2003, spanning four seasons and 201 episodes, and was followed by an original video animation series released between June and December 2004. An English-language version of the first season, produced by 4Kids Entertainment, aired in North America in 2005. ''Ojamajo Doremi'' has inspired two companion films, manga adaptations, video games, and a light novel sequel series. A 20th anniversary film titled ''Looking for Magical Doremi'' was released on November 13, 2020. Plot ''Ojamajo Doremi'' Doremi Harukaze, a third grade elementary school girl living in the fictional Japanese town of Misora, comes across the , a magic shop, and accidentally discovers that its o ...
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Yumeta Company
, known as from 2009 to 2017, is a Japanese animation studio formed in 1990. History Yumeta Company absorbed Hal Film Maker and changed its name to TYO Animations on July 1, 2009. On December 1, 2017, Memory Tech Holdings announced that they had acquired TYO Animations, and made it a subsidiary of Graphinica. They also announced that the company's name would revert to Yumeta Company. Works Television series OVAs/ONAs Films References External links

* * Yumeta Company, Animation studios in Tokyo Japanese companies established in 1990 Japanese animation studios Mass media companies established in 1990 {{anime-org-stub ...
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Tomohisa Taguchi
is a Japanese animator, director, storyboard artist and screenwriter. Personal life Taguchi was born and raised in Sōja. He graduated from Osaka Seikei University Faculty of Arts in 2007 and worked as a production assistant at Anime International Company. While attending college, he wanted to make live-action films. Although he is still interested in making one, he feels that animation has its own merits and charms, and there are many things that can only be expressed in animation. For this reason, he would like to focus on creating works that make good use of the expressions that are only possible in animation. Career In 2014, under A-1 Pictures, Taguchi made his directorial debut with '' Persona 3 The Movie: No. 2, Midsummer Knight's Dream.'' He is no stranger to the series as he has worked in various ''Persona'''s anime before. Taguchi shared that it was a tough job for him because it was his first directorial work and he was also directing '' Persona 4: The Golden Anim ...
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Digimon Film Logo
, short for "Digital Monsters" ( ''Dejitaru Monsutā''), is a Japanese media franchise encompassing virtual pet toys, anime, manga, video games, films and a trading card game. The franchise focuses on the eponymous creatures, who inhabit a "Digital World", a parallel universe that originated from Earth's various communication networks. The franchise was created in 1997 as a series of virtual pets, intended as the masculine counterpart to Tamagotchi. The creatures were first designed to look cute and iconic even on the devices' small screens; later developments had them created with a harder-edged style influenced by American comics. The franchise gained momentum with an early video game, ''Digimon World'', released only in Japan in January 1999. Several anime series and films including its first anime incarnation, ''Digimon Adventure'', which based on both video game and digital pet have been released, and the video game series has expanded into genres such as role-playing, ra ...
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Clockwork Island Adventure
Since the premiere of the anime adaptation of Eiichiro Oda's ''One Piece'' manga in 1999, Toei Animation has produced fifteen feature films based on the franchise traditionally released during the Japanese school spring break since 2000. Four of the films were originally shown as double features alongside other Toei film productions and thus have a running time below feature length (between 30 and 56 minutes). The first three films were shown at the and the eleventh was released as part of ''Jump Heroes Film''. The films generally use original storylines, but some adapt story arcs from the manga directly. With the release of films ten, twelve, thirteen and fourteen, tie-in story arcs of the TV series were aired concurrently. Additionally, three of these films have had special featurette shorts, showcasing the characters engaged in various activities unrelated to the series. They were shown dancing in ''Jango's Dance Carnival'' with ''Clockwork Island Adventure''; playing soccer ...
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Fox Kids
Fox Kids (originally known as Fox Children's Network and later as the Fox Kids Network; stylized as FOX KIDS) was an American children's block programming, programming block and branding for a slate of international children's television channels. Originally a joint venture between the Fox Broadcasting Company (Fox) and its network affiliate, affiliated stations, it was later owned by ABC Family Worldwide, Fox Family Worldwide. The Fox Kids brand originated on a programming block that launched on the Fox network from September 8, 1990, to September 7, 2002. The block aired on Saturday mornings throughout its existence (Sunday mornings in Canada), with an additional lineup on Monday through Friday afternoons airing until January 2002. Fox Kids is the only form of daytime television programming, outside of Fox Sports (United States), sports, aired by the Fox network to date. Following then-Fox parent News Corporation's sale of Fox Kids Worldwide to The Walt Disney Company in July 2 ...
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Gary Friedman
Gary Friedman is the chairman and chief executive officer of home furnishings retailer Restoration Hardware, Inc. Early life Gary Friedman was born in San Francisco to a Jewish family. When he was five years of age, his father died and he was raised by his mother in Sonoma, California. While attending community college, he worked part-time at The Gap, in 1977. He became the youngest manager in the company's history, in addition to the company's youngest district manager and regional manager. Career From 1988 to 2001, Friedman worked for Williams-Sonoma, Inc., where he served in various capacities, including as president and chief operating officer from May 2000 to March 2001, and as chief merchandising officer and Director of Retail Stores for both Williams-Sonoma and Pottery Barn Pottery Barn is an American upscale home furnishing store chain and e-commerce company, with retail stores in the United States, Canada, Mexico and Australia. Pottery Barn is a wholly owned subsidiar ...
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Jeff Nimoy
Jeffrey Nimoy is an American voice actor and writer best known as the voice of Nicholas D. Wolfwood from ''Trigun'', and Tentomon (and his higher Digivolution forms) from the ''Digimon'' series. Jeff has reprised his roles of Tentomon and Gennai in the ''Digimon tri.'' film series. Career Nimoy wrote, directed, and served as story editor for the English adaptation of the '' Digimon: Digital Monsters'' anime (1999–2001 series and the franchise films '' Digimon: The Movie'' and '' Digimon 02: Revenge of Diaboromon''). He also served as an executive producer and writer on numerous other Fox Kids series. Prior to that, Jeff was nominated for three Emmy Awards in four years, winning once, for his comedic work as a writer and producer for NFL Films Presents on ESPN and Fox. He also co-wrote the Showtime movie '' Big Brother Trouble'' (2000), and the animated series ''Pecola''. Jeff is the second cousin once removed of Leonard Nimoy. Jeff also co-directed the English version of '' ...
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Bob Buchholz
Robert Buchholz is an American voice actor, writer, story editor, and voice director. He has provided voices for anime and video games. He is the owner of Spliced Bread Productions. Filmography Anime * '' Akira'' - Ryu (Animaze dub) * '' A Whisker Away'' - Kusugi-sensei * ''Battle Athletes Victory'' - Alfred Gurtlent * ''Beastars'' - Oguma (Netflix dub) * ''The Big O'' - Beck Gold/Jason Beck * '' Cowboy Bebop'' - Tom Wiles * '' Digimon: Digital Monsters'' - Additional Voices (Adventure and Adventure 02) * '' Digimon: The Movie'' - Andy, Uncle Al, Additional Voices * ''Duel Masters'' - Additional Voices * ''Fushigi Yûgi'' - Tokaki (Young) * '' Ghost in the Shell: SAC 2045'' - Paz * '' Ghost in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex'' - Pazu * ''If I See You in My Dreams'' - Director Hamaoka * '' Kashimashi: Girl Meets Girl'' - Sora Hitoshi * '' Mazinkaiser SKL'' - Koujidani * ''Metal Fighter Miku'' - Tokichiro Harajuku * ''Mobile Suit Gundam 08th MS Team'' - Pilot (Episode 9) * '' Mouse' ...
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Sanrio Puroland
, also known as ''Hello Kitty Land'', is an indoor theme park located in Tama New Town, Tokyo, Japan. Opened on December 7, 1990, it hosts attractions, live shows, shopping outlets, and restaurants dedicated to Sanrio characters such as Hello Kitty, My Melody, Cinnamoroll, Gudetama, and Aggretsuko, in a manner akin to Disney theme parks. Sanrio Puroland attracts over 1.5 million visitors per year, and is ranked among the major theme parks in Japan, along with both Tokyo Disney Resort parks and Fuji-Q Highland. Sanrio also operates Harmonyland, an outdoor theme park in Oita Prefecture. History Origins During its conceptual phase, Sanrio Puroland was known by many names - first as Sanrio Communication World, as well as Sanrio Heart Park and Sanrio Piero Land. The original theme was going to be "communication", as opposed to Sanrio's existing works, including its characters. Sanrio Puroland was a "bald attempt" to challenge the Walt Disney company and its theme parks. To build ...
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Toei Animation
() is a Japanese animation studio primarily controlled by its namesake Toei Company. It has produced numerous series, including ''Sally the Witch,'' ''GeGeGe no Kitarō,'' ''Mazinger Z'', ''Galaxy Express 999'', ''Cutie Honey'', ''Dr. Slump'', ''Dragon Ball (TV series), Dragon Ball'', ''Saint Seiya'', ''Sailor Moon (TV series), Sailor Moon'', ''Slam Dunk (manga), Slam Dunk'', ''Digimon'', ''One Piece (TV series), One Piece'', ''Toriko'', ''World Trigger'', ''The Transformers (TV series), The Transformers'' (between 1984–1990, including several Japanese exclusive productions) and the ''Pretty Cure'' series. History The studio was founded by animators Kenzō Masaoka and Zenjirō Yamamoto in 1948 as . In 1956, Toei purchased the studio and it was renamed , doing business as Toei Animation Co., Ltd. outside Japan. In 1998, the Japanese name was renamed to Toei Animation. It has created a number of TV series and movies and adapted Japanese comics as animated series, many popular w ...
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