Anime is the everyday Japanese word for cartoons (even foreign ones). Outside Japan, the term specifically to mean animated films from Japan, especially that which is drawn in a simplified style common in manga (new anime trailers). It also occurs that cartoon is used as a collective name for cartoons in manga style, whether they come from Japan or other (Asian) countries.
This is often highly non-realistic cartoon based on the science fiction or fantasy has become widespread, partly because the animation technique is suitable for such film and TV productions. Special Effects blends easily into environment in a more natural way. Cartoon got his international breakthrough thanks largely to 1988 Akira. The film was directed by Katsuhiro Otomo and portrays a dystopian future society in a style that characterizes cyberpunk. When Otomo after nine years of work in 2004 released his next creations, Steamboy, cyberpunk had been exchanged for steampunk in a fictional Victorian England.
In same furrow as Akira is however Mamoru Oshiis Kokaku kidotai (roughly "Mobile Armored Riot Police"; English title Ghost in Shell) of 1995, which was followed in 2004 by the Innocence. 2002 was also a TV series (titlad Ghost in Shell: Stand Alone Complex) of concept, but this is not linked to any other Oshii-work but follows his own line. This series was followed by a second season (Ghost in Shell: SAC 2nd GIG) and then a movie (Ghost in Shell: SAC Solid State Society) which had its premiere on Japanese television in 2006. Both the series and the film written and directed by Kenji Kamiyama.
In science fiction genre deserves TV series Cowboy Bebop 1998 by Shin'ichiro Watanabe mention. Samurai Champloo, a kind of sequel to Cowboy Bebop (though based in Edo-period Japan with a soundtrack of hip-hop rather than jazz) began airing in 2004. Space Opera series Ginga Densetsu eiyu (Legend of Galactic Heroes, 1982-2000), based on a book series by Yoshiki Tanaka, deserves a mention as the longest OVA series ever. It comprises a total of 162 episodes and three feature films. In addition, the record of most participating voice actor in an cartoon series.
Cartoon produced and published a number of ways in Japan. The majority ofll cartoon consists of television shows that at no time broadcast in Japanese TV. These are usually 13, 26, 52 or 104 sections long, because the series broadcast with an episode per week for shorter or longer cycles.
Comics (usually shorter and higher budget per episode) that goes straight to video and DVD (and occasionally appears on special cinemas) called OVA (Original Video Animation) or OAV (Original Animated Video). There is no obvious way for cartoon; an OVA become a TV series or feature film, but in same way a TV series followed up by an OVA.
Various forms of "mecha" (the term is more common outside than in Japan) can be said to constitute an entirely separate genre in cartoon, the Gundam and Macross as two major titles. Both have, to date, each with a half-dozen comics in their luggage.
Lately, the genre gained a wider audience. Not only young women look at it here, but also other groups outside the genre's boundaries have flocked in here. A shojo cartoon that has aired, the series Sailor Moon. It is a series primarily for children but has also had older viewers, and girls 8-18 years are said to have been the average viewers.
This is often highly non-realistic cartoon based on the science fiction or fantasy has become widespread, partly because the animation technique is suitable for such film and TV productions. Special Effects blends easily into environment in a more natural way. Cartoon got his international breakthrough thanks largely to 1988 Akira. The film was directed by Katsuhiro Otomo and portrays a dystopian future society in a style that characterizes cyberpunk. When Otomo after nine years of work in 2004 released his next creations, Steamboy, cyberpunk had been exchanged for steampunk in a fictional Victorian England.
In same furrow as Akira is however Mamoru Oshiis Kokaku kidotai (roughly "Mobile Armored Riot Police"; English title Ghost in Shell) of 1995, which was followed in 2004 by the Innocence. 2002 was also a TV series (titlad Ghost in Shell: Stand Alone Complex) of concept, but this is not linked to any other Oshii-work but follows his own line. This series was followed by a second season (Ghost in Shell: SAC 2nd GIG) and then a movie (Ghost in Shell: SAC Solid State Society) which had its premiere on Japanese television in 2006. Both the series and the film written and directed by Kenji Kamiyama.
In science fiction genre deserves TV series Cowboy Bebop 1998 by Shin'ichiro Watanabe mention. Samurai Champloo, a kind of sequel to Cowboy Bebop (though based in Edo-period Japan with a soundtrack of hip-hop rather than jazz) began airing in 2004. Space Opera series Ginga Densetsu eiyu (Legend of Galactic Heroes, 1982-2000), based on a book series by Yoshiki Tanaka, deserves a mention as the longest OVA series ever. It comprises a total of 162 episodes and three feature films. In addition, the record of most participating voice actor in an cartoon series.
Cartoon produced and published a number of ways in Japan. The majority ofll cartoon consists of television shows that at no time broadcast in Japanese TV. These are usually 13, 26, 52 or 104 sections long, because the series broadcast with an episode per week for shorter or longer cycles.
Comics (usually shorter and higher budget per episode) that goes straight to video and DVD (and occasionally appears on special cinemas) called OVA (Original Video Animation) or OAV (Original Animated Video). There is no obvious way for cartoon; an OVA become a TV series or feature film, but in same way a TV series followed up by an OVA.
Various forms of "mecha" (the term is more common outside than in Japan) can be said to constitute an entirely separate genre in cartoon, the Gundam and Macross as two major titles. Both have, to date, each with a half-dozen comics in their luggage.
Lately, the genre gained a wider audience. Not only young women look at it here, but also other groups outside the genre's boundaries have flocked in here. A shojo cartoon that has aired, the series Sailor Moon. It is a series primarily for children but has also had older viewers, and girls 8-18 years are said to have been the average viewers.
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