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[12] During the development of the first anime, Arakawa allowed the anime staff to work
independently from her and requested a different ending from that of the manga. She said that she would not like to repeat the same ending in both media, and wanted to make the manga longer so she could develop the characters. When watching the ending of the anime, she was amazed about how different the homunculi creatures were from the manga and enjoyed how the staff speculated about the origins of the villains. [6] Because Arakawa helped the Bones staff in the making of the series, she was kept from focusing on the manga's cover illustrations and had little time to make them. [14] Themes and analysis[edit] The series explores social problems, including discrimination, scientific advancement, political greed, brotherhood, family, and war. [15] Scar's backstory and his hatred of the state military references the Ainu people, who had their land taken by other people. [6] This includes the consequences of guerrilla warfare and the number of violent soldiers a military can have. [16] Some of the people who took the Ainus' land were originally Ainu; this irony is referenced in Scar's use of alchemy to kill alchemists even though it was forbidden in his own religion. [6] The Elrics being orphans and adopted by Pinako Rockbell reflects Arakawa's beliefs about the ways society should treat orphans. The characters' dedication to their occupations reference the need to work for food. [17] The series
also explores the concept of equivalent exchange; to obtain something new, one must pay with something of equal value.
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[71][72] A Blu-ray edition of Akira was subsequently released in Australia by Madman Entertainment under exclusive license from
Manga and Kodansha. [73] Madman has recently released a DVD/Blu-ray combo which license is separate from the standalone Blu-ray release because instead of the DVD version being the Manga Video UK version, it uses Madman/Manga's 2001 Special Edition DVD release which is licensed from Manga UK. The Blu-ray release is the first use the format's highest audio sampling rate (Dolby
TrueHD 5. 1 at 192 kHz for the Japanese audio track) and first to use the hypersonic effect (only available on the Japanese track and on high-end audio systems). Beyond Japanese with English subtitles, the Blu-ray also features the 2001 Pioneer/Animaze English dub (TrueHD 5. 1 at 48 kHz). The DVD version was again released in 2012 by Bandai Entertainment. The film was licensed again by Funimation following Bandai Entertainment's closure shortly after its DVD release. [74] The Funimation release includes both English dubs, Streamline in stereo and Pioneer in 5. 1 surround (both TrueHD at 96 kHz). [75] Funimation released a 25th anniversary Blu-ray/DVD combo and separate DVD release on November 12, 2013, which features the TrueHD Japanese audio and both English dubs (TrueHD at 96 kHz on Blu-ray).