nozomanu fushi no boukensha
2Critical reception 6Explanatory notes 7References 8External links Toggle the table of contents Sonny Boy (TV series) 9 languages العربيةEspañolFrançais한국어日本語РусскийไทยTiếng Việt中文 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView history Tools Tools
move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Japanese anime series Sonny BoyKey visual of Sonny BoyGenreScience fiction, survival[1]Created byShingo Natsume Anime television seriesDirected byShingo NatsumeProduced byMotoki MukaichiIsao
IshikawaJitsurou KikuchiKensaku WadaYuuko MatsuiAyuri TaguchiWritten byShingo NatsumeMusic byVarious[a]StudioMadhouseLicensed byCrunchyroll SA/SEA: MedialinkOriginal networkTokyo MX, KBS, SUN, BS Asahi, RABOriginal run July 16, 2021 – October 1, 2021Episodes12 Anime and manga portal Sonny Boy is an original Japanese anime television series animated by Madhouse and written and directed by Shingo Natsume. The series aired from July to October 2021. Sonny Boy utilizes non-traditional storytelling, occasionally skipping over major events and instead focusing on various characters' reactions to those events. While fantasy elements are present, the series primarily uses its setting to explore psychological themes such as identity, social expectation, freedom, and loneliness. [2] Plot[edit] Midway through a seemingly endless day of summer vacation, third-year middle school student Nagara and his class, along with transfer student Nozomi and the aloof and mysterious Mizuho, are suddenly transported to an alternate dimension. The group calls the new dimension "This World", and finds it has its own set of rules and physics. Over time, while trying to get back home, they realize that they have individual supernatural abilities, but also find it difficult to navigate their own interpersonal relationships. The class later splits into two groups due to internal conflicts. As both the groups continue journeying to find their way back home, they discover many other students who have spent thousands of years in other "This Worlds". Characters[edit] Nagara (長良) Voiced by: Aoi Ichikawa[3] (Japanese); Derick Snow[4] (English) Nozomi (希) Voiced by: Saori Ōnishi[3] (Japanese); Luci Christian[4] (English) Mizuho (瑞穂) Voiced by: Aoi Yūki[3] (Japanese); Tia Ballard[4] (English) Asakaze (朝風) Voiced by: Chiaki Kobayashi[3] (Japanese); Daman Mills[4] (English) Rajdhani (ラジダニ, Rajidani) Voiced by: Hiroki Gotō[5] (Japanese); Siddhartha Minhas[4] (English) Hoshi (明星) Voiced by: Ami Naitō[5] (Japanese); Ry McKeand[4] (English) Pony (ポニー, Ponī) Voiced by: Hana Sato[5] (Japanese); Lauren Landa[4] (English) Cap (キャップ, Kyappu) Voiced by: Yōji Ueda[5] (Japanese); Patrick Seitz[4] (English) Hayato (はやと) Voiced by: Shōta Yamamoto[5] (Japanese); David Matranga[4] (English) Shanghai (上海, Shanhai) Voiced by: Kana Ogino[5] Production and release[edit] The anime television series was announced on April 28, 2021. The series was animated by Madhouse and written and directed by Shingo Natsume, with original character designs provided by Hisashi Eguchi and Norifumi Kugai adapting the designs for animation.
They even devote an episode to both Samurai Champloo's "Baseball Blues" and Shaolin Soccer ("The Red Ball") Each season of Captain N: The Game Master was outsourced to a different studio. The second went to Japan. Said season did stand out, though, with better drawn episodes like The Legend of
Zelda (1989) crossover. The DiC series Care Bears has been described as animesque, and in fact it really looks like some of the children and adults are drawn in this style. (There is even an episode where a character is shown wearing a Sailor Fuku. ) This was one of the examples of a co-production with Japanese animators, and there were even parts where they showed newspapers with scribbles that seem to indicate it being written like Japanese newspapers.
6 million worldwide. The film won the Japanese Movie Critics Awards for Best Animated Feature Film. While nominated for the Japan Academy Film Prize for Excellent Animation of the Year, as well the Mainichi Film Award for Best Animation Film, it lost to In This Corner of the World and Your Name, respectively. Plot[edit] An elementary
school student named
Shōya Ishida and his friends bully Shōko Nishimiya, a transfer student who was born deaf. When word of the bullying reaches the principal, Shōya is framed as the sole perpetrator by his friends. Shōya blames Shōko when she tries to help him, and they get into a physical altercation.