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ISBN 978-0-7864-3234-9. Cavallaro, Dani (2009). The art of Studio Gainax: experimentation, style and innovation at the leading edge of anime. McFarland & Co. ISBN 978-0-7864-3376-6. Clements, Jonathan; McCarthy, Helen (2006). The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917. Berkeley, Calif: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 978-1-933330-10-5. Craig, Timothy J. (2000).

67"I'm Home"
Transliteration: "Tadaima" (Japanese: ただいま)Shigetaka IkedaMasahiro HayashiAugust 10, 2005 (2005-08-10)June 28, 2010 Nina confronts Johan who presents her with a story of the brainwashing which happened at the Red Rose Mansion and the occasion when over 40 people were poisoned except Franz Bonaparta who survived. Suddenly, Nina realizes that she was the one who witnessed the deaths, not Johan, and it was she who ran home to find Johan dressed as her. The shock of this revelation nearly drives her take her own life, but she is saved by Tenma. She realizes that Johan took her experiences and made them his own. Capek then arrives and tells Tenma that he is going after Franz Bonaparta, however Capek is gunned down shortly afterwards by two members of his organization for the paranoid killing of his own guard earlier. Later, Johan visits one of his hired hitmen and shoots him, before leaving stating that the true end is where he must be.

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^ "The Best Anime of the Decade (2010 - 2019)". IGN. January 1, 2020. Archived from the original on January 1, 2020. Retrieved January 4, 2020. Bibliography[edit] Thompson, Jason (2007). Manga: The Complete Guide. New York: Ballantine Books & Del Rey Books. ISBN 978-0-345-48590-8. External links[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hunter × Hunter. Official Hunter × Hunter manga site (in Japanese) Official Viz Media Hunter × Hunter site Official English manga website Official Nippon Television Hunter × Hunter (2011) anime site (in Japanese) Official VAP Hunter x Hunter (2011) anime site (in Japanese) Hunter x Hunter Story Board Exhibit at the Shinjō Mogami Manga Museum Event Report Hunter × Hunter (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia vteHunter × Hunter by Yoshihiro TogashiMedia Chapters Characters Gon Freecss Kurapika Nippon Animation series (1999) Episodes OVAs Madhouse series (2011) Episodes Films Phantom Rouge The Last Mission Related Jump Super Stars Jump Ultimate Stars J-Stars Victory VS Jump Force Links to related articles vteSeries currently running in Weekly Shōnen Jump One Piece Hunter × Hunter My Hero Academia Jujutsu Kaisen Mission: Yozakura Family Undead Unluck Me & Roboco Sakamoto Days The Elusive Samurai Witch Watch Blue Box Akane-banashi RuriDragon Kill Blue Nue's Exorcist Kagurabachi Website: www. Retrieved July 31, 2013. ^ Gore, Sydney (July 31, 2013). "JoJo Sues Record Label After Years of Disputes". Billboard. Retrieved July 31, 2013. ^ "JoJo Finally Free from Blackground Records, Signs with Atlantic".
[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.