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It starred Taizō Sayama as Tada and the Takarazuka Revue's Haruka Yamashiro as Frol. [2] Anime film[edit] A 91-minute anime film adaptation of the manga was released in Japan on November 1, 1986. [25][26] It was licensed by Central Park Media in North America and released on VHS with English subtitles in the early 1990s. [27] It was re-released on VHS with a newly produced English dub in 1996 and on DVD with dual language audio tracks in 2004. [28] Central Park Media discontinued their home video release in 2004. [29] The New York company MYC & Associates liquidated the anime license in 2009. [30] Cast[edit] Tadatos Lane (Tada): Akira Kamiya (Japanese), Curtis Jones (English) Frolbericheri Frol (Frol): Michiko Kawai (Japanese), Wendee Lee (English) King Mayan Baceska (His Majesty): Hideyuki Tanaka (Japanese), Steven Blum (English) Doricas Soldam IV (Fourth): Toshio Furukawa (Japanese), David Hayter (English) Ganigus Gagtos (Ganga): Tesshō Genda (Japanese), Dean Elliot (English) Amazon Carnias (Amazon): Hirotaka Suzuoki (Japanese), Steven Blum (English) Vidminer Knume (Knu): Norio Wakamoto (Japanese), Joe Romersa (English) Colonel Glenn Groff (Mule): Michihiro Ikemizu (Japanese), Henry Malloy (English) Dolph Tasta (Red nose): Kōzō Shioya (Japanese), Steven Blum (English)
Toto Ni (Toto): Tarako (Japanese), Dorothy Elias-Fahn (English) Chaco Kacka (Chaco): Tsutomu Kashiwakura (Japanese), Dean Allen (English) Staff[edit] Director: Satoshi Dezaki, Tsuneo Tominaga [ja] Executive Producer: Hidenori Taga [ja] Original Story: Moto Hagio Planning: Shigekazu Ochiai [ja] Screenplay: Toshiaki Imaizumi, Katsumi Koide Animation Director: Keizo Shimizu Character Design: Akio Sugino, Keizo Shimizu Effects Director: Kenichi Maejima Mechanical Design: Yōichi Yajima Art Director: Junichi Higashi [ja] Cinematography: Nobuo Koyama
Audio Director: Shigeharu Shiba Music Director: Zen Oikawa Music: Yasuhiko Fukuda Theme Song: "Boku no Honesty", Shinichirō Kawakami [ja] Producer: Minoru Kotoku Production: Magic Bus, Kitty Films Stage plays[edit] They Were Eleven has been adapted into several stage plays in Japan. The first, performed by the all-male acting troupe Axel [ja], ran from June to July 2004;[31] the second, performed by Axel, ran from December
2008 to January 2009;[32] the third, performed by the all-male acting troupe Studio Life [ja], ran from February to March 2011;[33][34] the fourth, performed by Studio Life, ran throughout January 2013;[1][35] and the fifth, performed by Studio Life, ran from May to June 2019. [36][37] The sequel manga series has also been adapted into two stage plays in Japan: one performed by Studio Life, which ran from February to April 2013,[1][35] and another performed by the female idol group Morning Musume '16, which ran throughout June 2016. [18][38][39] Audio drama[edit] An audio drama adaptation of the manga was produced by the drama CD label E-Star and released in Japan on September 25, 2013. It starred Atsushi Abe as Tada, Kazutomi Yamamoto as Frol, Kōsuke Toriumi as King Mayan Baceska, and Daisuke Kishio as Doricas Soldam IV.
Both novels ranked third and fourth respectively in Oricon's overall bunko ranking chart. [191] Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba overall novelization was the tenth best-selling light novel in 2019,
with 407,640 copies sold. [192] In February 2020, after a planned reprint
collectively 1. 16 million copies were in circulation, making the books the fastest franchise novel in Shueisha's "Jump J-Books" label to reach 1 million copies in circulation. [193] The two light novels were the best-selling novels of the first half of 2020, collectively selling a total of 1,199,863 copies. [194][195] The Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba overall novelization was the best-selling light novel of 2020, with 2,752,593 copies sold.
Yen Press. Archived from the original on
December 5, 2022. Retrieved December 10, 2020. ^ オーバーロード13 聖王国の聖騎士 下 [Overlord 13: The
Paladin of the Holy Kingdom (Part 2)] (in Japanese). ASIN 404734947X. ^ "Overlord, Vol. 8 (light novel)". Yen Press. Archived from the original on December 5, 2022. Retrieved December 10, 2020. ^ オーバーロード9 破軍の魔法詠唱者 [Overlord 9: The Magic Caster of Destroy] (in Japanese).