great teacher onizuka synopsis
Protoculture Inc. pp. 64–5.
ISSN 0835-9563. ^ Togashi,
Yoshihiro (April 5, 2005). "2". An
Encounter in the Storm.
Hunter × Hunter. Vol. 1. Viz Media.
[27] Battle Tendency was published in four volumes in 2015 and 2016,[28] and Stardust Crusaders was published in ten volumes from 2016 to 2019. [29] Viz continues to publish the series in their own digital and hardcover editions that emulate the JoJonium edition; Diamond Is Unbreakable was published in nine volumes from 2019 to 2021,[30] while Golden Wind began in August 2021. [31] In January 2022, they began releasing Stone Ocean digitally. [32] Spin-offs See also: Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe and Crazy Diamond's Demonic
Heartbreak Araki has also authored several manga spin-offs of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. The first, "Episode 16: At a Confessional", was published as a one-shot in Weekly Shōnen Jump in July 1997. [33] It follows Rohan Kishibe from Diamond Is Unbreakable, and is the first entry in the Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe series. Dead Man's Questions[b] follows Yoshikage Kira from Diamond Is Unbreakable; it was published as three chapters in the magazine Allman in June and July 1999. [34] Both one-shots were
later published in Under Execution, Under Jailbreak,[c] a collection of short story manga by Araki published in 1999. [35] "Oingo Boingo Brothers Adventure",[d] a one-shot featuring the title characters from Stardust Crusaders, was released in October 2002;[36] it is drawn in the style of Boingo's Stand Tohth, a fortune-telling comic book. Between January 2008 and February 2018, six chapters of Thus Spoke Rohan Kishibe were published in various magazines. A tankōbon volume was published by Shueisha in November 2013, collecting the stories "At a Confessional", "Mutsu-kabe Hill", "Millionaire Village", "Poaching Seashore", and "Rohan Kishibe Goes to Gucci".
[25] The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD in Japan on May 27, 2016, which include a new OVA, titled Alice War! (アリス・ウォー!, Arisu Wō!), that is set after the events of the film and a new episode of Yukari Akiyama's Tank Course. [26] The film is followed by a six-part animated film series by Mizushima titled Girls und Panzer das Finale (ガールズ&パンツァー 最終章, Gāruzu ando Pantsā Sai Shūshō),[27] with the first film in the series being released in Japan on December 9, 2017. [28] As of March 26, 2021[update], a total of three films have been released. [29] A compilation film combining the twelve episodes of the series and This Is the Real Anzio Battle! OVA into a two-hour runtime, titled Girls und Panzer: 63rd National High School Senshadō Tournament Compilation (ガールズ&パンツァー 第63回戦車道全国高校生大会 総集編, Gāruzu ando Pantsā Dai 63 Kai Senshadō Zenkoku Kōkōsei Taikai Sōshūhen), was released in 110 theaters and several 4DX and MX4D screenings in Japan on September 29, 2018. [30] The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD in Japan on February 23, 2019. [31] Sentai
Filmworks announced the acquisition of Girls und Panzer in September 2012,[32] and released the 12 episodes of the series on Blu-ray and DVD in North America on December 3, 2013,[33] and the six episodes of its OVA on the same formats on February 25, 2014. [34] Crunchyroll streamed the series in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, Scandinavia, and South Africa from October 10, 2012,[35] to March 31, 2022. [36] A scene in the Japanese broadcast of the eighth episode, where the characters Katyusha and Nonna
sing the Soviet folk-based song "Katyusha", was removed by Crunchyroll, with Jeff Chuang of Japanator stating that "copyright reason is the most likely why the segment was cut". [37] Sentai Filmworks restored the missing scene in their home media release of the series, but the song was replaced with a different one, later revealed as the instrumental version of "Korobeiniki". [38] In October 2012, Anime Network licensed the series for a November release. [39] MVM Entertainment announced the acquisition of the series in October 2013.