cut and paste beginning sounds worksheets
Not the greatest art out there during the time, but given the situation that they had to work with, it's still pretty decent.
Music: The pop numbers that Mima's trio does (CHAM!) are pretty catchy. And the other music that's played only heightens the suspense. Pretty good, overall.
Seiyuu: As usual, no problems here. Mima's seiyuu is outstanding (she later went on to play Tomoyo in Cardcaptor Sakura, Ceres in Ceres: Celestial Legend, and Akane in My-HiME (Higurashi), My-Otome and My-Otome Zwei (Soir)).
Dub: N/A, didn't watch it.
Length: I honestly don't
know what more they could've done with this
film; the film wraps up at
close to an hour and a half. (Actually, knowing Kon, maybe I don't want to know. ) And it seems just right, because of the fast pace that it clips along at,
while still managing to make sure that everything that the audience needs to understand is included.
Overall: An amazing, if not perfectly animated, psychological thriller that will have you wondering just what's real here and clinging to your nearest cuddly.
^ 週間 コミックランキング (2023年11月27日~2023年12月03日) [Weekly
Comic Ranking (November 27, 2023−December 3, 2023)]. Oricon (in Japanese). Archived
from the original on December 17, 2023. Retrieved December 17, 2023. 60,635 ^ 週間 コミックランキング (2023年12月04日~2023年12月10日) [Weekly Comic Ranking (December 4, 2023−December 10, 2023)]. Oricon (in Japanese). Archived from the original on December 17, 2023. Retrieved December 17, 2023. 36,136 ^ "One Piece Manga Sales Report" "2008's Top-Selling Manga in Japan, by Series". Anime News Network. January 2, 2009.
Eventually Takumi pursues rally racing as career and becomes a world champion legendary rally race car driver. The story of Initial D continued in another
manga by Shuichi Shigeno, MF Ghost. Media[edit] The Initial D franchise logo Manga[edit] Main article: List of Initial D chapters Written and illustrated by Shuichi Shigeno, Initial D was serialized for eighteen years by Kodansha in the seinen manga magazine Weekly Young
Magazine from July 17, 1995,[4][5] to July 29, 2013. [6][7] Kodansha collected its 719 individual chapters in forty-eight tankōbon volumes, released from November 6, 1995,[8] to November 6, 2013. [9] In North America, the manga was licensed for English release by Tokyopop (along with the anime series) in 2001. [10][11] The company changed the names of the characters in the anime edition, and subsequently changed them in the manga to match.