toon filmweb
^ "New
Zealand Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on
December 25, 2016. Retrieved December 20, 2016. ^ "Last chance to see Makoto Shinkai's Your
Name in cinemas!". Madman Entertainment. Archived from the original on December 25, 2008. Retrieved March 22, 2009. ^ "One Piece tom 01" [One Piece volume 01] (in Polish). Mangarden. Archived from the original on June 17, 2018.
Vivy’s sick-ass fight scenes feature some of the smoothest movie-quality sakuga animation I’ve seen in an anime series, which shouldn’t come as any surprise since Wit Studio is the same production company behind the first
three seasons of Attack on Titan. AdvertisementPrevious SlideNext Slide6 / 14List slidesTo Your EternityList slidesTo Your Eternity AdvertisementNot many anime pass the three-episode test run from the jump, but To Your Eternity had me choking back tears from the first episode. To Your Eternity is the anime adaptation of Yoshitoki Ōima’s The Immortal. The series follows an immortal creature called Fushi that starts its long existence as a rock
before taking the forms of a wolf and human as it observes humanity. Ōima-san also happens to be the mangaka behind A Silent Voice, and its opening theme “Pink Blood” is sung by none other than Hikaru Utada, so my being moved to tears doesn’t come as a surprise. The show pulls no emotional punches.
The entry ceremony is soon held after the short spring vacation. The new first year students are finally arriving, as if to greet the coming of April. Standing neck to neck with the second years, the new first years have unique personalities full of ups and down.
What's more— There is an enforcer from the White Room among them.
Special exams against the other second years, the stepping stones to ascend to class A, dodging the tenacious Tsukishiro and the enforcer's attacks while counterattacking, and their own human relationships. The first days of the second year of the Advanced Nurturing High School is finally about to begin! And they are not by any means ordinary— Releases The
series has
been published under Media Factory's MF Bunko J imprint since 2015; as of January 2024, 27 volumes (including 5 short story collections) have been released.