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A final battle is fought in Tokyo Olympiad exposing the experiment's secrets. Show Less Show More Rating: R (Graphic Violence|Brief Nudity) Genre: Sci-fi, Anime Original Language: Japanese Director: Katsuhiro Ohtomo Producer: Shunzo Kato, Ryôhei Suzuki Writer: Izou Hashimoto, Katsuhiro Ohtomo Release Date (Theaters): Jan 1, 1988 wide Rerelease Date (Theaters): Mar 30, 2001 Release Date (Streaming): Nov 12, 2013 Box Office (Gross USA): $390. 0K Runtime: 2h 4m Distributor: Streamline Pictures Production Co: Akira Committee Company, Ltd. Sound Mix: Surround, Dolby Stereo Aspect Ratio: Flat (1. 85:1) Cast & Crew Mitsuo Iwata Shôtarô Kaneda Voice Nozomu Sasaki Tetsuo Shima Voice Mami Koyama Kei Voice Tessho Genda Ryûsaku Voice Hiroshi Otake Nezu Voice Kôichi Kitamura Priestess Miyako, Council A Voice Yuriko Fuchizaki Kaori Voice Masaaki Ôkura Yamagata Voice Katsuhiro Ohtomo Director Izou Hashimoto Writer Katsuhiro Ohtomo Writer Shunzo Kato Producer Ryôhei Suzuki Producer Sawako Noma Executive Producer Katsuji Misawa Cinematographer Takeshi Seyama Film Editing Shoji Yamashiro Original Music Kuzuo Ebisawa Production Design Yuji Ikehata Production Design Koji Ono Production Design Toshiharu Mizutani Art Director Show all Cast & Crew News & Interviews for Akira 2022 Asian/Pacific American Heritage Month TV & Streaming Calendar 12 Unique Depictions of Tokyo in the Movies Ready Player One Easter Egg Watchlist: What To See Before Seeing Spielberg’s Latest View All Critic Reviews for Akira All Critics (54) | Top Critics (17) | Fresh (49) | Rotten (5) Full Review. Chris Stuckmann ChrisStuckmann. com Full Review.An honorific is generally used when referring to the person one is talking to (one's interlocutor), or when referring to an unrelated third party in speech. However, it is dropped by some superiors when referring to one's in-group or informal writing. It is never used to refer to oneself, except for dramatic effect or some exceptional cases. Dropping the honorific suffix when referring to one's interlocutor, which is known as to yobisute (呼び捨て), implies a high degree of intimacy and is generally reserved for one's spouse, younger family members, social inferiors (as in a teacher addressing students in traditional arts), close friends and confidants. Within sports teams or among classmates, where the interlocutors approximately are of the same age or seniority, it can be acceptable to use family names without honorifics. [1] Some people of the younger generation, roughly born since 1970, prefer to be referred to without an honorific.
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