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ASCII Media Works. February 10, 2015. Archived from the original on February 12, 2015. Retrieved February 11, 2015. ^ "Dengeki Bunko: Fighting Climax Game Pits SAO, Shana Casts Against Each Other". Anime
News Network. Retrieved October 20, 2020. ^ "神達に拾われた男 1". Square
Enix (in Japanese). Square Enix. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
[43] It was directed first by Kōzō Morishita (episodes 1–73) and then by Kazuhito Kikuchi (episodes 74–114). The character designers and aestheticists were Shingo Araki and Michi Himeno, and Seiji Yokoyama composed the soundtracks. Following Kurumada's storylines from the manga closely, the chief scriptwriters were Takao Koyama (1–73) and Yoshiyuki Suga (74–114). The series has three main parts: Sanctuary (episodes 1–73), Asgard, an anime original story arc (episodes 74–99), and Poseidon (episodes 100–114). The series was cancelled and left unfinished in 1989, leaving one arc of the manga not animated, until finally being adapted into a series of OVAs in 2002. [44] The series one-hundred fourteen episodes was re-released in Japan on two Blu-ray box sets on June 20 and September 24, 2014. [45] The series was re-broadcast on TV Asahi in 2015. [46] After Japan, Saint Seiya was first broadcast in France in 1988 on TF1's Club Dorothée [fr],
under the title Les Chevaliers du Zodiaque (which inspired the title in other language versions),[5][47] and the series became quickly popular. [48][5][49] The series was broadcast throughout Asia, Europe and Latin America, where it was a success as well. [50][51][52] In North America, the series was first licensed by DIC Entertainment, under the title Knights of the Zodiac, in 2003. [53][54] The DIC version was edited for broadcast, cutting overly violent scenes, coloring the red blood to blue, adding in previously non-existent digital scene transitions, rewriting the scripts, renaming
several characters and replacing the music themes and the original soundtrack.
It was produced by Bug Films and directed by Kazuki Kawagoe, with assistant direction by Hanako Ueda, scripts supervised by Hiroshi Seko, character designs by Kii Tanaka, zombie designs by Junpei Fukuchi, and music composed by Makoto Miyazaki. [3] The series aired from July 9 to December 26, 2023, on the Nichi-5 [ja] programming block on all JNN stations in Japan, including MBS and TBS. [50][51] The opening theme is "Song of the Dead" (ソングオブザデッド, Songu obu za Deddo) by Kana-Boon, while the ending theme is "Happiness of the Dead" (ハピネス オブ ザ デッド, Hapinesu obu za Deddo) by Shiyui [ja]. [52] Hulu, Netflix, and Crunchyroll streamed the series in the
United States simultaneously with its Japanese release. [3][52][53] Muse Communication licensed the series in Asia-Pacific. [54] In March 2024, it was announced that the English dub would begin airing in the United States on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block on March 31, 2024. [55] Episodes[edit] No. Title [56]Directed by [a]Storyboarded by [a]Original air date [56]English air date [57]1"Akira of the Dead"
Transliteration: "Akira obu za Deddo" (Japanese: アキラ オブ ザ デッド)Kazuki KawagoeKazuki KawagoeJuly 9, 2023 (2023-07-09)March 31, 2024 Akira Tendo is a young office worker who hates his job. Three years ago, an excited Akira came to Tokyo to work after graduation but increasingly becomes disillusioned after learning his company ruthlessly exploits their employees. Despite being depressed, he continues to stay due to his coworker, Saori Ohtori, the only one who treats him with kindness but is unable to confess his feelings since Ohtori is
also the CEO's mistress. When a zombie outbreak hits Tokyo, rather than despair, Akira greets it with happiness since he is finally free.