dragon ball super episode liste
1Sources 10External links Toggle the table of contents Akira (1988 film) 37 languages العربيةAvañe'ẽБългарскиCatalàDeutschΕλληνικάEspañolEsperantoEuskaraفارسیFiji HindiFrançaisGalego한국어HrvatskiBahasa IndonesiaItalianoעבריתКыргызчаLatviešuമലയാളംNederlands日本語Norsk bokmålPortuguêsRomânăРусскийSlovenčinaСрпски / srpskiSrpskohrvatski / српскохрватскиSuomiSvenskaไทยTürkçeУкраїнськаTiếng Việt中文 Edit links ArticleTalk English ReadEditView
history Tools Tools move to sidebar hide Actions ReadEditView history General What links hereRelated changesUpload fileSpecial pagesPermanent linkPage
informationCite this pageGet shortened URLDownload QR codeWikidata item Print/export Download as PDFPrintable version In other projects Wikimedia CommonsWikiquote From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 1988 animated film directed by Katsuhiro Otomo "Akira (anime)" redirects here. For the franchise, see Akira (franchise). For the original 1982 manga, see Akira (manga). AkiraTheatrical release posterJapanese nameKanjiアキラ Directed byKatsuhiro OtomoScreenplay by Katsuhiro Otomo Izo Hashimoto Based onAkira
by Katsuhiro OtomoProduced by Ryōhei Suzuki Shunzō Katō Starring Mitsuo
Iwata Nozomu Sasaki Mami Koyama Taro Ishida Tesshō Genda Mizuho Suzuki Tatsuhiko Nakamura Fukue Itō Kazuhiro Shindō CinematographyKatsuji MisawaEdited byTakeshi SeyamaMusic byShōji YamashiroProduction
companyTokyo Movie Shinsha Co. LtdDistributed byTohoRelease date July 16, 1988 (1988-07-16) Running time124 minutesCountryJapanLanguageJapaneseBudget¥700 million / $5. 7 million[1][2]Box office$49 million[3] Akira (Japanese: アキラ) is a 1988 Japanese animated cyberpunk action film[4] directed by Katsuhiro Otomo, produced by Ryōhei Suzuki and Shunzō Katō, and written by Otomo and Izo Hashimoto, based on Otomo's 1982 manga of the same name. Set in a dystopian 2019, it tells the story of Shōtarō Kaneda, the leader of a biker gang whose childhood friend, Tetsuo Shima, acquires incredible telekinetic abilities after a motorcycle accident, eventually threatening an entire military complex amid chaos and rebellion in the sprawling futuristic metropolis of Neo-Tokyo. While most of the character designs and settings were adapted from the manga, the plot differs considerably and does not include much of the last half of the manga, which continued publication for two years after the film's release. The soundtrack, which draws heavily from traditional Indonesian gamelan as well as Japanese noh music, was composed by Shōji Yamashiro and performed by Geinoh Yamashirogumi. Akira was released in Japan on July 16, 1988, by Toho; it was released the following year in the United States by Streamline Pictures. It garnered an international cult following after various theatrical and VHS releases, eventually earning over $80 million worldwide in home video sales.
1Anime 3. 4. 2Live-action 3. 5Video
games 3. 5. 1Console games 3. 5.
2Mobile games 3. 5. 3Crossovers 3. 6Stage plays 3.
Retrieved March 29, 2021. ^ ブルーロック(2) (in Japanese). Kodansha. Retrieved January 27, 2021. ^ "Blue Lock,
Volume 2". Kodansha USA.