Zankyou no Terror
Alternate Titles: Terror in Resonance
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Alternate Titles: Terror in Resonance
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Mitsugi sits down with Jason Moody, creator of the Iota Soul project. This project aims to support worldwide orphans through the creation of an interactive manga. Check it out!
The Anime Addicts attempt to purge Chiaki’s soul by demonstrating the dangers of “cake eating”. We also dive into a mailbag “catchup”, tackling about 40% of our overflowing mailbag. We continue our impressions with Mushishi Zoku Shou, No Game No Life, Akuma no Riddle, and Abarenbou Rekishi!
Impressions: Mushishi Zoku Shou, Akuma no Riddle, No Game No Life, Abarenbou Rekishi!
Alternate Titles:
Kyosogiga
Kyousogiga
Kyosougiga
Kyousou Giga
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We do another Mystery Science-esque viewing of M.D. Geist 2 – Death Force on the weekly show. Click play at the same time and watch along to follow the insanity that ensues from this madness. Then we do a complete 180 and review the slice of life anime Gingitsune.
Reviews: Gingitsune
Do you have a really good idea for an anime? Do you not get how the studios in Japan seem to come up with the same old thing year after year? Us too! We take a page out of reality TV from the show Shark Tank as the Addicts pitch anime to each other and pass or fail.
Mitsugi –
1) Title: Dainihon no tami ni wareware yarou! (For the sake of the Great Japan, let’s DO IT!)
Genre: Comedy
Episode Number: 12
Description: A person who tries to raise Japan’s birthrate by getting people to ****. Or explore why the problem exists in the first place. Where does the cold japanese attitude that relationships and sex are just “troublesome” stem from?
2) Title: NAN DE?! okachan-san sugu Umarenaide kure! (Oka-uma) (WHY?! Little Baby please don’t be born so soon!)
Genre: Comedy
Episode number: 12
Description: An anime about a man with a pregnant wife. Shows the process of child raising and getting ready for a kid. Also, doting on the wife (eg get her strange foods at 3am, etc…)
3) Title: Moe-chan mou ninki janai! Kutabare! (Moe is no longer popular, so DIE!)
Genre: Action
Episode Number: 12
Description: Anime that is about moe no longer being popular and the tv station makes moe girls brutally kill each other to fight over the last time slot devoted to moe shows.
Kimiko –
1) Title: A Bottle of Wine for Your Trouble
Genre: Slice of Life/Drama
Episode Number: 12
Description: About a girl who gets sent to live with her distant aunt in Italy after her parents die in a car crash. The aunt lives and works on a vineyard. Main themes: Life in Italy, the inner workings of a vineyard/making wine, struggling with the death of a loved one.
2)Title: If You Could Go Back
Genre: Fantasy/Comedy/Action
Episode Number: 26
Description: Time travel anime! Two groups of time travelers: The Winders (who are born with the ability and use it to alter events in the past) and The Agents (who have devices to help them travel and whose job it is to stop the Winders by any means necessary). The main theme: Agents are trying to prevent major events from being changed to keep the betterment of mankind intact. Winders are trying to change it for the same reason. A perfect opportunity to look at the concept of antagonists based on perspective and opinion.
3)Title: Shooting With Your Eyes Closed
Genre: Drama/Romance/Sci-Fi
Episode Number: 12
Description: An anime that focuses on two major themes not often hit on well or at all: gay romance (as exactly that, just romance and realism, not yaoi or shonanai), and a realistic interpretation of the emotional and physical aspects of war despite the science fiction concept.
Kram –
1)Title: Kaze no Uta wo Kike (Hear the Wind Sing)
Genre: Drama
Episode Number: 3
Description: An OVA based on Haruki Murakami’s first novel about an unnamed protagonist in a post-collegiate slump. Examines the contrast between transient relationships and real friendship through a series of loosely-related vignettes.
2) Title: Ore wa Sonna ni Kowai Gaijin ja Nai (I am not that scary of a foreigner…)
Genre: Comedy/Slice-of-life
Episode Number: 12
Description: The life and times of an English-speaking foreigner trying to make his way through daily life in the Land of the Rising Sun. Trouble is, he’s kind of big and scary (but not really)!
3) Title: Chi to Hagane (Blood and Steel)
Genre: Science Fiction/Drama
Episode Number: 12
Description: The story of a group of four childhood friends who spent their formative years watching mecha shows and building plastic models. They have now graduated from the four top universities for robotics and engineering in the world, and are reuniting in Japan to fulfill a lifelong dream and a promise to each other: to build Japan’s first fully-operational mecha for its self-defense force.
Chiaki –
1) Title: Ouza no Geemu
Genre: Fantasy, Drama, Romance
Episode Number: 12 (with potential extension)
Description: Riding on the popularity of the Game of Throne’s franchise this anime adaptation would bring the western fantasy novels to Japan in a way that can resonate with the market and successfully tell the story without the need of a high live-action budget. The anime would focus on the perspective of just one character for the first twelve episodes, namely Ned Stark, and follow up until (spoiler alert) death. Following seasons could follow other characters, or split half and half, such as Danerys or Rob Stark and his campaign.
2) Title: Kekkon ni Nayami ga Aru (The problem with marriage is…)
Genre: Romance, Comedy, Slice of Life
Episode Number: 12
Description: Mikoto is a successful business woman with everything put together. She lives the perfect model life of a Japanese woman. She can cook, she cleans, she works full time and still has the opportunity to volunteer at all community events. Her only problem is: she has yet to find a husband. It isn’t that she isn’t willing to look, and she’s tried. But marriage comes with its own expectations and Mikoto isn’t sure if she wants to meet them.
3) Title: Meiji
Title: Meiji
Genre: Historical, Drama
Episode Number: 12
Description: Follow the young Emperor Meiji, Mutsuhito, as he rises to power at the end of the Tokugawa shogunate. It is a time of change and industrialization in Japan, people are forced to adapt but change is scary and not all are pleased. See it through a lens of his personal life as he navigates through becoming emperor, his classes and education, mistakes, and management of business and pleasure.
Impressions: Infinite Stratos, Valverave 2, Magi 2, Ace of Diamond, Kyousougiga
The AAAPodcast has a discussion on the American Anime Industry. We pull up numbers, market data and trends to discuss where the industry is at and where it is headed in the future. Is it a happy future? Or do we see grim things on the horizon?
Reported by the Market Research Firm Oricon on Japanese Book Sales –
Sales of Compiled book volumes (Tankobon) of manga has dipped 1.5% to 267.5 billion yen in 2012 compared to 2011
This is the first recorded sales drop since Oricon began taking annual statistics on book sales in 2009
Shueisha was the publisher with the highest market share with 14.5% of overall books sold
Market share dipped by 0.2 points compared to 2011
Kodansha increased its market share by 0.1 points to 10.8%
Shogakukan also increased 0.5 points with 7.9%
SOURCE:
Final 2012 TV Anime Top Sellers Rankings, Reported by Oricon –
60,580 – Nisemonogatari
45,804 – Fate/Zero 2
35,729 – SwordArtOnline
35056 – Girls Und Panzer
24433 – Kuroko no Basuke
SOURCE: http://www.reddit.com/r/anime/comments/1ni07n/2012_tv_anime_sales_rankings_update_jojo_18k/
Jetro’s Report on the North American Anime Market –
US Dollars Sold according to Nielen Videoscan, Box Office Mojo, and Wowmax Media’s estimates: DVD SALES, VHS SALES, MOVIE RECEIPTS AND OTHER MEDIA
2002: 428 million USD
2003: 390 million USD
2004: 367 million USD
2005: 376 million USD
2006: 375 million USD
2007: 325 million USD
2008: 312 million USD
2009: 321 million USD RECESSION (US household income at 67,976)
2010: 200 million USD (decline of 34.6%) (USHI at 67,392 decline of .86%)
2011: 196 million USD (decline of 2%) (USHI at 67,677 growth of .42%)
2012: 217 million USD (growth of .5%)
NOTE: These numbers do not include merchandise
Leading the box office receipts was Arrietty (distributed by Disney) with 19.29 million USD.
However, removing the Ghibli film box office receipts does not affect the 2012 numbers in a large way.
Market Breakdown by organization:
43.8%: Funimation
22.5%: Disney
12.6%: VIZ Media
06.3%: Section 23
04.6%: Bandai Entertainment (stopped producing videos in 2012)
02.5%: Sony
01.5%: Media Blasters
00.9%: Manga Entertainment
05.4%: Other companies
Home Video Market: Market for DVD AND VHS VIDEOS
2009: 306 million USD (US household income at 67,976)
2010: 200 million USD (decline of 34.6%) (USHI at 67,392 decline of .86%)
2011: 196 million USD (decline of 2%) (USHI at 67,677 growth of .42%)
2012: 197 million USD (growth of .5%
The top 20 anime titles in North America for 2012 were mostly Ghibli, Pokemon, and Dragon Ball Z
Consumption Methods
Amazon is the highest for both American and Japanese produced Animation
The next three for Japanese Animation are:
Netflix
Hulu
Crunchyroll
Manga Sales (In Millions of US Dollars)
2008: 1.75 (American Comics: 4.37)
2009: 1.40 – 20% Decrease (American Comics: 4.28 – 2% Decrease)
2010: 1.20 – 15% Decrease (American Comics: 4.19 – 2.2% Decrease)
2011: 1.13 – 6% Decrease (American Comics: 4.14 – 2% Decrease)
Market Share:
Viz Media: 30.7%
Yen Press: 8.5%
DC Comics: 8.2%
Top Selling Manga:
Naruto
Black Butler
Vampire Knight
Pokemon
All of these are published through VIZ
Original Source:http://www.jetro.go.jp/jfile/report/07001194/us_animation_comic.pdf
English Summary: http://www.twitlonger.com/show/n_1rlg8e3
US Market total Merchandise Sales, Reported by JETRO –
Total US Market GDP of Anime Goods (Figures in Billions USD)
2001 – 4.46
2002 – 4.36
2003 – 4.84
2004 – 3.3
2005 – 3.0
2006 – 2.78
2007 – 2.83
2008 – 2.66
2009 – 2.74
2010 – 2.58
2011 – 2.53
2012 – 2.51
CAGR 2001-2012 of -5.1%
According to NPD’s retail tracking data, about 60% of the anime characters goods market in the United States belongs to Pokémon-related items.
Of that US$2.741 billion in 2009, character goods made up US$2.420 billion, while DVDs accounted for US$306 million.
SOURCE: http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2011-04-15/america-2009-anime-market-pegged-at-us$2.741-billion
AnimEigo (U.S.)
Anime Midstream (U.S.)
Aniplex Of America (U.S., American subsidiary of Aniplex owned by Sony Music Entertainment Japan)
Crunchyroll (U.S.) (distributor)
Discotek Media (U.S.)[1]
Disney (U.S.)
Miramax Films (U.S., previously owned by Disney until 2010 when it was acquired by Filmyard Holdings[2])
Funimation Entertainment (U.S.)
Kadokawa Pictures USA (U.S., American subsidiary of Kadokawa Pictures)
Manga Entertainment (UK, U.S.: bought by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2005)
Media Blasters (U.S.)
NIS America (U.S., American subsidiary of Nippon Ichi Software software company)
Section 23 (U.S.) (the successor company to ADV films, which split into several companies in 2009. “Section 23” handles distribution, “Sentai Filmworks” handles license acquisition, “Aesir Holdings” inherited ADV’s old library of titles, “Seraphim Studios” handles new English dubs, and “Valkyrie Media Productions” handles The Anime Network).
The Right Stuf International (U.S., main distribution subdivision rebranded “Nozomi Entertainment” in 2007)
Saban Brands (U.S.)
Sony Pictures Television International/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment (U.S., American subsidiary of Sony)
Viz Media (U.S., owned jointly by Shogakukan and Shueisha, of Japan, but it is run independently)
Kazé (France, Germany, Switzerland, Italy, United Kingdom)
Dybex (France, Belgium, Holland, Switzerland)
101 Films (United Kingdom)
Anime Limited (United Kingdom)
Manga Entertainment UK (the main branch of “Manga Entertainment”)
MVM Films (UK)
StudioCanal UK (UK)
Universum Film GmbH (Germany)
Hanabee (Australia)
Madman Entertainment (Australia: Madman overwhelmingly dominates the Australian anime market, for many years through the 2000s controlling approximately 90% of all sales)
Siren Visual (Australia)
4Kids Productions (US) (subsidiary of 4Kids Entertainment Specializing in dubbing anime,shut down in 2012 due to continued lack of profitability).
ADV Films (U.S., U.K.) (shut down in 2009, selling off its assets and intellectual properties to four other Houston-based companies, such as Section 23 (see above)).
Bandai Entertainment (U.S., owned by Namco Bandai[3])
Bandai Visual USA (U.S., previously a subsidiary of Bandai Visual Japan and not affiliated with Bandai Entertainment, now folded into Bandai Entertainment[4])
Beez Entertainment (EU, owned by Bandai)
Central Park Media (de facto defunct since mid-2007 when new DVD releases ceased, even though they continued to license their titles for TV and VOD, they entered a state of limbo.[5] Officially declared bankruptcy and assets liquidated in mid-2009.[6] Several of their titles have been acquired by other anime distributing companies prior to and following Central Park Media’s bankruptcy and liquidation, such as ADV Films, Bandai Entertainment, Funimation Entertainment, Media Blasters, Nozomi Entertainment, etc.)
US Manga Corps (U.S., part of Central Park Media)
Family Home Entertainment (U.S., renamed Artisan Entertainment) in the 1990s, then acquired by Lions Gate Entertainment in 2003).
Geneon Entertainment (U.S. branch “Geneon USA” (formerly “Pioneer Entertainment”) defunct September 2007. Parent Japanese company ceased in-house distribution of its own titles, many of which have been re-licensed by Funimation[7][8] and Sentai Filmworks. Parent company “Geneon Entertainment” then sold off its own ownership to NBC Universal subsidiary UPI, which then merged Geneon with its own “Universal Pictures Japan” division on February 1, 2009, renaming the new company “Geneon Universal Entertainment Japan”).[9][10]
Saban Entertainment (U.S., acquisitions either went to The Walt Disney Company or just expired, succeeded by Saban Brands)
Streamline Pictures (U.S., Canada: stopped producing new anime releases in 1996, folding into Orion Pictures, which in turn folded into Metro-Goldwyn-Mayerone year later, in 1997. The Streamline brand name officially went defunct in 2002).
Synch-Point (U.S., A subsidiary of Broccoli (company), defunct when parent company Broccoli International USA shut down their operations in 2007)
Urban Vision (U.S.)
U.S. Renditions (U.S., A subsidiary of Books Nippan, defunct mid-1990s)
Tokyopop (U.S.)
Reviews: Senki Zesshou Symphogear G and Servant x Service
Mitsugi’s theory on how gender affects the quality of an anime has been brought up a number of times on the show. The addicts decide to finally take it on and discuss if the number of women in an anime has any direct correlation to the quality of the show.
Theory: Anime that have a character gender ratio of 3:1 in favor of female characters have a lower content quality than more balanced anime. I would like to point out that this is not my opinion in life. This view only applies to anime.
– Mitsugi
Reviews: Ryo-Kyu-Bu and Eternal Family
The Anime Addicts Anonymous hosts make their pics and discuss the fall anime season. What is coming out that you need to watch? What is coming out that you need to be paying attention to.
Our Selections:
Mitsugi:
Pupa – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cUbXHxAgTaw
Director – Tomomi MOCHIZUKI – House of Five Leaves, Ocean Waves, Princess Nine
Animation Production – Studio DEEN
Hajime no Ippo – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vu-zsBsE4Dc
Director – Jun Shishido – Hajime no Ippo: New Challenger, Saiunkoku Monogatari
Original Creator – George Morikawa
Animation Production – Madhouse Studios
Kuroko no Basuke S2 – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qCpeG6V2Ms
Director –
Original Creator – Tadotoshi Fujimaki
Animation Production – Production IG
Yowamushi Pedal – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33yw5EijUsg
Director – Osamu Nabeshima – Zetman, Saint Tail, Hamtaro, D. Gray man
Animation Production – TMS Entertainment
Gundam Build Fighters – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eB9Q3JtdqaY
Director -Kenji Nagasaki – No. 6
Original Creator – Yoshiyuki Tomino and Hajime Yatate
Animation Production – Sunrise
Ace of Diamond – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZRQYHHmSgA
Director – Mitsuyuki MASUHARA – Chii’s Sweet Home, Kobato, Polar Bear Cafe
Animation Production – Madhouse Studios, Production IG
Chiaki:
Arpeggio of Blue Steel – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=30GHXmIyWJk
Kyoukai no Kanata – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIcptxBYXeY
Magi 2 – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Vo4D3b0Tzc
Gingitsune – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dpv639zbnc4
Yozakura Quartet – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8n7wCD51UkA
Kram:
Kyousouginga
Yuusha ni Narenakatta
Kill la Kill
Samurai Flamenco
Valvrave 2
Kimiko:
Ace of Diamonds
Coppelion
Diabolik Lovers
Infinite Stratos II
Koroshiy-san: The Hired Gun
Reviews: Majestic Prince and Free!