Animerica
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Mewtwo...anime counterpart have been mixed, with some reviewers such as the Daily Record '' citing him as a cliche villain, while others such as ''Animerica and Sight & Sound praised the character's depth. Mewtwo was conceived and developed by Ken... In this article: Mewtwo, Pokemon, Mew, Pokemon: Mewtwo Returns, Ash Ketchum, Pokemon Red and Blue, Nintendo, Dan Green, and Pokemon Company |
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Wikipedia | October 31, 2009
Last Exile
...film. The report was based on a blog post by Patrick Macias, author of several books on Japanese pop culture and anime and the writer for Animerica, which noted that while he was attending the Tokyo International Anime Fair, a Gonzo employee...
In this article: Last Exile, Claus Valca, Geneon, Range Murata, Gonzo, History, Geneon Entertainment, and Koichi Chigira
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Wikipedia | October 30, 2009
Blood: The Last Vampire
...more easily. The resulting film is very short for a theatrical work, spanning only 45 minutes. Kitakubo stated in a 2001 interview with Animerica that he had the remaining story of "Saya's past present and future" in his own mind, but that...
In this article: Blood: The Last Vampire, Production I.G, Manga Entertainment, DVD, Japan, and Blood+
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Wikipedia | October 25, 2009
Viz Media
...of anime and Japanese films released by Viz, see the Viz Media category . For manga titles released, see the Viz Media manga category . Animerica is a quarterly anime and manga digest that initially started as a monthly magazine featuring...
In this article: Viz Media, Shueisha, Shogakukan, Dragon Ball, Shojo Beat, DVD, Cartoon Network, and Shonen Jump
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Wikipedia | October 08, 2009
Chris Kohler
Chris Kohler is a video game journalist and editor who has written for several publications in the past decade, including Wired '', ''Animerica, Official Nintendo Magazine and 1UP.com. He is also a published author of two books. His first...
In this article: Chris Kohler, Tufts University, Official Nintendo Magazine, Kyoto Seika University, Wired, O'Reilly Media, and Medford, Massachusetts
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Wikipedia | October 06, 2009
Samurai X: Trust & Betrayal
...and after-effects murder can have, something that Kenshin has yet to comprehend though others have tried to point it out to him. Animerica reviewer Rio Yanez praised ''Trust''s "introspective take on violence" as well as its being...
In this article: Samurai X: Trust & Betrayal, Enishi, Anime News Network, Himura Kenshin, Rurouni Kenshin, and Japan
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Wikipedia | September 16, 2009
Crying Freeman (film)
...arc of the best-selling graphic novel by Kazuo Koike and Ryoichi Ikegami. Despite being heavily promoted by Viz Media on Animerica magazine and reprints of the Crying Freeman graphic novel, the film was never released in the United...
In this article: Brotherhood of the Wolf, Crying Freeman, Yakuza, British Columbia, and Portrait of a Killer
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Wikipedia | August 26, 2009
Animerica
Animerica is a quarterly digest published by Viz Media. It initially started as a monthly magazine featuring reviews of anime and manga titles, as well as related works. After a preview issue was released in November 1992, the magazine's...
In this article: Waldenbooks, Borders, Trademark, Best Buy, Viz Media, United States, Animerica Extra, and Shojo Beat
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Wikipedia | August 09, 2009
Patrick Macias
...early work, and this led to a regular column titled "Tiger on Beat" in which Macias covered Hong Kong movies. Lu went on to edit Tokyoscope and Pulp, and Patrick likewise began writing for Pulp and became the assistant editor for Animerica.
In this article: Patrick Macias, San Francisco Bay Guardian, Sacramento, California, and Hong Kong
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Wikipedia | July 24, 2009
Bruce Lewis
...freelance business, the Henderson Lewis Company. Lewis has written extensively on anime and manga. His writing has been published in Animage, Animerica, Star Blazers: The Magazine of Space Battleship Yamato, Anime UK, Anime FX '', ''Wired...
In this article: Bruce Lewis, Star Blazers, Space Battleship Yamato, Funimation Productions, and Shojo Beat
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Wikipedia | July 22, 2009
Don't Leave Me Alone, Daisy
...friends, an android that wants Techno dead and to protect Hitomi, the 2 missiles that Techno befriended, and the rest of the class. Animerica gave the series 1 star out of 5, summarizing its view as, "Stalking is funny?" THEM Anime...
In this article: Anime News Network and US
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Description from Wikipedia:
Animerica is one of the original magazines reviewing anime and manga in North America. It is published by VIZ Media (formerly Viz Communications) and predominantly reviews material produced by Viz. Volume 1 Number 00 was released in November 1992; with Vol.1 No.1 following in March 1993, officially launching the monthly magazine.
In April 2005, Animerica announced it would no longer offer a newsstand edition for sale. Instead, the title continues as an ad hoc giveaway at anime conventions and as quarterly digest-size compendium given away free at Borders, Waldenbooks and Best Buy stores. The last newsstand issue appeared in June 2005.
Animerica uses a non-standard romanization system (a modified form of the Hepburn system), replacing the macrons used in Hepburn with circumflexes.
Two manga magazine complements to Animerica, called Animerica Extra and Pulp were published at one time, but are now defunct. However, Viz has returned to publishing monthly serialized manga magazines with both an American edition of Shonen Jump (aimed at the young male demographic), as well as a spin-off magazine, Shojo Beat, that combines the serialized manga magazine format with the teen girls' magazine format, featuring shōjo manga similarly to the later volumes of Animerica Extra (which had converted to a shōjo lineup before ending publication) as well as horoscopes and information on fashion, makeup, and Japanese slang and cultural trends. Both Shonen Jump and Shojo Beat now also have accompanying graphic novel lines from Viz.
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