Japanese Animation Films

24 September 2011



japanese animation films

Download Naruto To Know Japanese Animation Better

The word ‘anime’ is quite popular, not only in Japan, but the entire world. One mention of the word, and you can imagine a wide range of cartoon anime series available on television. However, when someone is asked to define anime, they would simply say that they are Japanese cartoons. However, when you get a Naruto download, you will know how Japanese cartoons differ from normal American cartoons.   

Anime television series and anime films have been specifically derived from Japanese Manga. Manga Is another name for comics in Japanese. But the characteristics of a manga are quite different from a normal comic. In fact, a manga becomes famous for its own unique style, like you can see in Naruto episodes.

The main difference between a manga and a comic is the characters themselves. The characters of a manga have exceptionally large eyes which grow larger to express emotions like fear or excitement. The other features like nose and mouth are comparatively smaller than the eyes. You should watch Naruto online to witness such traits yourself!

The hairstyles and hair color of the characters are quite unique and away from realism. The hair may be long and spiky, but are never portrayed in their natural brown or black color.  They may be depicted in pink, magenta, blue or green or any other color. Blonde is also rarely used. The clothes of anime characters are very unconventional and unusual. They may depict a highly stylish version of Japanese school uniform. If you download Naruto, you will find that the dresses are designed like those of samurai warriors or feudal lords.

There are still other costumes derived from the Victorian or the Renaissance era of the West. Whatever the style of the clothes may be, they are always quite colorful and multi layered with a uniqueness of there own. The background scenes are always quite detailed and colorful in an anime. If the action has to take place in a dark place, the entire city is colored in shades of red and black, with ominously looming landscapes. That is also one of the characteristics of the series, when you get a Naruto download.

Japanese animation is different from American cartoons, as they are portrayed in a series and not in separate stories like the American cartoons. The series have a unique plotline and an ending full of suspense. Japanese anime characters depict real, human characteristics and do not give the feeling of seeing a cartoon. The heroes are not always good and the villains not always bad. Also, heroes may die in the end of the series! You can catch Naruto episodes and compare it with any other series to find further differences.

About the Author

Naruto is good anime Manga Series. I am massive fan of  Naruto Episodes. Here you can download naruto episodes and so on TV Shows.Even You can also watch naruto online.

Japanese Animated Movie Top10 Essentials 70′s-90′s


Cars [Original Soundtrack] [Collector's Edition]


Cars [Original Soundtrack] [Collector's Edition]


$7.83


Cars is a typical Disney-Pixar animated movie in that it deals with an anthropomorphic character (here, a car) and the heartwarming values of family and friendship. (Alas, we’ll have to wait a little while longer for the company to take on greed and selfishness.) The accompanying soundtrack is equally typical in that it’s split between catchy pop songs and a score by Randy Newman. The clear highli…

Baby Einstein - Language Nursery


Baby Einstein – Language Nursery


$8.49


If you’ve been around babies in the last few years, you’ve seen these newfangled toys that are abstract in color (or just black, white, and red) and make curious, crunching noises. Studies have shown that these types of toys stimulate newborns, expanding the capacity of their little sponge-like minds. That concept comes to the video age in Baby Einstein. This 30-minute tape is called a “video boar…

Final Fantasy XIII Original Soundtrack


Final Fantasy XIII Original Soundtrack


$54.49


CD ALBUM…

Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo)


Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo)


$18.49


Hayao Miyazaki gained widespread attention in Japan for his complex ecological manga series, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1982), which he adapted for the screen two years later. One thousand years after a war devastated much of the Earth, humanity clings to existence at the fringes of a vast, polluted forest inhabited by monstrous insects. Only Nausicaä, the princess of the tiny realm of …

Ponyo (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo)


Ponyo (Two-Disc Blu-ray/DVD Combo)


$18.99


Ponyo confirms Academy Award®-winning director Hayao Miyazaki’s reputation as one of the most imaginative filmmakers working today. Loosely based on Hans Christian Anderson’s “The Little Mermaid,” Ponyo is a magical celebration of innocent love and the fragile beauty of the natural world. The daughter of the sea goddess Gran Mamare (voiced by Cate Blanchett) and the alchemist Fujimoto (Liam Neeso…

Star Wars: The Clone Wars - The Complete Season One [Blu-ray]


Star Wars: The Clone Wars – The Complete Season One [Blu-ray]


$42.00


The thrilling 3-D CGI animated series The Clone Wars serves as impressive proof that George Lucas’s Star Wars universe could translate to a weekly television series that wouldn’t lose the scope, imagination, or sense of adventure of the features. Like the 2008 feature film of the same name, the 22 episodes that compose the series’ debut season (2008-2009) cover the action between Attack of the Clo…

Spirited Away


Spirited Away


$13.49


The highest grossing film in Japanese box-office history (more than $234 million), Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away (Sen To Chihiro Kamikakushi) is a dazzling film that reasserts the power of drawn animation to create fantasy worlds. Like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz and Lewis Carroll’s Alice, Chihiro (voice by Daveigh Chase–Lilo in Disney’s Lilo & Stitch) plunges into an alternate reality. On …

My Neighbor Totoro


My Neighbor Totoro


$14.99


My Neighbor Totoro is that rare delight, a family film that appeals to children and adults alike. While their mother is in the hospital, 10-year-old Satsuki and 4-year-old Mei move into an old-fashioned house in the country with their professor father. At the foot of an enormous camphor tree, Mei discovers the nest of King Totoro, a giant forest spirit who resembles an enormous bunny rabbit. Mei a…

Howl's Moving Castle


Howl’s Moving Castle


$13.71


Like a dream, Howl’s Moving Castle carries audiences to vistas beyond their imaginations where they experience excitement, adventure, terror, humor, and romance. With domestic box office receipts of over $210 million, Howl passed Miyazaki’s Princess Mononoke to become the #3 film in Japanese history, behind his Spirited Away and James Cameron’s Titanic. Based on a juvenile novel by Diana Wynne …

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3 - 3D View-Master 3 Reel Set


Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3 – 3D View-Master 3 Reel Set


$19.77


The turtles are back…in time….

Animation


Animation


$30.68


Looks at the history of animated films and innovators in the field.

Japanese Animation


Japanese Animation


$22.36


While visiting Japan, animation writer Chris Robinson gets lost. As he drifts through Tokyo, Hiroshima, and Kyoto he happens upon a number of mysterious figures including Bob Dylan, Haruki Murakami, Sumo wrestlers, Big Bird a

Japanese Masked Superman Animation Figures 4pcs / Lot


Japanese Masked Superman Animation Figures 4pcs / Lot


$7.79


These are Japanese masked superman animation figures.

Naoyuki Tsuji Animation Collection


Naoyuki Tsuji Animation Collection


$21.21


With deceptively simple charcoal drawings, Japanese animator Naoyuki Tsuji creates an otherworldly landscape of dreams and memories. These evocative films, more avant-garde than anime, include TRILOGY ABOUT CLOUDS, A FEATHER STARES AT THE DARK, EXPERIMENT, TRAVEL TO THE LOST WORLD, WAKE UP, and FOR ALMOST FORGOTTEN STORIES. into animals; a man with a deranged face terrorizes his family and devours his children. What first appears to be childlike crudeness in his animation is actually subtle, strange, and even uncanny. Tsuji’s films captivate us because they are vague recollections of beguiling childhood dreams and memories-the wonder of the puppet show, the mystery of clouds, or the attraction of monsters.

Cartoons And Animation


Cartoons And Animation


$37.96


Introduces the principles of cartoons and animated films, discussing the history of animation, the different types of animation, the influence of computers, and the development of story lines and characters, along with advice on having a career in the fie

Animation Soundtrack


Animation Soundtrack


$16.79


Japanese pressing. Geneon. 2005.



 Air (Film)


Air (Film)


$59.99


Air is a 2005 Japanese animated film directed by Osamu Dezaki and written by Makoto Nakamura based on the visual novel of the same name by Key. Originally, the film was set for a release date in autumn 2004, but was delayed; the film finally premiered in Japanese theaters on February 5, 2005. The film, animated by Toei Animation, is a reinterpretation of the original Air storyline which centers on the story arc of the female lead Misuzu Kamio. Yukito Kunisaki arrives in the town of Kami for a chance to earn money at the summer festival and meets Misuzu on his first day in town. They soon become friends and a story one thousand years old begins to unfold. Before going to DVD, a thirty-minute sample of the film was streamed online by Animate between June 2 and June 16, 2005 two weeks later. The film was later sold on DVD and released in three editions: the Collector’s Edition, the Special Edition, and the Regular Edition on August 5, 2005. The Air film was licensed for English language distribution by ADV Films and was released on December 11, 2007. The license of the film was transferred to Funimation in July 2008 who will continue to release the film in North America.

 Akio Ohtsuka


Akio Ohtsuka


$48.99


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Akio Otsuka(born November 24, 1959) is a Japanese actor and seiyu from the Tokyo Metropolitan area. He is currently attached to Mausu Promotion. He stands at 182 centimeters (6 feet), weighs 73 kilograms (about 161 lbs.) and has a blood type of B. He married fellow seiyu Yoko Somi on February 11, 2005, but later divorced her in 2009. He is the son of seiyu Chikao Otsuka. The astringent and calm quality of his voice has landed him many roles in films, dubbing, animation, and video games. He is most known for the roles of Black Jack (Black Jack), Solid Snake (Metal Gear Solid), Xehanort (Kingdom Hearts), Shunsui Kyouraku (Bleach), Lieutenant Garuru (Sgt. Frog), Gwendal von Voltaire (Kyo Kara Maoh!), Batou (Ghost in the Shell) series and movies, Blackbeard (One Piece), Twin brother police Inspector’s Sango and Jugo Yokomizo (Detective Conan), and Anavel Gato (Mobile Suit Gundam 0083: Stardust Memory). Apart from voicing villainous or jokester characters, he also occasionally does narration for anime shows.

 Andalusia in Fiction: Television Shows Set in Andalusia, Nasu: Summer in Andalusia, to an Unknown God, Law of Desire, Verano Azul


Andalusia in Fiction: Television Shows Set in Andalusia, Nasu: Summer in Andalusia, to an Unknown God, Law of Desire, Verano Azul


$8.78


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Television Shows Set in Andalusia, Nasu: Summer in Andalusia, to an Unknown God, Law of Desire, Verano Azul, Torrente 2: Misión En Marbella, Curro Jiménez, Bajarse Al Moro. Excerpt: Nasu: Summer in Andalusia Nasu: Andarushia no Natsu) is a 2003 Japanese anime film by Madhouse, directed by Kitar Ksaka, the famed animation supervisor of the Oscar-winning anime film Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke and long-time collaborator of Studio Ghibli, and adapted from a short 3-tankbon manga by I Kuroda, entitled Nasu, which was serialized in the Afternoon manga magazine. Ksaka became interested in adapting the work after his long-time collaborator, Hayao Miyazaki, a fan of cycling, himself recommended the manga to Ksaka. The film soon went on to become the first Japanese anime film ever to be selected for the Cannes Film Festival. Nasu: Summer in Andalusia has been translated and dubbed into English by the anime television network Animax, which has broadcast the film in Southeast Asia, the Indian subcontinent, and other regions. It was also translated into French, under the title Nasu – Un été andalou, and Italian, under the title Melanzane – Estate andalusa. The German version was released as Nasu – Sommer in Andalusien. It was announced that a sequel, Nasu: A Migratory Bird with Suitcase, was being produced, which will be set in Japan on the Japan Cup Cycle Road Race, which was subsequently released in 2007. Directed by Kitar Ksaka, it featured Ken’ichi Yoshida, another long-time collaborator of Studio Ghibli, who has worked on several Studio Ghibli films such as Princess Mononoke and Porco Rosso, as animation director. In 2008, Nasu: A Migratory Bird with Suitcase won the best Original Video Animation award at the seventh

 Animated Films


Animated Films


$12.95


The best animated films have combined the latest technology with creativity and a flair for storytelling and are adored by both children and adults. With films such as Monsters, Inc. , Shrek, and Toy Story capturing the imagination of moviegoers and critics, animated film is enjoying a resurgence unseen since its golden age in the 1930s and 1940s. From the earliest full-length feature animation, Disney”s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, through stop-motion animation and Japanese anime to the advent of CGI, this book takes a critical look at animation through the ages and explores its infinite cinematic possibilities.

 Animated Films


Animated Films


$12.95


The best animated films have combined the latest technology with creativity and a flair for storytelling and are adored by both children and adults. With films such as Monsters, Inc., Shrek, and Toy Story capturing the imagination of moviegoers and critics, animated film is enjoying a resurgence unseen since its golden age in the 1930s and 1940s. From the earliest full-length feature animation, Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, through stop-motion animation and Japanese anime to the advent of CGI, this book takes a critical look at animation through the ages and explores its infinite cinematic possibilities.

 Animation Art


Animation Art


$45


This large format, comprehensive, high quality and visually rich art book covers the history of animation throughout the world, focusing heavily on the North American creative engines of Disney, Warner and now the new, small production CGI houses.The book is divided into world regions to reveal the clear developments in each area, but heavy cross referencing will show the increasing internationalization of animation from the 1930′s when the industry and creative imagination of Walt Disney began to infect artists and producers the world over, revealed most recently in The Matrix phenomenon where the bridge between the first and subsequent films, (Animatrix, nine animated shorts), was provided by a pioneering collaboration between US and Japanese animation studios. Beginning with the earliest in animation, we follow the few individuals who worked on their own to develop techniques that would soon transform animation into a mass-market phenomenon. In recent years, animation has been hugely impacted by the arrival of the computer, seen in films such as Toy Story and Shrek. Computers have pushed animation to the limit by achieving fine, detailed, real-world rendering techniques that challenge the next generation of animators.

 Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


$3.46


New – This comprehensive guide lists 1,500+ animated films on DVD, everything from early 20th-century works to Disney, Warner Bros., and cutting-edge digital CGI. Included are foreign films, major hits like “Shrek, ” and hundreds of Japanese anime releases, plus a separate section on mature-themed material like “Fritz the Cat.” 1,400 photos.

 Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


$0.99


Used – This comprehensive guide lists 1,500+ animated films on DVD, everything from early 20th-century works to Disney, Warner Bros., and cutting-edge digital CGI. Included are foreign films, major hits like “Shrek, ” and hundreds of Japanese anime releases, plus a separate section on mature-themed material like “Fritz the Cat.” 1,400 photos.

 Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


$3.92


New – This comprehensive guide lists 1,500+ animated films on DVD, everything from early 20th-century works to Disney, Warner Bros., and cutting-edge digital CGI. Included are foreign films, major hits like “Shrek, ” and hundreds of Japanese anime releases, plus a separate section on mature-themed material like “Fritz the Cat.” 1,400 photos.

 Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


$0.99


Used – This comprehensive guide lists 1,500+ animated films on DVD, everything from early 20th-century works to Disney, Warner Bros., and cutting-edge digital CGI. Included are foreign films, major hits like “Shrek, ” and hundreds of Japanese anime releases, plus a separate section on mature-themed material like “Fritz the Cat.” 1,400 photos.

 Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


Animation on DVD: The Ultimate Guide


$3.31


This comprehensive guide lists 1,500+ animated films on DVD, everything from early 20th-century works to Disney, Warner Bros., and cutting-edge digital CGI. Included are foreign films, major hits like Shrek, and hundreds of Japanese anime releases, plus a separate section on mature-themed material like Fritz the Cat. 1,400 photos.

 Animatrix (DVD and Soundtrack)


Animatrix (DVD and Soundtrack)


$3.63


Welcome to The Animatrix, a visionary fusion of CG-animation and Japanese anime from the world’s most revered anime directors. Experience the prequel to The Matrix and learn about the last cities of mankind, the war with the machines and humanity’s ultimate downfall. Witness the Final Flight of the Osiris, which sets the stage for The Matrix Reloaded movie and Enter the Matrix video game. Grasp a more complete understanding of The Matrix available nowhere else. Expand your mind even further as you unlock a dazzling arsenal of Bonus Materials. It’s time to plug in.The films: Final Flight of the Osiris, The Second Renaissance Parts I & II, Kid’s Story, Program, World Record, Beyond, A Detective Story, and Matriculated.

 Anime


Anime


$67.52


Used – High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as “Japanese animation.” Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, vi

 Anime


Anime


$67.52


New – High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as “Japanese animation.” Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, vid

 Anime


Anime


$69.99


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as “Japanese animation”. Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, video, video games, commercials, and internet-based releases, and represents most, if not all, genres of fiction. Anime gained early popularity in East and Southeast Asia and has garnered more-recent popularity in the Western World.

 Anime


Anime


$47.78


New – High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as “Japanese animation.” Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, vid

 Anime


Anime


$47.78


Used – High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as “Japanese animation.” Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, vi

 Anime


Anime


$81.55


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Anime is animation originating in Japan. The world outside Japan regards anime as Japanese animation. Anime originated about 1917. Anime, like manga (Japanese comics), has a large audience in Japan and high recognition throughout the world. Distributors can release anime via television broadcasts, directly to video, or theatrically, as well as online. Both hand-drawn and computer-animated anime exist. It is used in television series, films, video, video games, commercials, and internet-based releases, and represents most, if not all, genres of fiction. Anime gained early popularity in East and Southeast Asia and has garnered more-recent popularity in the Western World.

 Anime Mania: How to Draw Characters for Japanese Animation


Anime Mania: How to Draw Characters for Japanese Animation


$19.95


There’s no doubt about it: Japanese animation is hot. Television shows, films, and videos featuring the anime style of animation are wildly popular. Japanese animation is like a comic book come to life, retaining all its power but in moving form. It has a very different style from traditional western animation, incorporating heavy shading, dramatic camera angles, and beautifully rendered special effects—especially the fantastic anime depictions of ocean waves, storms, smoke, and explosions. Easier to draw than its western counterpart, anime is more limited and simpler in its execution. In Japanese anime the characters move, but their movements are generally staccato, sharp, and dramatic—not free-flowing with lots of overlapping action, anticipation, and follow-through.In Anime Mania, famous cartoonist, teacher, and best-selling author Christopher Hart demonstrates how any comic book artist can become expert in this wonderful style of animation. Step by step, he details how to draw the coolest anime characters from the widest selection of popular styles: high-tech cyberpunks who live in the world of the future; teen characters—with troubled relationships at school, home, and on the street; and mighty monsters, fantasy warriors, and giant robots. Aspiring animators will also find chapters on anime’s spectacular special effects, the role of storyboarding in anime, sketching and the art of character design, and a mini-crash course in perspective. The book concludes with interviews with Scott Frazier, an American anime director working in Japan, and Mahiro Meada, a renowned Japanese animation director.Brimming with hundreds of spectacular examples, illustrations, and step-by-step exercises, Anime Mania details how anyone can become a real anime artist without having to reinvent the art of drawing.

 Azumanga Daioh Episodes


Azumanga Daioh Episodes


$48.99


High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! This is a complete list of episodes for the Japanese television anime series Azumanga Daioh produced by the animation studio J.C.Staff,[1] and based on the manga series of the same name written and illustrated by Kiyohiko Azuma. The series originally aired on TV Tokyo, TV Aichi, TV Osaka, and AT-X[2] in five-minute segments each weekday from 8 April 2002 until 30 September 2002. Each week’s segments were repeated that weekend in a 25-minute compilation episode with an opening and credits, for a total of 130 five-minute segments and 26 episode compilations. The compilation episodes were released to VHS and DVD by Starchild Records;[3] the five-minute segments can be distinguished by their individual titles. In the United States, the television anime was released by ADV Films in both a six-volume DVD set on 9 September 2005, and later reissued as a five-volume “thinpak” DVD set.[4] The sixth DVD volume of the first release included The Very Short Azumanga Daioh Movie.

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