Mugen no Ryvius
Television series | |
---|---|
Original title | Mugen no Ryvius |
Country of production | Japan |
original language | Japanese |
year | 1999 |
length | 24 minutes |
Episodes | 26th |
genre | Drama, science fiction |
idea | Hajime Yatate |
production | Fukashi Azuma, Fumikuni Furusawa, Kazunari Takagi |
music | Katsuhisa Hattori |
First broadcast | October 6, 1999 - March 29, 2000 on TV Tokyo |
Mugen no Ryvius ( Japanese 無限 の リ ヴ ァ イ ア ス ), also known under the English title Infinite Ryvius , is an anime series from 1999 that was also implemented as a manga .
action
In 2225, the solar system was struck by a phenomenon called Gedult . The solar system was inundated by a lake of plasma, and humans colonized other planets.
Future space pilots are trained on a space station called Love Delta . In the event of an attack on the station, all adults will be killed in the destruction of the station, but the young pilot aspirants can save themselves on the ship Ryvius , which is hidden on the space station.
The return to earth is subsequently made more difficult by the burgeoning power struggles within the ship.
Production and publications
The 26 episode series was produced by the animation studio Sunrise and Bandai Visual . Directed by Gorō Taniguchi . The script was written by Yōsuke Kuroda and Yūichirō Takeda based on an idea by Hajime Yatate . The character design was created by Hisashi Hirai and the artistic direction was taken over by Shigemi Ikeda.
The first broadcast of Mugen no Ryvius took place from October 6, 1999 to March 29, 2000 on the Japanese television station TV Tokyo . The series later appeared in the United States and France as well as in Arabic.
synchronization
role | Japanese speaker ( seiyū ) |
---|---|
Aoi pants | Hoko Kuwashima |
Kozue Izumi | Sakura Tange |
Yūki Aiba | Sōichiro Hoshi |
Kōji Aiba | Tetsu Shiratori |
Ikumi Oze | Tomokazu Seki |
music
The music for the series was composed by Katsuhisa Hattori . The opening credits dis- and the ending credits, Yume o Sugitemo , were sung by Mika Arisaka.
Manga adaptation
Shinsuke Kurihashi also implemented the story in manga form. In 2000 two edited volumes were published by Media-Works- Verlag in Japan . ComicsOne published the manga in English.
Awards
The series was named Best TV Series at the fifth Kobe Animation Festival in 2000.
Individual evidence
- ↑ 5th Kobe Animation Festival. Anime News Network , accessed July 17, 2009 .
Web links
- Bandai Channel Official Website for Anime (Japanese)
- Entry for anime and manga at Anime News Network (English)