Slayers Great

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Movie
German title Slayers Great
Original title ス レ イ ヤ ー ズ ぐ れ い と, Sureiyāzu Gureito
Country of production Japan
original language Japanese
Publishing year 1997 (cinema, J)
2005 ( DVD , D )
length about 60 minutes
Age rating FSK 16
Rod
Director Hiroshi Watanabe
script Hajime Kanzaka
synchronization
chronology

←  Predecessor
Slayers Return

Successor  →
Slayers Gorgeous

Slayers Great ( Japaneseス レ イ ヤ ー ズ ぐ れ い と, Sureiyāzu Gureito ) is the third anime cinema production for the novel and television series " Slayers ". The film had its world premiere in Japanese cinemas on August 2, 1997. As with the previous films Slayers Perfect and Slayers Return , the JCStaff studio was responsible for the animation , while Toei Animation was again responsible for distribution .

action

Lina Inverse and Naga are just eating when a golem bull that has gone wild threatens a young girl named Laia Einburg. Lina and Naga save the girl and are invited to her home by her, more or less voluntarily. Laia lives there with her father Galia, a master golem builder, and her equally talented brother Huey. However, father and son live in quarrel and so it is not difficult for the two warring Lords Haizen and Granion, who rule the city, to win one of the two to their side. Both plan to take control of the city and ultimately the whole world with a golem army. In order to achieve this goal, the respective opponent must first be cleared out of the way.

The two build a golem each, Galia one that is modeled on Lina and Huey one of the Naga model. To achieve the necessary magical energy, Lina and Naga were included in their counterparts. Over time, however, Lina gets fed up with being locked up, breaks out of the golem and ends the fight with her strongest magical attack, the Dragon Slave. Since the city is seriously affected in the fight, the two lords are demoted to guards as a punishment.

Publications

In Germany, OVA Films released the film on DVD on March 21, 2005. Slayers Great was released in English by ADV Films UK on January 6, 2004. In New Zealand and Australia , Madman Entertainment Pty. Ltd. distribution.

synchronization

The dubbing was recorded like its predecessor in the studios of Circle of Arts .

role Japanese speaker ( seiyū ) German speaker
Lina Inverse Megumi Hayashibara Shandra Schadt
Naga, the white snake Maria Kawamura Veronika Neugebauer
Laia Einburg Kikuko Inoue Beate Pfeiffer
Galia Einburg Seizo Katou Dieter Memel
Huey Einburg Takehito Koyasu Florian Bauer
Lord Haizan Kiyoshi Kawakubo Claus Brockmeyer
Lord Granion Norio Wakamoto Ulf J. Söhmisch

Soundtrack

As with its predecessors, the ending song Reflection was sung by Megumi Hayashibara again. Takayuki Hattori was again responsible for the soundtrack .

Web links