Uchu no Stellvia
Uchu no Stellvia | |
---|---|
Original title | 宇宙 の ス テ ル ヴ ィ ア |
genre | Mecha , romance, drama, comedy |
Television series | |
Country of production | Japan |
original language | Japanese |
year | 2003 |
length | 25 minutes |
Episodes | 26 in 1 season |
production | Gō Nakanishi , Shinichi Ikeda , Takatoshi Chino |
music | Seiko Nagaoka |
First broadcast | April 2, 2003 - September 24, 2003 on TV Tokyo |
Manga | |
country | Japan |
author | Ryō Akizuki |
publishing company | MediaWorks |
magazine | Dengeki Daioh |
First publication | 2003-2004 |
expenditure | 2 |
Uchū no Stellvia ( Japanese 宇宙 の ス テ ル ヴ ィ ア , Uchū no Suteruvia ) is an anime series. The science fiction series first aired in 2003.
action
In 2176, an electromagnetic wave of particles wiped out almost all life on earth. 180 years later, a second wave is imminent, but this time people have prepared. The peoples of the earth have teamed up and erected gigantic space stations and protective shields to protect the earth.
On the way to Stellvia , one of these space stations, is the sixteen-year-old Shima Katase ( 片 瀬 志 麻 , Katase Shima ), who wants to start her training there. She befriends Arisa Glennorth and other students. You experience a number of adventures.
Origin and publications
The 26 episodes of the series were created in the animation studio XEBEC . Tatsuo Satō , who had previously taken on this role in the series Nadesico , acted as the director .
Uchū no Stellvia premiered on Japanese television from April 2 to September 25, 2003 on TV Tokyo . The series then came out on eight DVDs. Geneon distributed the anime in the United States.
Voice actor
role | Japanese speaker ( seiyū ) |
---|---|
Shima katase | Ai Nonaka |
Kouta Otoyama | Takahiro Mizushima |
Arisa Glennorth | Yuki Matsuoka |
music
The music was composed by Seiko Nagaoka . The song Asu e no Brilliant Road by Angela was used for the opening credits . The end credits are Kirei na Yozora , The End of the World and Dear my best friend , all also by Angela.
Adaptations
Several video games were released based on the anime series: a strategy game for the PC in 2003 and a PlayStation 2 game and a Game Boy Advance game in 2004 .
The manga artist Ryō Akizuki implemented the plot as a manga series. This was published from 2003 to 2004 in individual chapters in the manga magazine Comic Dengeki Daiō , in which Barasui's Strawberries & Marshmallows appeared at the time. The Media-Works- Verlag published these individual chapters in two anthologies. DrMaster published the anthologies in English.
Web links
- Information about the series and the manga at Anime News Network (English)