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'''''Negadon: The Monster from Mars''''' {{Nihongo|惑星大怪獣ネガドン|Wakusei Daikaijû Negadon|lit. ''Great Planet Monster Negadon''}} is a 2005 computer-animated Japanese short kaiju film, written and directed by Jun Awazu and distributed by CoMix Wave Inc. It premiered at the Tokyo International Film Festival on October 16, 2005. Styled after the kaiju films of the 1950's and 60's, ''Negadon'' depicts a scientist piloting a giant robot to save Tokyo from a space monster ten years after an accident involving the same machine led to the death of his daughter.
'''''Negadon: The Monster from Mars''''' {{Nihongo|惑星大怪獣ネガドン|Wakusei Daikaijû Negadon|lit. ''Great Planet Monster Negadon''}} is a 2005 computer-animated Japanese short kaiju film, written and directed by Jun Awazu and distributed by CoMix Wave Inc. It premiered at the Tokyo International Film Festival on October 16, 2005. Styled after the kaiju films of the 1950's and 60's, ''Negadon'' depicts a scientist piloting a giant robot to save Tokyo from a space monster ten years after an accident involving the same machine led to the death of his daughter.
==Plot==
==Plot==
In the year 2025, Earth's population has reached 10 billion, and its resources are at a breaking point.
"Man always brings about disaster by his own hand."
"Man always brings about disaster by his own hand."


Line 33: Line 35:
{{Cast
{{Cast
|Dai Shimizu|Ryuichi Narasaki (voice)
|Dai Shimizu|Ryuichi Narasaki (voice)
|Takuma Sasahara|Masaji/Seiji Yoshizawa (voice)
|Takuma Sasahara|Seiji Yoshizawa (voice)
|Akane Yumoto|Emi Narasaki (voice)
|Akane Yumoto|Emi Narasaki (voice)
|Masafumi Kishi|Narrator / TV Announcer (voice)
|Masafumi Kishi|Narrator / TV Announcer (voice)
Line 56: Line 58:
*[[Type 74 Tank]]
*[[Type 74 Tank]]
*[[Honest John Missile Launcher]]
*[[Honest John Missile Launcher]]
==Development==
==Production==
==Production==
http://www.scifijapan.com/articles/?s=negadon
http://www.scifijapan.com/articles/?s=negadon
==Marketing==
==Gallery==
==Gallery==
==Soundtrack==
==Theatrical Releases==
==U.S. Release==
==U.S. Release==
Central Park Media acquired the rights to ''Negadon: The Monster from Mars'' in January 2005, and commissioned an English dub from TripWire Productions. The film was screened at several conventions and theaters throughout the year; in theaters, it was part of a triple feature with two other anime shorts, ''Cat Soup'' and ''Kakurenbo: Hide and Seek''. A partial list of U.S. screenings is below:
*Anime Syracuse (Syracuse, NY) - March 25, 2006
*ImaginAsian Theater (New York City, NY) - May 9-18, 2016
*Egyptian Theatre (Hollywood, CA) - June 30, 2006
*[[G-Fest]] (Rosemont, IL) - July 8, 2006
*Alamo Mason Park Cinema (Houston, TX) - Opened July 12, 2006
The film was released on DVD by U.S. Manga Corps on July 11, 2006.<ref name="SFJ">[http://www.scifijapan.com/articles/2006/04/27/negadon-update/ SciFi Japan - NEGADON DVD and Theatrical Release News]</ref>
==Alternate Titles==
==Alternate Titles==
==Reception==
==Reception==
Writing for the New York Times, Neil Genzlinger remarked that ''Negadon: The Monster from Mars'' "looks great and even has a respectable dose of the character development and back story that anime sometimes spurns... The setup is lovely, but the film seems in a hurry to get to the big clash, as if desperate not to violate some anime time limit. Too bad; it might have worked at feature length."<ref name="NYT">[http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/12/movies/12nega.html?mcubz=0 New York Times - 'Negadon: The Monster From Mars' Headlines a Triple Bill of Anime]</ref>
http://www.animenewsnetwork.cc/review/negadon-dvd
==Awards==
==Awards==
*20th Digital Contents Grand Prix - Outstanding Production Award
*9th Japan Media Arts Festival - Jury Recommended Work
==Video Releases==
==Video Releases==
'''''Japanese''''' DVD (2005)
'''Japanese''' DVD (2005)
 
'''U.S. Manga Corps''' DVD (2006)
*Region: 1
*Discs: 1
*Audio: Japanese, English
*Subtitles: English
*Special Features:
*Notes: Out of print.
==Videos==
==Videos==
{{Videos|
{{Videos|
Line 76: Line 98:
}}
}}
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*''Negadon: The Monster from Mars'' refers to the year 2025 as "[[wikipedia:Shōwa period|Showa]] 100," suggesting that Japanese Emperor [[wikipedia:Hirohito|Hirohito]] lived to be 124.
*According to Central Park Media's press release, ''Negadon: The Monster from Mars'' is the first fully computer-animated monster film.<ref name="CPM">[https://web.archive.org/web/20060724052732/http://www.centralparkmedia.com:80/news/news.cfm?NewsID=89 Central Park Media Unveils "NEGADON" Contest, Website, Trailer, and Screening]</ref>
==External Links==
==External Links==
*[http://www.h2.dion.ne.jp/~magara/project_En.html Official site]
*[http://www.h2.dion.ne.jp/~magara/project_En.html Official site]
*[http://www.scifijapan.com/articles/2006/05/12/event-coverage-negadon-the-monster-from-mars/ SciFi Japan's coverage of the New York City premiere of ''Negadon: The Monster from Mars'']
==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}

Revision as of 14:24, 7 September 2017

Negadon: The Monster from Mars
The Japanese poster for Negadon: The Monster from Mars
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png Great Planet Monster Negadon

Directed by Jun Awazu
Producer Kazuki Sunami
Written by Jun Awazu
Music by Shingo Terasawa
Distributor CoMix WaveJP
Central Park MediaUS
Running time 26 minutes
Aspect ratio 2.35:1

Negadon: The Monster from Mars (惑星大怪獣ネガドン,   Wakusei Daikaijû Negadon, lit. Great Planet Monster Negadon) is a 2005 computer-animated Japanese short kaiju film, written and directed by Jun Awazu and distributed by CoMix Wave Inc. It premiered at the Tokyo International Film Festival on October 16, 2005. Styled after the kaiju films of the 1950's and 60's, Negadon depicts a scientist piloting a giant robot to save Tokyo from a space monster ten years after an accident involving the same machine led to the death of his daughter.

Plot

In the year 2025, Earth's population has reached 10 billion, and its resources are at a breaking point.

"Man always brings about disaster by his own hand."

His last thought is, This will do, right, Emi?

Yoshizawa watches the sun set as Tokyo begins to rebuild.

Staff

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Directed by   Jun Awazu
  • Written by   Jun Awazu
  • Produced by   Kazuki Sunami
  • Music by   Shingo Terasawa, Akane Yumoto ("Dream in True Color: The Sky in 2015")
  • Cinematography by   Jun Awazu
  • Edited by   Jun Awazu

Cast

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Dai Shimizu   as   Ryuichi Narasaki (voice)
  • Takuma Sasahara   as   Seiji Yoshizawa (voice)
  • Akane Yumoto   as   Emi Narasaki (voice)
  • Masafumi Kishi   as   Narrator / TV Announcer (voice)

English Dub

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Sean Schemmel   as   Ryuichi Narasaki
  • Dan Green   as   Seiji Yoshizawa
  • Annice Moriarty   as   Emi Narasaki
  • Marc Thompson   as   TV Announcer
  • Tom Wayland, Tim Werenko   as   Other Voices

Appearances

Monsters

  • Negadon
  • Miroku

Weapons, Vehicles, and Races

Development

Production

http://www.scifijapan.com/articles/?s=negadon

Gallery

U.S. Release

Central Park Media acquired the rights to Negadon: The Monster from Mars in January 2005, and commissioned an English dub from TripWire Productions. The film was screened at several conventions and theaters throughout the year; in theaters, it was part of a triple feature with two other anime shorts, Cat Soup and Kakurenbo: Hide and Seek. A partial list of U.S. screenings is below:

  • Anime Syracuse (Syracuse, NY) - March 25, 2006
  • ImaginAsian Theater (New York City, NY) - May 9-18, 2016
  • Egyptian Theatre (Hollywood, CA) - June 30, 2006
  • G-Fest (Rosemont, IL) - July 8, 2006
  • Alamo Mason Park Cinema (Houston, TX) - Opened July 12, 2006

The film was released on DVD by U.S. Manga Corps on July 11, 2006.[1]

Alternate Titles

Reception

Writing for the New York Times, Neil Genzlinger remarked that Negadon: The Monster from Mars "looks great and even has a respectable dose of the character development and back story that anime sometimes spurns... The setup is lovely, but the film seems in a hurry to get to the big clash, as if desperate not to violate some anime time limit. Too bad; it might have worked at feature length."[2]

http://www.animenewsnetwork.cc/review/negadon-dvd

Awards

  • 20th Digital Contents Grand Prix - Outstanding Production Award
  • 9th Japan Media Arts Festival - Jury Recommended Work

Video Releases

Japanese DVD (2005)

U.S. Manga Corps DVD (2006)

  • Region: 1
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: Japanese, English
  • Subtitles: English
  • Special Features:
  • Notes: Out of print.

Videos

Japanese Negadon: The Monster from Mars Trailer #1
Japanese Negadon: The Monster from Mars Trailer #2
Japanese Negadon: The Monster from Mars Trailer #3
Japanese Negadon: The Monster from Mars Trailer #4

Trivia

  • Negadon: The Monster from Mars refers to the year 2025 as "Showa 100," suggesting that Japanese Emperor Hirohito lived to be 124.
  • According to Central Park Media's press release, Negadon: The Monster from Mars is the first fully computer-animated monster film.[3]

External Links

References

This is a list of references for Negadon: The Monster from Mars. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]