Toho Champion Festival: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Toho Chanpion Matsuri.png|right|200px]] | [[File:Toho Chanpion Matsuri.png|right|200px]] | ||
The '''Toho Champion Festival''' {{Nihongo|東宝チャンピオンまつり|Tōhō Chanpion Matsuri}} was a [[Japan]]ese film festival that was held by [[Toho]] between [[1969]] and [[1978]]. First headlined by ''[[All Monsters Attack]]'', it was aimed primarily at children, bringing films new and old to theaters during the spring, summer, and winter months when school was not in session.<ref name="TK">{{cite web|url=https://www.tohokingdom.com/blog/toho-champion-festival/|title=Toho Champion Festival|author=Romero, Anthony|date=15 December 2013|work=Toho Kingdom}}</ref> Included among the festival lineups was every ''[[Godzilla (franchise)|Godzilla]]'' [[:Category:Godzilla Films|film]] released from 1969 to [[1975]], [[Space Amoeba]], every Godzilla film from [[1962]] to [[1968]] were re-released. In addition other tokusatsu films were re-released, [[The Mysterians]], [[Mothra (film)|Mothra]], [[King Kong Escapes]] and [[Latitude Zero]]. Television series episodes were also given theatrical runs, such as those of [[Tsuburaya Productions|Tsuburaya]]'s ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Return of Ultraman|Return of Ultraman]]'', ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Mirrorman (series)|Mirror Man]]'' and ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Ultraman Taro (series)|Ultraman Taro]]'', or Toho's own ''[[Warrior of Love Rainbowman (1972 series)|Warrior of Love Rainbowman]]''. The 1976 Spring Champion Festival was the only event that did not feature a kaiju film; instead, [[Disney]]'s ''[[wikipedia:Peter Pan (1953 film)|Peter Pan]]'' was the main feature, accompanied by anime TV episodes and Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck shorts. | The '''Toho Champion Festival''' {{Nihongo|東宝チャンピオンまつり|Tōhō Chanpion Matsuri}} was a [[Japan]]ese film festival that was held by [[Toho]] between [[1969]] and [[1978]]. First headlined by ''[[All Monsters Attack]]'', it was aimed primarily at children, bringing films new and old to theaters during the spring, summer, and winter months when school was not in session.<ref name="TK">{{cite web|url=https://www.tohokingdom.com/blog/toho-champion-festival/|title=Toho Champion Festival|author=Romero, Anthony|date=15 December 2013|work=Toho Kingdom}}</ref> Included among the festival lineups was every ''[[Godzilla (franchise)|Godzilla]]'' [[:Category:Godzilla Films|film]] released from 1969 to [[1975]], ''[[Space Amoeba]]'', every Godzilla film from [[1962]] to [[1968]] were re-released. In addition other tokusatsu films were re-released, ''[[The Mysterians]]'', ''[[Mothra (film)|Mothra]]'', ''[[King Kong Escapes]]'' and ''[[Latitude Zero]]''. Television series episodes were also given theatrical runs, such as those of [[Tsuburaya Productions|Tsuburaya]]'s ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Return of Ultraman|Return of Ultraman]]'', ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Mirrorman (series)|Mirror Man]]'' and ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Ultraman Taro (series)|Ultraman Taro]]'', or Toho's own ''[[Warrior of Love Rainbowman (1972 series)|Warrior of Love Rainbowman]]''. The 1976 Spring Champion Festival was the only event that did not feature a kaiju film; instead, [[Disney]]'s ''[[wikipedia:Peter Pan (1953 film)|Peter Pan]]'' was the main feature, accompanied by anime TV episodes and Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck shorts. | ||
The festival originated as a competitor to the [[jawp:東映まんがまつり|Toei Manga Festival]], which began in summer 1964 as the "Great Manga Parade." It was similarly held during the spring, summer, and occasionally winter school breaks, packaging together movies and television episodes by [[Toei]] and other companies for theatrical release. Prior to the Toho Champion Festival, Toho's kaiju and tokusatsu releases during the summer 1966 to 1969 seasons also appeared to compete with the Toei Manga Festival and its predecessors, with the co-features often being anime and tokusatsu TV show compilation films. Although the Toei Manga Festival significantly outlived the Toho Champion Festival, lasting until summer 1989, Toho has maintained a tradition of releasing a ''[[wikipedia:Doraemon|Doraemon]]'' movie nearly every spring break since 1980, often with multiple supporting films. | The festival originated as a competitor to the [[jawp:東映まんがまつり|Toei Manga Festival]], which began in summer 1964 as the "Great Manga Parade." It was similarly held during the spring, summer, and occasionally winter school breaks, packaging together movies and television episodes by [[Toei]] and other companies for theatrical release. Prior to the Toho Champion Festival, Toho's kaiju and tokusatsu releases during the summer 1966 to 1969 seasons also appeared to compete with the Toei Manga Festival and its predecessors, with the co-features often being anime and tokusatsu TV show compilation films. Although the Toei Manga Festival significantly outlived the Toho Champion Festival, lasting until summer 1989, Toho has maintained a tradition of releasing a ''[[wikipedia:Doraemon|Doraemon]]'' movie nearly every spring break since 1980, often with multiple supporting films. |
Revision as of 16:50, 22 February 2024
The Toho Champion Festival (東宝チャンピオンまつり was a Tōhō Chanpion Matsuri)Japanese film festival that was held by Toho between 1969 and 1978. First headlined by All Monsters Attack, it was aimed primarily at children, bringing films new and old to theaters during the spring, summer, and winter months when school was not in session.[1] Included among the festival lineups was every Godzilla film released from 1969 to 1975, Space Amoeba, every Godzilla film from 1962 to 1968 were re-released. In addition other tokusatsu films were re-released, The Mysterians, Mothra, King Kong Escapes and Latitude Zero. Television series episodes were also given theatrical runs, such as those of Tsuburaya's Return of Ultraman, Mirror Man and Ultraman Taro, or Toho's own Warrior of Love Rainbowman. The 1976 Spring Champion Festival was the only event that did not feature a kaiju film; instead, Disney's Peter Pan was the main feature, accompanied by anime TV episodes and Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck shorts.
The festival originated as a competitor to the Toei Manga Festival, which began in summer 1964 as the "Great Manga Parade." It was similarly held during the spring, summer, and occasionally winter school breaks, packaging together movies and television episodes by Toei and other companies for theatrical release. Prior to the Toho Champion Festival, Toho's kaiju and tokusatsu releases during the summer 1966 to 1969 seasons also appeared to compete with the Toei Manga Festival and its predecessors, with the co-features often being anime and tokusatsu TV show compilation films. Although the Toei Manga Festival significantly outlived the Toho Champion Festival, lasting until summer 1989, Toho has maintained a tradition of releasing a Doraemon movie nearly every spring break since 1980, often with multiple supporting films.
Festivals
Year | Lineup | ||
---|---|---|---|
Spring | Summer | Winter | |
1969 | N/A | N/A | |
1970 | |||
1971 | |||
1972 | |||
1973 | |||
1974 | N/A | ||
1975 | N/A | ||
1976 | |||
1977 | |||
1978 |
Selected attendance
Year | Film | Attendants[19] |
---|---|---|
1969 | All Monsters Attack | 1,480,000 |
1970 | King Kong vs. Godzilla | 870,000 |
Mothra vs. Godzilla | 730,000 | |
1971 | The Great Monster War: King Ghidorah vs. Godzilla | 1,350,000 |
Godzilla vs. Hedorah | 1,740,000 | |
Godzilla, Mothra, King Ghidorah: The Greatest Battle on Earth | 1,090,000 | |
1972 | Godzilla vs. Gigan | 1,780,000 |
Ebirah, Horror of the Deep | 780,000 | |
1973 | Godzilla vs. Megalon | 980,000 |
Son of Godzilla | 610,000 | |
1974 | Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla | 1,330,000 |
1975 | Terror of Mechagodzilla | 970,000 |
1977 | King Kong vs. Godzilla | 480,000 |
Videos
Trailers
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Miscellaneous
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See also
External links
References
This is a list of references for Toho Champion Festival. 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]
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Bibliography
- Nakamura, Satoshi; Shiraishi, Masahiko; Aita, Tetsuo; Tomoi, Taketo; Shimazaki, Jun; Maruyama, Takeshi; Shimizu, Toshifumi; Hayakawa, Masaru (29 November 2014). Godzilla Toho Champion Festival Perfection. ASCII MEDIA WORKS. ISBN 978-4-04-866999-3.
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