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%E9%A2%A8%E3%81%BE%E3%81%8B%E3%81%9B%EF%BC%92
%E5%AE%89%E5%8E%9F%E9%BA%97%E5%AD%90 Lyrics


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Comments from YouTube:

@kirivert5022

outra braba

@binusdimas

the ending so japanese tv show

@tjena4390

If this anime was given more production money and the author did a better writing job this wouldve been a success, good character diversity

@gabrielandradeferraz386

it was from an age where you usually have like 30 episodes just to get to know the characters to then put in some actual plot, I dont think the autor was given a good chance to write the anime, given the expectations of the time, there is anime that is way worse that got way more episodes. I doesn't look very expensive to produce too, so I am not sure that money was the issue this early on with this anime. It definetly deserved way more episodes.

@raizowanderer

It's an original anime without a manga.. A one volume manga came out after the release of the anime

@tjena4390

@@raizowanderer ohh damn, thats interesting

@FrostSoul-qs6kq

as someone thats been to animation school , Back then it took tons more work and effort to draw each and every picture of a cartoon to get animation that was 'Smooth' looking and artistic , unlike today where its more of a case of copy paste digitally and anime like One piece keep vomiting episode after episode with its characters that look like they had siblings for parents .

The Artists sometimes of these forgotten anime even sell the art panels used in the animation out of desperation . its really sad seeing them go out for 3 to 4 US dollars while toy companies sell the 'mint condition' merch for insane prices like 500 to 2000 .

@SmileyTrilobite

I remember finding this on DVD by surprise in the early 2000s (still have it). At least on the US side, the anime wasn’t heavily marketed compared to another chanbara comedy/drama written and directed by Akitaro Daichi: Jubei-chan. The US localizer for Tsukikage Ran was Bandai, and I think it fell under the radar while their marketing highlighted shows like Gundam, Outlaw Star, Trigun, Vision of Escaflowne, and Cowboy Bebop. Tsukikage Ran doesn’t seem as complex for most of it or epic in scale, but I don’t think it tries to be. I appreciate the endearing lead characters and genre parody.

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