Trigun Badlands Rumble

From No Man's Land - A Trigun Wiki
Revision as of 04:23, 17 March 2023 by imported>Whyitskai (→‎Releases: added subheadings, started writing about the premiere at Sakura Con, started theatrical release section. also removed the citations from the infobox for the time being as they were not properly appearing in the references section at the bottom of the page and it was bothering me. will fix that later (all pages formerly cited in the infobox are cited elsewhere in the article so they are still in the article text))

Trigun Badlands Rumble
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Trigun: Badlands Rumble
Directed By Satoshi Nishimura
Produced By
Written By Yasuko Kobayashi
Music By Tsuneo Imahori
Studio Madhouse
Original Manga By Yasuhiro Nightow
Licensed By
Distributed By
Japanese Network
US Network Adult Swim
Network
Japanese Premiere
US Premiere April 2, 2010
(Sakura Con exclusive screening)
Premiere April 24, 2010
Episodes
Released
Budget
Runtime 90 minutes
Box Office 72 million yen

Trigun: Badlands Rumble (also called Trigun The Movie) is a 2010 theatrical film which takes place in the 1998 anime continuity.

Overview

Summary

Cast

Production Staff

Soundtrack

The film's soundtrack was composed by Tsuneo Imahori. It was released as the album Trigun - Badlands Rumble - O.S.T..

Releases

World Premiere

The film premiered on April 2nd, 2010 at Sakura Con in Seattle, Washington, USA.[1] It was shown in standard definition, in Japanese, and without English subtitles.[2] After the premiere, a Q&A was held with the director, Satoshi Nishimura, and character designer, Takahiro Yoshimatsu. The film was screened twice more during the convention on April 3rd and 4th, 2010.[1]

Theatrical

The film premiered theatrically in Japan on April 24th, 2010.[3]

Foreign

Home Media

Manga

"Gekijōban Trigun Bangai-hen: Dodongo Kyōdai Honeycombed Village no Kettō" is a 2-part manga story that serves as a follow-up to film's story. It originally published in Young King Hours in 2010.[4] It was also bundled with the first pressing of the Japanese limited-edition DVD of the film.[5] The manga was later included in the Trigun: Multiple Bullets anthology.

Notes

Links

References