Trigun (1998 anime)
Trigun トライガン | |
---|---|
Directed By | Satoshi Nishimura |
Produced By | Shigeru Kitayama |
Written By | Yōsuke Kuroda |
Music By | Tsuneo Imahori |
Studio | Madhouse |
Original Manga By | Yasuhiro Nightow |
Licensed By | Pioneer/Geneon Entertainment USA (US, former)[1] FUNimation Entertainment(US, current)[1] |
Distributed By | Madman Entertainment (AU, former)[1] |
Japanese Network | TV Tokyo[1] |
US Network | Adult Swim[1][2] |
Network | Crunchyroll (worldwide, current)[1] |
Japanese Premiere | April 1, 1998[3] |
US Premiere | April 1, 2003[4] |
Episodes | 26 |
Trigun (Japanese:トライガン) is the first anime adaptation of Trigun, released in 1998.
Overview
From Crunchyroll:
Vash the Stampede is a wanted gunslinger with a habit of turning entire towns into rubble. His path of destruction reaches across the wastelands of a desert planet. Oddly enough, for such an infamous outlaw, there’s no proof he’s ever taken a life. In fact, he’s a pacifist who’s more doofus than desperado. There’s definitely a whole lot more to Vash than his reputation lets on.
Episodes
- Main article: List of Trigun (1998 anime) episodes
The anime consists of 26 episodes, each with a runtime of approximately 24 minutes.
- 600億$$の男
The $$60 Billion Man - TRUTH OF MISTAKE
- PEACE MAKER
- LOVE&PEACE
- HARD PUNCHER
- LOST JULY
- B. D. N.
- そして荒野と空の間を
AND BETWEEN THE WASTELAND AND SKY... - MURDER MACHINE
- QUICK DRAW
- ESCAPE FROM PAIN
- DIABLO
- ヴァッシュ·ザ·スタンピード
Vash the Stampede - LITTLE ARCADIA
- DEMONS EYE
- FIFTH MOON
- レム·セイブレム
REM SAVEREM - 今は, さよなら
GOODBYE FOR NOW - HANG FIRE
- FLYING SHIP
- OUT OF TIME
- ALTERNATIVE
- 楽園
PARADISE - 罪
SIN - LIVE THROUGH
- こんなにも青い空の下で
UNDER THE SKY SO BLUE
Soundtrack
The music for Trigun was composed by Tsuneo Imahori and produced by Yukako Inoue. The series' soundtrack was released on two albums, Trigun The First Donuts and Trigun: The 2nd Donut Happy Pack.
Theme Songs
All 26 episodes use the same opening and closing theme songs.
Opening
"H.T" by Tsuneo Imahori
Closing
"風は未来に吹く" (Hepburn: Kaze wa Mirai ni Fuku) by AKIMA & NEOS
Film
Main article: Trigun: Badlands Rumble
Trigun: Badlands Rumble is a theatrical film released in 2010, telling an original story taking place within the anime continuity.
Production
Staff
Cast
- Continued on the following subpage.
Releases
TV
In Japan, Trigun was originally broadcast on TV Tokyo, premiering on April 1, 1998.[6]
In the U.S., Trigun aired on Adult Swim, a programming block on Cartoon Network, first premiering on March 31, 2003, airing at midnight (12:00 A.M.).[7][4]
Home Media
- See subpages Home media releases, Foreign home media releases
Gallery
-
Adult Swim web promo.
- See subpage Episode title cards
Notes
Links
- Young King Ours - Official Trigun Website (Japanese, archived)
- Bandai Channel - Official Trigun Website (Japanese, archived)
- Cartoon Network [adult swim] - Trigun Homepage (archived)
- Trigun on FUNimation
- Trigun on Crunchyroll
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Trigun (TV) - Anime News Network
- ↑ [adult swim] | Shows - Trigun (archived)
- ↑ 放映リスト (Japanese, archived)
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Cartoon Network | TV Schedule - March 31, 2003 (archived)
- ↑ スタッフ・キャストリスト (Japanese, archived)
- ↑ TV Tokyo - Anime News Network
- ↑ Trigun Date Set - Anime News Network