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Space Battleship Yamato

Specials 1977 - 2009

  • 1977-08-06T10:30:00Z on YTV
  • 30m
  • 18h 19m (15 episodes)
  • Japan
  • Japanese, Italian
  • Drama, Action, Adventure, Anime
Space Battleship Yamato is a Japanese science fiction anime series featuring an eponymous spacecraft. It is also known to English-speaking audiences as Space Cruiser Yamato; an English-dubbed and heavily edited version of the series was broadcast on North American and Australian television as Star Blazers. The first two seasons of this version were broadcast in Greece in 1981-82 as Διαστημόπλοιο Αργώ. An Italian-language version was also broadcast under the name Star Blazers in Italy, and a Portuguese-language version was successfully shown in Brazil under the title Patrulha Estelar and Viaje a la Ultima Galaxia or Astronave Intrepido in Spain and Latin America. It is a seminal series in the history of anime, marking a turn towards more complex serious works and influencing works such as Mobile Suit Gundam and Neon Genesis Evangelion; Hideaki Anno has ranked Yamato his favorite anime and credited it with sparking his interest in anime. Yamato was the first anime series or movie to win the Seiun Award, a feat not repeated until the 1985 Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind.

15 episodes

Special 1 Space Battleship Yamato

  • 1977-08-06T10:30:00Z2h 16m

Space Battleship Yamato is the first theatrical movie based on the classic anime series. Unlike the later films that would follow it, this is a compilation film consisting of various television episodes edited from the "Iscandar" arc of the television series. It originally had a new ending created for the theatrical release in which Starsha had died before the Yamato reaching Iscandar. This ending was removed for the TV broadcast and was lost until the DVD release. In English speaking countries it was known by the title, Space Cruiser.

Farewell to Space Battleship Yamato, also called Arrivederci Yamato, is the second film based on the classic anime series Space Battleship Yamato. The same storyline was reused and expanded on later in the year on TV in Space Battleship Yamato II, albeit with a more upbeat ending.

Yamato: The New Voyage was a television movie that was first broadcast on Fuji TV. This was the third movie in the Space Battleship Yamato saga. The Yamato crew must defeat the new Dark Nebula Empire.

1980-08-02T10:30:00Z

Special 4 Be Forever Yamato

Special 4 Be Forever Yamato

  • 1980-08-02T10:30:00Z2h 26m

Be Forever Yamato is the third theatrical film based on the classic anime series Space Battleship Yamato. The film is unique for switching from monaural VistaVision to Quadraphonic CinemaScope when the Yamato enters the Double Galaxy.

1983-03-19T10:30:00Z

Special 5 Final Yamato

Special 5 Final Yamato

  • 1983-03-19T10:30:00Z2h 44m

The Space Battleship Yamato saga ended in 1983 with the fourth theatrical movie, Final Yamato. At a running time of approximately 165 minutes, Final Yamato currently holds the record as being the longest running animated film ever made.

Space Battleship Yamato: Resurrection is Japanese animated film, and the first part of a planned series of films which are the latest addition to the Space Battleship Yamato saga. Resurrection is set in the year 2220, 21 years after the first Yamato story and 17 years after the story of the last film, Final Yamato. A wandering black hole is approaching the Solar system, and will surely destroy all life on Earth. The decision has been made to evacuate Earth's entire population. The planet to which Earth's population is being moved is called Amare, ruled by Queen Iriya, some 27,000 light years away in the Sairam star system. When the film opens, that task is already under way. The Yamato had been destroyed in 2203.

1995-02-21T10:30:00Z

Special 12 Hope for Tomorrow

Special 12 Hope for Tomorrow

  • 1995-02-21T10:30:00Z30m

1995-12-18T10:30:00Z

Special 13 Launch

Special 13 Launch

  • 1995-12-18T10:30:00Z30m

1996-08-25T10:30:00Z

Special 14 Combat

Special 14 Combat

  • 1996-08-25T10:30:00Z30m

Many a concert was held during the Yamato production years with fans turning out in droves to watch Hiroshi Miyagawa wave the wand and bring the spirit to life before their very eyes. Each event was a huge success, but throughout that time Yoshinobu Nishizaki (whose had produced live music performances long before he ever got into anime) was nurturing something else: a classic orchestral concert in the grand tradition. That dream came true on May 4, 1984, when The Yamato Grand Symphony was performed at Tokyo's Postal Life Insurance Hall by the NHK Symphony Orchestra.

1,800 fans from 12 to 24 years old were chosen by lottery to attend. Since it was recorded on video, formal dress was required. A non-Yamato overture was performed prior to Producer Nishizaki's opening remarks, but it was not recorded. The concert became one of three Yamato albums released on CD along with the first two symphonic suites in 1985. Numerous video releases also appeared in multiple formats. A 'trackdown' recording of the symphony was included in the 2004 Eternal Edition Premium box set which was remastered from a combination of video and tape sources. The most recent release was a DVD from Columbia in 2005.

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