Star Wars is getting the anime treatment in a new anthology series for Disney+! In Star Wars: Visions, the stories you know and love from galaxies far, far away will be told through the singular style and tradition of Japanese anime. There will be an English dub of the series, as well as a full Japanese cast.
"Star Wars: Visions Anime Is Coming to Disney Plus". IGN.com. Retrieved March 28, 2021. ^ a b Bankhurst, Adam (July 3, 2021). "Star Wars: Visions First Look and Release Date Revealed". IGN. Retrieved July 3, 2021.
Retrieved November 7, 2018. ^ "Star Wars Resistance, All-New Anime-Inspired Series, Set for Fall Debut". StarWars.com. April 26, 2018. Archived from the original on March 30, 2019.
In March 2018, Jon Favreau was hired to write and produce a live-action Star Wars series for Disney+. The series follows "a lone gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy far from the authority of the New Republic " a few years after the events of Return of the Jedi.
^ Brooks, Dan (March 13, 2020). " ' There's a Star Wars for Every Generation': Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures Returns". StarWars.com. Archived from the original on March 13, 2020. Retrieved March 14, 2020. ^ Spangler, Todd (November 28, 2018). "Disney Launches 'Star Wars' Digital Animated Series to Turn Kids Into Fans". Variety.
Star Wars has been drawing heavily from Japanese culture since Luke Skywalker first met a space samurai and went full Hidden Fortress on the Death Star. From Darth Vader’s ancient Japan-inspired attire to the prequels’ geisha aesthetic, Rey’s top knots and The Mandalorian’s direct nods to Kurosawa, Japanese pop-culture is as woven into ...
End of dialog window. Set to debut September 22, Star Wars: Visions is an anthology featuring seven shorts from some of the top studios in anime, including Ghost in the Shell’s Production IG, A Whisker Away’s Studio Colorado and Batman Ninja’s Kamikaze Douga.
The series gets its own 'Animatrix'. “There are so many opportunities to reflect Japanese storytelling in a Star Wars universe,” executive Jaqui Lopez says in the first-look reel from the upcoming Star Wars: Visions. For a series not known for understatement, that's quite a whopper. Star Wars has been drawing heavily from Japanese culture ...
Based on the three-minute sizzle reel, the series will dive deep into Japanese tradition, with lifelong fans/artists reimagining the Star Wars world through a uniquely Japanese lens: That is, a lens held by actual Japanese people and not George Lucas after attending a late-night screening of Rashomon.
Star Wars anthology series that will see some of the world's best anime creators bring their talent to this beloved universe.
The reoccurring Star Wars franchise phrase, "I have a bad feeling about this" (or some variation of) is said several times.
Seven anime studios are putting their unique spin on the world of Star Wars, a first for the franchise. Yet, it feels like Star Wars has finally come full circle. “Japanese animation inspired a lot of the people at Lucasfilm over the years,” said executive producer James Waugh.
Star Wars borrowed specific elements from Japan (and elsewhere), incorporated them, reinvented them, and presented them in a brand new way. Japanese culture has done the same for thousands of years, whether that was taking and reinventing culture or artistic elements from China, Korea, India or, later, the West.
Japanese period films, called jidaijeki, were clearly a big inspiration for Star Wars. Akira Kurosawa looms large, with The Hidden Fortress perhaps being the biggest single source, providing inspiration for characters, their relationships, and even plot points.
Take Osamu Tezuka, for instance. Considered the father of anime, he was inspired by Walt Disney. Yet, what he created wasn’t simply made-in-Japan Disney animation. It was different and inspired a new generation of animators at home (as well as, it seems, back at Disney).
Star Wars draws from a variety of sources, but famously Japanese culture and cinema were among George Lucas’s many inspirations. For example, design-wise, the Imperial and Rebel crests were influenced by mon or emblems traditionally used in Japan by families, or more recently, companies. G/O Media may get a commission.
In March 2018, Jon Favreau was hired to write and produce a live-action Star Wars series for Disney+. The series follows "a lone gunfighter in the outer reaches of the galaxy far from the authority of the New Republic " a few years after the events of Return of the Jedi.
Star Wars Galaxy of Adventures debuted on the "Star Wars Kids" YouTube channel and website in late 2018. Using stylized animation, the series of shorts reimagine key scenes from the saga, initially leading up the release of Episode IX.
Production began in 2012 prior to the Disney acquisition, with 39 episodes completed and 62 additional scripts finished.
Nelvana, the animation studio that produced the animated segment of the Holiday Special, was hired to create two animated series which aired together on ABC: Droids (1985–1986) follows the adventures of C-3PO and R2-D2, and its sister series Ewoks (1985–1987) features Wicket and other members of the titular species from Return of the Jedi, both set before the events of the original trilogy. One reviewer calls Droids "rudimentary" and Ewoks "unremarkable", but writes that both "marked the first major effort to expand the Star Wars 'brand' beyond its original live-action film existence."
Main article: Star Wars Resistance. The animated series Star Wars Resistance debuted in late 2018, shifting the animation style towards anime -inspired cel-shading visuals, and focuses on a young Resistance pilot Kazuda Xiono before and during The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi, leading up to The Rise of Skywalker.
The series will follow Rebel spy Cassian Andor, five years before the events of Rogue One, during the formative years of the Rebellion. In November 2018, a prequel series to the 2016 film Rogue One centered on Cassian Andor was confirmed to be in development, and described as a " rousing spy thriller".
In April 2020, Variety reported that a female-centric live-action Star Wars series is in development for Disney+ with Russian Doll co-creator Leslye Headland serving as a writer and showrunner. In early November, Headland expounded that the series would be set "in a pocket of the universe and a pocket of the timeline that we don't know much about," elaborating that she was more engaged creatively with the geography of the Star Wars universe than its existing visuals. On November 5, Deadline reported that the series was expected to be an "action thriller with martial arts elements". On Disney Investor Day 2020, it was revealed that it would take place during the late High Republic era.