Millions of manga fans loved Call of the Night for its beautiful story-telling, and LIDEN Flims decided to bring that store to life in the form of an anime. Call of the Night is getting close to its release, so LIDEN Films released a new trailer for the anime to give us a glimpse of the upcoming anime.
Call of the Night is scheduled to release worldwide in July 2022; however, the studio has yet to give us an exact release date for the first episode. Since the anime is only a couple of months away, we can expect news from the studio before May.
Call of the Night is written and illustrated by Kotoyama, his second manga series after Dagashi Kashi. It started in issue #39 of Shogakukan 's Weekly Shōnen Sunday, published on August 28, 2019. Shogakukan has collected its chapters into individual tankōbon volumes. The first volume was published on November 18, 2019.
An anime television series adaptation by Liden Films will premiere in July 2022 on Fuji TV 's Noitamina programming block. Unable to sleep or find true satisfaction in his daily life, Ko Yamori stops going to school and begins wandering the streets at night.
It has been serialized in Shogakukan's Weekly Shōnen Sunday since August 2019. In North America, the manga is licensed for English release by Viz Media. An anime television series adaptation by Liden Films is set to premiere in July 2022 on Fuji TV's Noitamina programming block.
A new cast member is ready to go bump in the night with a new key visual and a new character preview video for Call of the Night (known in Japan as Yofukashi no Uta), an upcoming TV anime based on the supernatural romantic comedy manga by Kotoyama about an insomniac human boy who has a fateful encounter with a vampire ...
An anime adaptation of Kotoyama's vampire romance manga Call of the Night is officially in the works, and set to land in July 2022. The manga centers on a man who meets a vampire and is quickly thrown into a whole new world that he must navigate.
Liden FilmsLiden Films is working on the animation. Recently, the Call of The Night anime adaptation was officially confirmed, and here's everything you need to know about it. Written and illustrated by Kotoyama, Call of The Night is a popular Japanese manga series that came out in 2019.
He can't control the ability, but it's shown that he turns into a half-vampire whenever he sees his blood.
The Chainsaw Man anime is finally on the way! Crunchyroll announced Monday that it has acquired the streaming rights to the highly-anticipated series based on the manga by Tatsuki Fujimoto. Ryū Nakayama (The Rising of the Shield Hero) is set to direct.
Must-See Series to Watch First on Crunchyroll An anime adaptation of Kotoyama's Call of the Night manga is coming to the renowned Noitamina programming block in July 2022, which broadcast such hits as The Promised Neverland, PSYCHO-PASS and the current Ranking of Kings.
Chapter 88: Star Chainsaw.
Initially released as a manga series based on supernatural and romantic comedy themes, the series has come a long way. It was written and illustrated by Kotoyama and further published by Shogakukan Publications. It was serialized in Weekly Shonen Sunday manga magazine and its English version was given by Viz Media.
As per the reports by the creators, the anime series is going to follow the original plot from the manga. The plot of the manga follows the life of an insomniac boy named Ko Yamori. Initially, Ko got really frustrated with not falling asleep at all, resulting in him stopping going to school.
Just like the manga series, main characters like Ko Yamori, Akira Asi, Nazuna Nanakusa, Seri Kikyo, and more are going to be in the center. Where Ko and Nazuna are going to be the main lead characters as per the manga and visuals. The series followed a very good picturization and the character design is absolutely up to mark.
Call of the Night manga by Kotoyama was first published in the Weekly Shonen Sunday magazine in 2019. The series will receive an anime adaptation in July 2022.
A grandma by heart who loves to knit, sketch, and swing in parks. Binge-reads a massive amount of manga from psychological to shounen-ai. Either awkward or salty, there's no in-between.