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- Animerama abstract "Animerama (アニメラマ) is a series of thematically-related adult anime feature films originally conceived and initiated by Osamu Tezuka and made at his Mushi Production animation studio from the late 1960s to early 1970s, perhaps intended as animated counterparts to the then-emergent pink films (a direct connection being Shigemi Satoyoshi being the scenarist for Cleopatra).As well as the erotic themes, they are also defined by mixing more typical traditional animation with sequences of UPA and Yōji Kuri-influenced experimental use of modern design, limited animation and still paintings akin to Tezuka's experimental short films and like those largely were are all directed, sometimes sharing the billing with Tezuka, by Eiichi Yamamoto. The first, A Thousand & One Nights, was the first erotic animated feature film and, at 130 minutes, remains one of the longest ever animated films. The first two are also notable for having scores by famed composer and electronic rearranger Isao Tomita. The third, Belladonna, made without Tezuka's direct involvement, is more serious than its predecessors and more avant-garde still, telling its story largely through pans over still, panoramic paintings with narration.The three films in the trilogy are:A Thousand & One Nights (千夜一夜物語, Senya Ichiya Monogatari) (1969)Cleopatra (クレオパトラ, Kureopatora) (1970)Belladonna (哀しみのベラドンナ, Kanashimi no Beradonna) (1973)All three were released onto DVD-Video by the video division of Columbia Music Entertainment, both separately and as a box set, in 2004 in Japan and re-released in 2006.A 1991 original video animation based on part of Ihara Saikaku's The Life of an Amorous Man (released on VHS in the United Kingdom and Ireland as The Sensualist) made at Grouper Production is sometimes considered an unofficial successor to the trilogy, owing to the involvement of Yamamoto as screenwriter and its similarly both erotic and experimental imagery.".
- Animerama wikiPageExternalLink animerama.
- Animerama wikiPageExternalLink detailview.html?KEY=XT-2199.
- Animerama wikiPageExternalLink ENGver.html.
- Animerama wikiPageID "13067496".
- Animerama wikiPageRevisionID "544945167".
- Animerama hasPhotoCollection Animerama.
- Animerama subject Category:Animated_film_series.
- Animerama subject Category:Fantasy_films_by_series.
- Animerama subject Category:Film_trilogies.
- Animerama subject Category:Lists_of_animated_films.
- Animerama subject Category:Osamu_Tezuka_anime.
- Animerama type Abstraction100002137.
- Animerama type Artifact100021939.
- Animerama type Creation103129123.
- Animerama type Event100029378.
- Animerama type FantasyFilmsBySeries.
- Animerama type Movie106613686.
- Animerama type Object100002684.
- Animerama type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Animerama type Product104007894.
- Animerama type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Animerama type Show106619065.
- Animerama type SocialEvent107288639.
- Animerama type Whole100003553.
- Animerama type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Animerama comment "Animerama (アニメラマ) is a series of thematically-related adult anime feature films originally conceived and initiated by Osamu Tezuka and made at his Mushi Production animation studio from the late 1960s to early 1970s, perhaps intended as animated counterparts to the then-emergent pink films (a direct connection being Shigemi Satoyoshi being the scenarist for Cleopatra).As well as the erotic themes, they are also defined by mixing more typical traditional animation with sequences of UPA and Yōji Kuri-influenced experimental use of modern design, limited animation and still paintings akin to Tezuka's experimental short films and like those largely were are all directed, sometimes sharing the billing with Tezuka, by Eiichi Yamamoto. ".
- Animerama label "Animerama".
- Animerama label "Animerama".
- Animerama sameAs Animerama.
- Animerama sameAs m.02z57t0.
- Animerama sameAs Q2850086.
- Animerama sameAs Q2850086.
- Animerama sameAs Animerama.
- Animerama wasDerivedFrom Animerama?oldid=544945167.
- Animerama homepage animerama.
- Animerama isPrimaryTopicOf Animerama.