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Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still

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Giant Robo
U.S. cover of Giant Robo: The Animation DVD thin-pack
ジャイアントロボ — 地球が静止する日
(Jaianto Robo: Chikyū ga Seishisuru Hi)
GenreAtompunk, Martial Arts, Mecha
Created byMitsuteru Yokoyama
Original video animation
Directed byYasuhiro Imagawa
Produced byYasuhito Yamaki
Written byYasuhiro Imagawa
Eiichi Matsuyama
Music byMasamichi Amano
StudioMu Animation Studio (ep. 1–6)
Phoenix Entertainment (ep. 7)
Licensed by
Released July 22, 1992 January 25, 1998
Runtime40–60 minutes (each)
Episodes7
Manga
Written byYasuhiro Imagawa
Illustrated byMari Mizuta
Published byKadokawa Shoten
MagazineComic Genki
DemographicShōnen
Original run19921993
Volumes2
Original video animation
Gin Rei
Directed byYasuhiro Imagawa
Produced byYasuhito Yamaki
Written byMichiko Yokote
Music byMasamichi Amano
StudioMu Animation Studio
Licensed by
Released February 20, 1994 February 21, 1995
Runtime20–30 minutes (each)
Episodes3
Manga
The Day the Earth Burned
Written byYasuhiro Imagawa
Illustrated byYasunari Toda
Published byAkita Shoten
MagazineChampion Red
DemographicSeinen
Original runSeptember 2006January 2011
Volumes9
icon Anime and manga portal

Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still (ジャイアント・ロボ — 地球が静止する日, Jaianto Robo: Chikyū ga Seishisuru Hi) is a 1992–1998 OVA series based on Mitsuteru Yokoyama's manga series Giant Robo. It was written and directed by Yasuhiro Imagawa.

Giant Robo is a homage to Yokoyama's career. The series features characters and plotlines from the manga artist's entire canon of work, effectively creating an all-new story. The events take place in the near future, 10 years after the advent of the Shizuma Drive triggers the third energy revolution. The series follows the master of the titular Robo, Daisaku Kusama, and the Experts of Justice, an international police organization locked in battle with the BF Group, a secret society hell-bent on world domination.

The OVA is recognized for its "retro" style and operatic score. The character designs emulate Yokoyama's drawing style and the action setpieces are influenced by Hong Kong action cinema.

The first installment of the series, "The Black Attaché Case", was released on July 22, 1992. Originally intended to finish within 36 months, the seven-volume series was ultimately released over the span of six years. "The Grand Finale" was released on January 25, 1998. The OVA has since been translated into English, Cantonese, Dutch, French, Italian, Korean, Portuguese and Spanish.

Plot

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The series takes place in a retro-futuristic setting, where the Shizuma Drive ends the depletion of petroleum resources and the need for nuclear power. The system is a non-polluting recyclable energy source that powers everything on land, sea and air. Ten years prior to the events of the series a team of scientists, led by Professor Shizuma, created the revolutionary system. In the process they nearly destroyed the world and one of their own, Franken von Vogler, was lost in the event that went down in history as the "Tragedy of Bashtarle." At the start of Giant Robo, the BF Group is in the middle of recreating the event with aid from the resurfaced von Vogler.

The story explores a society completely brought down, within the span of one week, because of dependency on a single energy source and a state of prosperity tainted by compromise and deceit.[1]

The BF Group (BF団, Bīefu dan) is the main antagonist of the series. Their origin is unknown, but not so their reason to be:[2] to lead mankind down a road of ruin. The Group's forces consist of mechanical monsters, foot soldiers and Experts (エキスパート, Ekisupāto), individuals with superhuman powers.

The most powerful Experts form the ruling cadre of the organization, the cabal of the Magnificent Ten (十傑集, Jūkesshū). Its members swear allegiance to Big Fire (ビッグ・ファイア, Biggu Faia), the Group's founder and leader, with faltering loyalty punishable by death. At the time of The Day the Earth Stood Still, the Ten are gearing up for the final showdown with the IPO.

The International Police Organization (国際警察機構, Kokusai Keisatsu Kikō) is the BF Group's counterpart in the Giant Robo universe.[2] The leaders of the world acknowledged Big Fire as a threat to world security and signed the charter creating the IPO. The IPO's methods are information and espionage, looking to bring down the BF Group rather than defeating them in an all-out war.

However, to counter Big Fire's superhuman elements, "Experts" are recruited and granted special international jurisdiction. The agents assembled are known as the Experts of Justice (正義のエキスパート, Seigi no Ekisupāto). Working with the Experts from the Peking Branch is Daisaku Kusama. While he does not possess any special powers, Daisaku is the one and only master of Giant Robo. Constructed by Daisaku's father,[3] Giant Robo is the IPO's trump card against Big Fire.

Production

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In 1990, producer Yasuhito Yamaki approached Yasuhiro Imagawa about working on an animated version of the Giant Robo manga.[4] Imagawa, a self-proclaimed fan of Yokoyama's work, jumped at the chance of working on the project.[5] The Giant Robo manga had started in 1967 and had never been adapted into animation before. It had a live action adaptation that premiered on TV Asahi in 1967–68.

In pre-production, Imagawa was informed he could not use any of the supporting characters from the manga or live action versions.[6] Instead, with Yokoyama's permission, he populated the series with characters from the artist's entire canon of work, including Akakage, Babel II and Godmars.[7] The Giant Robo OVA still follows Daisaku and Robo, and the main antagonist is still called "Big Fire," but it features an all-new storyline with a completely different cast of characters.

The first episode was released July 22, 1992 with the following three installments staying close to the proposed schedule of six months between releases.[1] In the nine months between the releases of Volumes 4 and 5, two OVAs focusing on the character of GinRei were produced.[8] Barefoot GinRei (素足のGinRei, Suashi no GinRei) is a humorous take on GinRei's job as a spy for the IPO. Mighty GinRei (鉄腕GinRei, Tetsuwan GinRei), a send up of super robot series, features Ken Ishikawa as guest mech designer. A third OVA, GinRei with Blue Eyes (青い瞳の銀鈴, Aoi hitomi no Gin Rei), was released after Volume 5 of Giant Robo.

The final episode was released January 1998, almost three years after episode six. In between releases, members of the Giant Robo staff worked on other projects, including The Big O,[9] Getter Robo Armageddon,[10] and Super Atragon, a two-episode OVA of Shunro Oshikawa's Kaitei Gunkan novel.

Imagawa intended The Day the Earth Stood Still to be the second to final chapter in the conflict between the Experts of Justice and Big Fire.[11] The OVA would be preceded by The Birth of Zangetsu the Midday,[12] The Plan to Assassinate Daisaku - the Canary Penitentiary, The Boy of Three Days, The Greatest Battle in History - General Kanshin vs. Shokatsu Koumei and The Boy Detective, Kindaichi Shōtarō, Appears![13] The final chapter is titled The Siege of Babel. No further stories have been animated.[6]

Music

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Donizetti's aria serves as theme to the events of "The Tragedy of Bashtarle", always seen in flashback and shades of gray.

The score of Giant Robo was composed, arranged and conducted by Masamichi Amano and performed by the Warsaw Philharmonic Orchestra and Choir. The music ranges from grand pieces like "Charge! His Name is Giant Robo" to more light-hearted tracks like "Tetsugyu in Love."[1] Amano makes use of leitmotifs, recurring musical themes associated with different characters, places or events.

Giant Robo's "Dies Irae" is first heard during the destruction of the Champs-Élysées in episode one. The hymn, written in Medieval Latin, describes what is known in Christian eschatology as Judgment Day. Along with Amano's original compositions, the soundtrack features "Una furtiva lagrima" from the 1832 opera L'elisir d'amore.[14] For Imagawa, the aria embodies one of the themes of Giant Robo: "the sorrow of others not understanding your true feelings".[15]

The music of Giant Robo has been called one of the OVA's best accomplishments.[16] The complete score was released in seven soundtracks by Nippon Columbia. The first two soundtracks were released in North America by AnimeTrax.

Episodes

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Ep. # Title Length Release date
1 "The Black Attache Case" 56 minutes July 22, 1992
2 "The Tragedy of Bashtarlle" 43 minutes February 20, 1993
3 "The Magnetic Web Strategy" 41 minutes August 20, 1993
4 "The Twilight of the Super Heroes" 46 minutes January 20, 1994
5 "The Truth of Bashtarlle" 45 minutes October 21, 1994
6 "Crime and Punishment" 49 minutes June 25, 1995
7 "The Grand Finale" 58 minutes January 25, 1998

Design

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For series director Yasuhiro Imagawa, the world where the story unfolds must be convincing, for it is the setting and themes what determine the character and mecha designs.[17] In the world of Giant Robo, "anything goes".[5] The technology is futuristic and the morals are modern. The world's outlook is bright, but there is an underlying sense of some sinister motive beneath it.[4] Wuxia heroes coexist with modern-day espers and giant robots as soldiers in a struggle between good and evil.

Art style

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The Giant Robo OVA is one of many anime titles based on old properties produced in Japan during the 1990s.[18] While titles like Bubblegum Crisis 2040, Dirty Pair Flash and Tekkaman Blade gave modern spins to old classics, the creators of Giant Robo decided to go with a "retro" look.

The characters were designed by Toshiyuki Kubooka (Lunar series, The Idolmaster) and Akihiko Yamashita. (Princess Nine, Tide-Line Blue) The designers were asked to emulate Yokoyama's characters rather than create new ones. Admittedly "it took some time to catch on to Director Imagawa's intentions",[5] but with repetition the staff was able to achieve Imagawa's vision of characters that look like they stepped out of anime from the 1960s.[19]

The mechanical design is a case of high technology meets old school engineering.[20] The titular mecha is an advanced piece of machinery,[10] equipped with booster rockets and hidden weapons throughout. Sporting big stovepipe arms and exposed rivets,[17] the hulking giant is more like a weapon of mass destruction than a "robot superhero".[6] Vehicles like the Shizuma-powered Beetle or the Experts' airship fortress in the design of a zeppelin appear as if they had been conceived at the turn of the 20th century,[21] giving the world of Giant Robo a timeless feel.[2]

Giant Robo is credited with generating interest in re-imagining other artists' works,[14] including Osamu Tezuka and Go Nagai, and creating a "retro" style that has been used in productions like Sakura Wars.

Influences

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The modern notion of the giant robot genre can be traced back to the 1970s.[22] The works of Go Nagai (Mazinger, Getter Robo) created the genre and the debut of Yoshiyuki Tomino's Mobile Suit Gundam in 1979 solidified it. In this genre, the mecha is the focal point of the action. But for a genre anime, Giant Robo does not feature many giant robot battles;[23] instead, it is the human characters who do the fighting.

Most of the "Experts" featured in The Day the Earth Stood Still come from Yokoyama's manga adaptations of Outlaws of the Marsh and Romance of the Three Kingdoms,[24] both wuxia novels and half of the "Four Classics" of Chinese literature. Wuxia are martial arts adventures populated by skilled, honorable fighters.[25] In Hong Kong action cinema, the genre is associated with swordplay epics sprinkled with mysticism.

Given their origin, the heroes and villains of Giant Robo are superhuman combatants who share many elements with the errant knights of wuxia like strength, magic powers and the ability to fly.[16] In wuxia adventures, the characters are given nicknames that allude to their mastery of weapons, their physical appearance or their demeanor (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon). Imagawa, inspired by Yokayama's adaptation of Outlaws of the Marsh,[26] followed this convention and gave Giant Robo's characters similar descriptive names like "Shockwave Alberto", "Silent Chūjō" and "Kenji The Immortal."

In jiang hu, secret societies plot against the status quo (House of Flying Daggers) and powerful clans do war with each other.[27] Giant Robo features the ongoing conflict between the Experts of Justice and the BF Group.[2] Woven into the story are values commonly associated with martial arts films like honor,[25] loyalty and individual justice, best exemplified in the rivalry between Alberto and Taisō.[28]

Themes

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Giant Robo is structured as a "character driven drama,"[4] emphasizing the relationships and personal histories of the characters over a mystery surrounding the titular mecha or a philosophical diatribe. At the time of the series,[3] Daisaku is 12 years old and the only child in the Experts of Justice. Giant Robo is the story of how Daisaku grows up and works to respect his father's last will and testament of protecting the world from the BF Group.

The OVA is comparable to a bildungsroman,[29] where the story traces the main character's development from childhood to maturity. The two most important characters in the boy's coming of age are his fellow Experts Tetsugyu and Kenji Murasame.[30] Tetsugyu is a grown-up, but still a "child" at heart. In the course of the story he and Daisaku grow up and mature, creating a parallel between them. Kenji, on the other hand, is what Daisaku sees as an "adult." Willing to sacrifice others for the sake of happiness, Kenji contrasts Daisaku's idealism.[17]

The story delves on the relationship between fathers and sons and the unbreakable bond that exists between them.[15] The characters of Daisaku and Genya lost their fathers at a young age and have been entrusted with a legacy that turns them into adversaries during The Day the Earth Stood Still. Mirror images of one another, the characters fight to fulfill their respective fathers' dying wish at the expense of the other's.[16]

Dr. Kusama's dying question to Daisaku ("Can happiness be obtained without sacrifice? Can a new era be achieved without tragedy?") is at the crux of the series.[26] Shizuma and his colleagues gave the world a new era of prosperity at the expense of billions of lives. The BF Group is willing to cause great misfortune to make their ideal world a reality, while many sacrifice themselves to protect it. The ending is bittersweet, with both sides suffering losses. For Imagawa, this was the only way of getting his point across. The series ends with a dedication to all fathers and their children "giving a glimmer of hope in the midst of all the sorrow."

The series may also be seen as "sort of an analogy or an allegory about nuclear technology", especially in the context of Japan's complex relationship to both its destructive and constructive aspects.[31]

Release

[edit]

The series was originally released by Bandai Visual on VHS and LaserDisc from 1992 to 1998. On March 24, 2000, Toshiba Entertainment released the series on Region 2 DVD. The Giant Robo Giga Premium Collection (ASBY-1600) features digitally remastered video and audio, interviews with the creators and a companion book. Then, Media Factory released a limited edition Blu-ray Box on October 26, 2012, with the video remastered to 4K, as well as the NYAV Post English dub, interviews with the staff and Japanese cast, audio commentary by the staff, and a performance by the Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra. A standard edition Blu-ray Box was released on April 24, 2015, this time with English subtitles included.

The distribution of the English-language version has been handled by five different companies. A LaserDisc edition was released by L.A. Hero in 1994. After L.A. Hero's license expired, it was released on VHS by U.S. Renditions and Manga Entertainment.[32] After Manga Entertainment's license expired, Media Blasters released Giant Robo on DVD. Media Blasters' 2004 release includes the Japanese language track, the Manga Entertainment dub, an all-new dub by NYAV Post and subtitled Japanese commentary tracks on some of the episodes. After Media Blasters' license expired, Discotek Media announced at Otakon 2018 on August 12 that they have picked up the series for a Blu-ray release. Despite the included Gin Rei OVA being in a separate DVD release, it would include everything from Media Blasters' previous release. Discotek has also hoped to produce brand new extras for this release as well.[33][34] It was released on December 24, 2019,[35] while the Gin Rei release was released on December 29, 2020.[36][37]

Giant Robo was distributed in the Netherlands by Manga DVD and in Hong Kong by Asia Video. The French version, dubbed by Saint Maur Studios, was distributed by Pathé. The series was released in Italy by Granata Press.

[edit]

Along with the animated version, Imagawa scripted a manga illustrated by Mari Mizuta. Serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's Comic Genki, it delves deeper into the machinations of the BF Group and introduces Yellow Emperor Rai-se (黄帝・ライセ, Kitei Rai-se) as Big Fire's counterpart in the IPO.[2] The issues were later collected in two volumes published under the Newtype 100% Comics imprint.

  • Giant Robo Volume 1 (ISBN 4-04-852343-0) released August 1992
  • Giant Robo Volume 2 (ISBN 4-04-852441-0) released September 1993

A novelization by Hiroshi Yamaguchi was released in September 1993. (Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko: ISBN 4-04-413104-X)

The Day the Earth Burned Volume 1

In commemoration of Giant Robo's 40th anniversary, Imagawa began scripting Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Burned (ジャイアント・ロボ - 地球の燃え尽きる日, Jaianto Robo - Chikyū no Moetsukiru Hi). The manga, illustrated by Yasunari Toda, was serialized in Akita Shoten's Champion Red between September 2006 and January 2011. It chronicles Daisaku's involvement in a three-way battle between the IPO, the Magnificent Ten and the Murasame Clan. The Day the Earth Burned follows the general tone and style of the OVA, but takes place in a reality separate from that of the OVA; The Day the Earth Burned explores what the OVA did not: the true nature of the GR Project and the true leader of Big Fire, Big Fire himself.

  1. ISBN 978-4-253-23231-9 (released on March 20, 2007)
  2. ISBN 978-4-253-23232-6 (released on September 20, 2007)
  3. ISBN 978-4-253-23233-3 (released on March 19, 2008)
  4. ISBN 978-4-253-23234-0 (released on September 19, 2008)
  5. ISBN 978-4-253-23235-7 (released on April 20, 2009)
  6. ISBN 978-4-253-23236-4 (released on September 18, 2009)
  7. ISBN 978-4-253-23237-1 (released on May 20, 2010)
  8. ISBN 978-4-253-23238-8 (released on November 19, 2010)
  9. ISBN 978-4-253-23239-5 (released on April 20, 2011)

The Giant Robo video game (SLPM-62526) was released for PlayStation 2 on November 3, 2004 by D3 Publisher. Set in The Day the Earth Stood Still continuity, the player leads Daisaku Kusama and Giant Robo on a quest to defeat the BF Group. As Daisaku, the player can pick up items and power-ups on the battlefield; as Giant Robo, the player does battle with other mechas. A Versus Mode allows players to compete against each other using any of the robots featured on the series. The game is not available in Europe or North America.

Mighty Ginrei: Final Fight (COCC-12444), an audio drama sequel to the Mighty GinRei OVA, was released on April 21, 1995, by Nippon Columbia. Love Fight, a music collection tie-in, was released the same day.

Reception

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The final installment of Giant Robo was released on January 25, 1998, eight years after production began and a full decade since its inception.[38] The feature suffered from high running costs and low sales,[1] but was better received in America.[23] The series appeared in the 62nd position of Animage's Top 100 Anime List,[39] published in January 2001. In July of the same year, the series appeared on a list of the all time top 50 anime, according to Wizard Magazine.[40]

Critical reception has been largely positive. Hyper magazine rated it 10 out of 10 in 1996.[41] Three different reviewers from the AnimeOnDVD site gave Giant Robo an "A+".[21][42][43] John Huxley of Anime Boredom "highly recommends" the series and Anime Academy gives it a grade of 88%.[44]

Giant Robo has been called "one of the true timeless classics of Anime."[21] Mike Crandol of Anime News Network says Imagawa "takes the best of the old and mixes it with the best of the new to create the definitive giant robot story."[16] John Huxley of Anime Boredom concludes the series is "the super robot show as it was in your mind's eye, a perfect combination of the old without the disappointment of reality."[19]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Luce, Eric. "Giant Robo Feature". EX: The Online World of Anime & Manga. Archived from the original on 2006-12-07. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  2. ^ a b c d e "The world of Giant Robo: The BF Group vs. the IPO". Liner Notes. (1993). Giant Robo Volume 3. Bandai Visual.
  3. ^ a b "Character biographies". Liner Notes. (1992). Giant Robo Volume 1. Bandai Visual.
  4. ^ a b c "The Steel God cometh!". Liner Notes. (1992). Giant Robo Volume 1. Bandai Visual.
  5. ^ a b c "Vibrant Designs". Liner Notes. (1993). Giant Robo Volume 2. Bandai Visual.
  6. ^ a b c Khan, Ridwan (September 2002). "The Yasuhiro Imagawa Lecture". Animefringe: Online Anime Magazine. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  7. ^ "Behind the Night's Illusions - the characters of Giant Robo: the Animation (Archive)". Anime Jump. 1999. Archived from the original on 2003-07-13. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  8. ^ Ouellette, Martin (September–October 1994). "Ginrei". Protoculture Addicts (30): 14–21.
  9. ^ "Anime Central 2003 Panel". A Fan's View. Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  10. ^ a b "Animazement - Yasuhiro Imagawa". A Fan's View. 1999-03-20. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  11. ^ "Imagawa Answers Your Questions!". Liner Notes. (1993). Giant Robo Volume 3. Bandai Visual.
  12. ^ The 2007 Tetsujin 28-go: Hakuchuu no Zangetsu (鉄人28号 白昼の残月) feature film, written and directed by Imagawa, shares its name with this story.
  13. ^ The title is a reference to Shōtarō Kaneda, the boy detective of Tetsujin 28-go, and Kosuke Kindaichi, the fictional detective created by Seishi Yokomizo.
  14. ^ a b Clements, J. & McCarthy, H. (2001). The Anime Encyclopedia: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917. Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 1-880656-64-7.
  15. ^ a b Oshiguchi, Takashi. "Yasuhiro Imagawa." In Anime Interviews: The First Five Years of Animerica, Anime & Manga Monthly (1992–97). VIZ Media LLC, 1997, pp. 78–83. ISBN 1-56931-220-6.
  16. ^ a b c d Crandol, Mike (2003-02-09). "Old School: Giant Robo". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  17. ^ a b c Cahill, Peter. "Interview with "the three amigos"". EX: The Online World of Anime & Manga. Archived from the original on 2008-05-09. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  18. ^ Duffield, Patricia (April 2000). "Remakes of the '90s". Animerica Extra. 3 (5).
  19. ^ a b Huxley, John (2007-01-21). "Giant Robo review". Anime Boredom. Archived from the original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved 2007-06-01.
  20. ^ IGN Staff (2002-11-26). "Anime Video Archives: Giant Robo". IGN Insider. Archived from the original on 2004-12-12. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  21. ^ a b c Black, David. "Giant Robo Giga Premium Collection (3)". Anime on DVD. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  22. ^ "Ask John: How Did Anime Start?". Anime Nation. 2000-02-25. Archived from the original on 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  23. ^ a b MAHQ Staff (2002-08-15). "Yasuhiro Imagawa, Director of Mobile Fighter G Gundam". Mecha Anime HQ. Archived from the original on 2007-05-27. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  24. ^ Neidengard, M. (January 30, 1999). The World's Mightiest Robot. Cornell Japanese Animation Society Newsletter.
  25. ^ a b Bordwell, David. "Hong Kong Martial Arts Cinema." In Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: A Portrait of the Ang Lee Film. New York: Newmarket Press, 2000, pp. 14–21. ISBN 1-55704-459-7.
  26. ^ a b "Imagawa Answers Your Questions! (Part 3)". Liner Notes. (1995). Giant Robo, Volume 6. Bandai Visual.
  27. ^ Pollard, Mark (2004-02-17). "Wuxia Pian - Introduction". Kung Fu Cinema: Screen fighting news & review. Archived from the original on 2006-10-31. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  28. ^ "Character biographies". Liner Notes. (1994). Giant Robo Volume 5. Bandai Visual.
  29. ^ Thacker, J. (September 14, 2002). Well, what would you prefer? Yellow spandex?. Cornell Japanese Animation Society Newsletter.
  30. ^ "Imagawa Answers Your Questions! (Part 2)". Liner Notes. (1994). Giant Robo Volume 5. Bandai Visual.
  31. ^ Accomando, Beth (23 March 2011). "Rants and Raves: Godzilla". KPBS-FM. Archived from the original on 30 June 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
  32. ^ U.S. Renditions, a division of Books Nippan, was the original licensor. After Books Nippan went out of business, Manga Entertainment picked up all their licenses, including Giant Robo.
  33. ^ Mateo, Alex (August 12, 2018). "Discotek Licenses Giant Robo, Kimagure Orange Road, Galaxy Express 999, More". Anime News Network. Retrieved August 27, 2018.
  34. ^ @TheGreatSG (August 12, 2018). "GIANT ROBO FINALLY!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  35. ^ "Giant Robo OVA Series Blu-Ray". Right Stuf Inc. Retrieved October 7, 2019.
  36. ^ Sherman, Jennifer (September 15, 2020). "Discotek Schedules Gin Rei OVA in Late 2020-Early 2021". Anime News Network. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  37. ^ Mateo, Alex (October 7, 2020). "Discotek Releases Lupin III: Tokyo Crisis, Devilman Lady, Detective Conan: The Crimson Love Letter, More Anime on December 29". Anime News Network. Retrieved February 4, 2021.
  38. ^ "The journey of ten years". Liner Notes. (1998). Giant Robo Volume 7. Bandai Visual.
  39. ^ "Animage Top-100 Anime Listing". Anime News Network. 2001-01-15. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  40. ^ "Wizard lists Top 50 Anime". Anime News Network. 2001-07-16. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  41. ^ "Anime". Hyper. No. 33. July 1996. p. 18.
  42. ^ Lee, Kenneth. "Giant Robo Giga Premium Collection (1)". Anime on DVD. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  43. ^ Hobbs, Ryan. "Giant Robo Giga Premium Collection (2)". Anime on DVD. Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
  44. ^ "Giant Robo Review". Anime Academy. Archived from the original on 2006-12-06. Retrieved 2007-01-01.
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