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2010 Japanese TV series or program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Daimajin Kanon (大魔神カノン) is a Japanese tokusatsu television drama produced by Kadokawa Pictures and broadcast on TV Tokyo.[1] The series premiered on April 2, 2010. The series retells the story of the original Daimajin film in a modern Japanese setting. Consisting of 26 episodes, the series was prefaced by a manga by Seijuro Mizu (jp) in Young Ace magazine. Writing for the series is shared by Shinji Ōishi and Naruhisa Arakawa.
Daimajin Kanon | |
---|---|
Genre | Fantasy, tokusatsu |
Written by | Shinji Ōishi Ai Sumikawa Naruhisa Arakawa Shinsuke Ōnishi (jp) Miyuki Sekiguchi |
Directed by | Taro Sakamoto (jp) Nobuhiro Suzumura (jp) Atsushi Shimizu (jp) |
Starring | Yuka Rikuna (jp) Hidekazu Mashima (jp) Nao Nagasawa Takashi Yamanaka (jp) Tsuyoshi Mori (jp) Serina Ogawa Fuku Suzuki Ken Maeda Nao Kinomoto (jp) Shūhei Izumi Sayuki Matsumoto (jp) Rie Shibata Hiroyuki Nagato |
Voices of | Junko Minagawa Nozomi Sasaki Kiyoshi Kobayashi Chō Nobuo Tanaka (jp) Tsunehiko Kamijō |
Narrated by | Junko Minagawa |
Opening theme | "Sing Your Heart Out" by Ryoko Moriyama |
Ending theme | "Ashita Tenki ni Naare" (jp) and "Aruite Kaerou" by Lia |
Composer | Toshihiko Sahashi |
Country of origin | Japan |
Original language | Japanese |
No. of episodes | 26 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | Shinichiro Inoue (jp) |
Producer | Shigenori Takatera (jp) |
Original release | |
Network | TV Tokyo |
Release | April 2 – October 1, 2010 |
Related | |
Daimajin |
Each episode of the series has its own unique kanji, but they are all read as "Kanon".
In the early stage of production, Noriaki Yuasa known for his involvements in various tokusatsu productions especially the Gamera franchise, was appointed for the director of Daimajin Kanon. Other previously appointed staffs include Mamoru Sasaki as the writer, and multiple crews who have participated in Toei's Kamen Rider franchise.[2] Yuasa and Sasaki, along with Yoji Hashimoto, once attempted to produce a television series of Daimajin in 1960s, however it was cancelled due to budgetary problem and predictable storyline of the franchise.[3]
All songs were written by Shoko Fujibayashi and composed by Toshihiko Sahashi.
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