Skip to main content

Witch Craft Works Anime's TV Spot Streamed

Yūsuke Kobayashi, Asami Seto, Ai Kayano, Shiori Izawa lead winter anime from J.C. Staff, Tsutomu Mizushima



The anime of Ryū Mizunagi's Witch Craft Works manga was announced last November. The story centers around Honoka Takamiya, a boy whose classmate Ayaka Kagari is talented in sports, excels in classes, and is attractive on top of everything. She also happens to be the most powerful witch on earth. Her purpose in life is to protect Takamiya at all costs.


The cast announced thus far includes:

Yūsuke Kobayashi as Honoka Takamiya

Asami Seto (Valvrave the Liberator, Chihayafuru) as Ayaka Kagari

Ai Kayano (You and Me., Senyū) as Kasumi Takamiya, Honoka's little sister

Shiori Izawa (Girls und Panzer, Silver Spoon), as Tanpopo Kuraishi, one of the "Witches of the Tower" who transfered to the high school

The website also features voice drama clips from the above-listed cast members.

Tsutomu Mizushima (XXXHOLiC, Girls und Panzer, Genshiken) is directing the anime at J.C. Staff as well as supervising the series scripts. Mizushima is also working on the anime's scripts alongside Michiko Yokote (Bleach, Genshiken, Cowboy Bebop, XXXHOLiC) and Reiko Yoshida (K-ON!, A Town Where You Live, Buddha 2: Tezuka Osamu no Buddha ~Owarinaki Tabi~). Yukie Hiyamizu (Toaru Kagaku no Railgun S sub-character designs) is designing the characters while Hiroshi Yakou (Heaven's Memo Pad, Waiting in the Summer) is designing the props. Kunio Tsujita (Hakkenden: Eight Dogs of the East) is handling the visual coordination for the series while Tomonori Kuroda (A Certain Magical Index, A Certain Scientific Railgun, Shakugan no Shana III (Final) is the art director. TECHNOBOYS PULCRAFT GREEN-FUND (Akikan!) will compose the music at Lantis, and fhana will perform the opening.

The anime will have an advance screening event in Tokyo's Cinemart Shinjuku theater on December 29.

Mizunagi launched the manga in 2011, and Kodansha published the sixth compiled volume last month.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Shirobako Movie: Unbox anime's nitty-gritty

From "8½" to "Day for Night" to "Dolemite Is My Signature," movie history is full of filmmaking. The latest addition to this self-referential genre is Tsutomu Mizushima's "Shirobako the Film," an anime about the blood, sweat and beers that brought an animated film on screen. It is the sequel to the television series "Shirobako," which aired from 2014 to 2015 and focused around Aoi Miyamori (voiced by Juri Kimura), a newly minted production assistant at the fictional Musashino Animation who, along with the viewer, discovers the ins and outs of how anime is produced from scratch to screen — and all the speed bumps that pop up along the way. Since canceling an in-progress sequence, the film opens four years later, with the great Musashino Animation a shadow of its former self. With the studio floundering, one of its executives comes to Miyamori with a bold plan: make an original theatrical film to be completed in less than a yea...

Omoi, Omoware, Furi, Furare Anime, Live-Action Video Streamed

Anime film hits theaters on May 29, live action on August 14 Toho MOVIE's official YouTube channel has released a 30-second collaboration clip featuring the new video of Io Sakisaka ( Ao Haru Ride )'s romance shoujo manga Omoi, Omoware, Furi, Furare / Love Me, Love Me Not . Serialized in Shueisha's Bessatsu Margaret from June 2015 to May 2019, the manga released 12 volumes of tankobon. His English version Love Me, Love Me Not , publisher VIZ Media presents the tale of his first volume as: "Fast friends Yuna and Akari are complete opposites — Yuna is an idealist, while Akari is a realist. When lady-killer Rio and the naive Kazuomi join their ranks, love and friendship become complicated!" Toshimasa Kuroyanagi ( Say I Love You ) directs the anime film adaptation of the manga at A-1 Pictures ( Oreimo, Sword Art Online ) on a screenplay by Erika Yoshida ( Tiger & Bunny ). It will be released in Japan on May 29, 2020. Then will follow the live-action f...

An anime-inspired campaign by anime director Mads Broni and Passion Animation Studios

MullenLowe partnered with Danish director Mads Broni and Passion Animation Studios to create an anime-inspired advertisement for one of UK's favorite restaurant chains, Wagamama. Called Bowl to Soul, it's based on the brand's affiliation with Japanese food and its founding philosophy that food not only feeds our heart, it "feeds our soul." The ad shows this by demonstrating Wagamama food's restore sensation. Upon taking her first taste, the ad's heroine tumbles into a magical land filled with streaming ramen rivers, ondulating coriander fields and spice fireworks. That doesn't sound bad. And it's a good way to appeal to those of us who haven't appreciated the magic of "your food will come out when it's ready." Created by a mixture of hand-drawn and computer-illustrated artwork, the film brings together a wide range of modern, diverse images and characters, each frame being a unique illustration influenced by anime art. Mu...