This was made 36 years ago. And still puts most modern animated films to shame!
@fireaza11 ай бұрын
I mean, it was produced during Japan's bubble economy. They pretty much had all the money in existence to throw at it, it's not really a fair comparison.
@amuroray911511 ай бұрын
This is one of the most expensive anime films ever made Multiple studios worked on it. I read years ago that Akira almost bankrupted one of the production companies that helped fund it.
@marekkoodziejak151311 ай бұрын
@@fireaza Not realy. Akira cost was about 3 times of My Neighbour Totoro by Ghibli (3,7 mln$), when USA's blockbusters like Die Hard had budget 3 times of Akira's (30 mln$), Beetlejuice 15mln$, Naked Gun 12 mln$, Who Framed Roger Rabbit 70 mln$. Last year there was about dozen movies with budget of 200 mln$ or more: Fast X, The Little Mermaid, Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantamania, Elemental, Killers of the Flower Moon, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, The Marvels, The Flash and... Wish... WISH!! Animated movie! When Godzilla Minus One had budget about the same as Akira 30 years back!!!!! So Akira wasn't so high above 'standards' of its time as you say, yet it was so influential for whole World and creaitve people! You think Wish will have the same impact? Godzilla Minus One will have an impact: it's proof how bloated Hollyweird is and how better movies can be when talented people make them.
@Sonyuu11 ай бұрын
@@amuroray9115 but their budget still pales compared with something made by Disney at the same time period.
Last summer, my 13 year old professed his love of anime. My response was to have him watch the grand-daddy of anime with me. I don't think he's fully recovered yet.
@Shin_Lona11 ай бұрын
As soon as he does... make him watch Evangelion. 😎
@jfernsten11 ай бұрын
@@Shin_Lona Can't let him watch what I haven't seen yet. Been thinking the next premiere anime to be "Vampire Hunter D". "Wicked City" taps into subjects I'm not comfortable with yet.
@tenebrousoul936811 ай бұрын
Try Serial Experiment Lain. It's a really good, but trippy, story about a girl coming of age . It deals with being that age where you're not a child, but not yet considered an adult. It's exposition heavy, though, so it can be a bit boring in spots
@blackyvertigo11 ай бұрын
@@Shin_Lonanah. Evangelion is a nonsensical mess. There are better
@isaiahsmith712311 ай бұрын
@@blackyvertigoSeriously though. The space western trilogy is good, Outlaw Star, Trigun, and Cowboy Bebop, also Legend of the Galactic Heroes.
@matthewsays11 ай бұрын
I don't believe CGI will ever be able to surpass the beauty of detailed traditional animation like Akira, Ghost in the Shell, Zeta Gundam, Megazone Part II, Ghibli, etc. I wish this detailed style weren't so cost prohibitive these days.
@DarkOverlord9611 ай бұрын
Stop downplaying the work of CG artists. Asshole.
@diosnelfrica59011 ай бұрын
@@DarkOverlord96He is right
@residentgrigo470111 ай бұрын
Ghibli has been using CG since the 90s but go on and Steamboy looks at least as good as Akira and that film is heavily reliant on CG. Guess who directed it?
@danielderamus957311 ай бұрын
I think Redline 2009 is like the last fully hand animated movie. Even Akira used computer work. What’s unique about Akira is that it was shot on 70mm film. That’s what the huge screen imax movies are shot on. Film of such a wide format allows resolution way beyond 4K.
@TF2Fan10111 ай бұрын
Across the SpiderVerse: ARe yOu sURe abOuT tHaT?!!???!??!? Edit: No, I’m not saying ATSV puts those other movies to shame. I’m saying it’s a little foolish to completely write CG animation off when there are countless examples of CGI done well.
@MicahBuzanANIMATION11 ай бұрын
I'm only a few minutes in, but I just had to stop and comment to say this is one of the best plot summaries of Akira I've heard. The film is often very confusing for first viewers due to the frenetic pace (over 2,000 cuts) and ambiguous concepts. Although the Akira manga goes into much more detail and expands on the themes and even gives minor characters in the film complete character arcs, I think the truncated and somewhat confusing story in the film version has created a market for countless Akira analysis videos we see popping up. If Akira was super straight forward, there would be far fewer videos talking about the meaning of the movie. This isn't to say Akira is only talked about because it's confusing or because it has stellar animation - it's a fever dream of an experience that's impossible to ignore or forget.
@TrexelCat9 ай бұрын
Akira almost single-handedly destroyed my interest in Anime. It was the first Anime I ever saw(a friend of mine was like, "Hey, watch this!"), and all I can say about that experience was, it was out there. The story was all over the place(to me). Starts off with future Tokyo, and biker gangs. And then quickly goes off the rails with psychokinetic powers and ends with a giant monster thing. Not saying it is a bad movie at all, just not the first Anime one should watch if they have never seen one before. And also not at 16. The reason it nearly destroyed my interest in Anime is, I thought this was the norm for Japanese Anime. But, due to an accident that involved Battlestar Galactica(the 70s/80s version, not the 2000s remake) I realized that a fair chunk of Japanese Anime was pretty tame. And that over there, cartoons can be made strictly for adults.
@JoseBronxRican8 ай бұрын
The main reason it's confusing is that a huge chunk of Dan's incredible summary is NOT alluded to in the movie at all, at least not in the original English. I'd have to look at the Pioneer dub again to see if it's the same there, but I know it's much more faithful to the source... Doesn't mean I think the dub's necessarily better; I recall thinking the new dub was a lateral move at best.
@gadaadyn819011 ай бұрын
What’s insane is the film in 1988 has a stadium being built for the 2020 Olympics. In the real world, Tokyo was suppose to host the 2020 Olympics but was pushed back to 2021 due to the Pandemic.
@CantankerousDave11 ай бұрын
There's also a medical alert flyer on a wall talking about a virus going around.
@fireaza11 ай бұрын
The organizers didn't want the events to line up with the movie, thus preventing WWIII. Wise move.
@goranisacson250211 ай бұрын
Avoided WW3 with a hair's breadth... so far.
@dogewood549911 ай бұрын
Predictive Programming just like all of the 9/11 shit put out there decades before it happened…
@danbauer366911 ай бұрын
Covid was the first bomb dropped in World War Three. Sorry, guys... truth hurts.
@johneasterling482011 ай бұрын
I remember playing Final Fantasy 7 for the first time when I was a teen. When it got to the motorcycle highway chase all I could think of was Akira.
@keithchristner452211 ай бұрын
80's/90's hand drawn anime will NEVER be topped. You have to just love the scenes that are literally just the artists in a sense "showing off" how detailed they can get (for example: when they show a 30 second scene of just a fully detailed rain storm
@ObsessiveGeek11 ай бұрын
Studio Ghibli from Spirited Away onwards still carry a similar level of gravitas.
@otakubullfrog166511 ай бұрын
Back when it was released on VHS, Akira was one of the few anime titles that was mainstream enough that my public library had it. You can never look at a teddy bear quite the same way once you've seen it.
@wstine7911 ай бұрын
The Akira slide in NOPE got a huge pop in the theater.
@user-vi4xy1jw7e8 ай бұрын
Huge pop?
@StillycoBra51506 ай бұрын
Cheer from the audience
@danielderamus957311 ай бұрын
Dan Larson and Galaxy team, thank you all for this! You’ve gut punched my nostalgia many times now, but this was like an actual nut stomping good time. Thank you all!
@Rook5111 ай бұрын
My brother and I were lucky enough to see a screening of Akira while at the 1989 San Diego Comic-Con. Someone was handing out tickets from a booth and my cousin grabbed 3 for us. Later that day we found ourselves in a dusty old theater watching the anime that I would be obsessed with for years afterwards. It was truly a sight to see on the big screen, even as a 13 year old.
@seanpbelcher11 ай бұрын
Me too! I was 18, and my friend dragged me to it because he had been reading the Marvel translation. I had no idea what I was in for, but it's still one of my fondest movie going memories. I still annoy my anime-loving kids with "Hey, did I ever mention I was one of the first people in the U.S. to see Akira?" LOL
@michaelpapp55188 ай бұрын
10:25 the score was so epic. My high school art teacher used to play it during art class. I borrowed the CD from him and made a copy for myself. This was back in 1996 when that was the new hotness of technology.
@Summertimeblues2811 ай бұрын
This was a gateway into Anime for myself and a lot of kids since it was widely available on home video back then.
@rjr299211 ай бұрын
I've honestly lost count of how many times I've seen the "Akira bike slide" in media.
@ObsessiveGeek11 ай бұрын
It's the more modern version of the Wilhelm Scream
@realRaven57511 ай бұрын
There are supercut compilations online if you're curious.
@ObsessiveGeek11 ай бұрын
@realRaven575 My favourite is in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Robin's Reckoning". Loved seeing it in live action in Nope too.
@JoseBronxRican8 ай бұрын
@@ObsessiveGeek Thank goodness they jumped on that JUST before it got really tired; LOL
@jerryharris634211 ай бұрын
The most impressive thing about this video was that Dan was able to clearly explain the plot of the movie, something nobody who watched it could ever figure out. I owned the first two Marvel adaptation comics in color. They were beautiful. I'm still lamenting selling them. (Yes, I'm a dummy. I know they're worth a bunch of money.)
@migovas148311 ай бұрын
why not, the movie was very condensed, and unlike the manga was very well structured..
@deathsnitemaresinfullust226911 ай бұрын
2 minutes into this video and I now understand the plot more than I Ever have in the 30+ years I've known of it's existence. Thank You Secret Galaxy.😄👍
@amuroray911511 ай бұрын
Same here. 😂 In the last 21 years, I never knew what the hell was going on. It helps to read the manga
@philsowers11 ай бұрын
Same, it's a heady and dense story. Really appreciate the breakdown. 👌
@ryangunwitch-black11 ай бұрын
lol I know, right!? Trying to read the books as a 7th grader was a bit much
@jpmiller792211 ай бұрын
Thanks to movies like this, Vampire Hunter D, and Fist of the North Star, my friends and I had the rules of good anime (or Japanimation, as we used to call it) were that it had to have blood, nudity, and a plot where you didn't know what the hell was happening. At least two of the three.
@deathsnitemaresinfullust226911 ай бұрын
@@jpmiller7922 yeah, that's kinda how it felt for a long time back then. 😄👍
@willlawson612611 ай бұрын
Akira was the very 1st Anime I watched in the mid 1990's. Rented it from Blockbuster video when they finally decided to carry a few of the well known classics. To this day I am so thankful that the Legendary Akira was my 1st Anime.
@45bombom11 ай бұрын
1993 was the year I saw it first as a rental from Blockbuster
@willlawson612611 ай бұрын
@45bombom It was probably right around then for me as well. I think I was 11 or 12. It was a few years before PS1 so 93 sounds right .
@daviddalrymple228411 ай бұрын
I was very fortunate to live near a big independent video store in the 90s. They had ~50 anime videos at any given time (or "Japanimation" as they still called it) which included a mix of TV shows like Funimation's first Dragon Ball dub, classic dubbed films like Akira and Venus Wars, and schlockier fare like Ninja Scroll.
@willlawson612611 ай бұрын
@@daviddalrymple2284 *In my best Napoleon Dynamite voice "Lucky!"
@jaysonraphaelmurdock881211 ай бұрын
Ninja Scroll "Schlocky"?
@johnniequinn321511 ай бұрын
“The order to stop construction” was released in the mind trip Anthology movie called Neo Tokyo or “Manie Manie: Labyrinth Tales” in 1987. It includes the full version of the “Running Man” short that used to play on M-TV during their experimental phase.
@LowellLucasJr.11 ай бұрын
Akira is still the magnum opus of mature storytelling, detailed animation and with a spectacular visual splendor! No matter if you bought the VHS, seen it on Sci-Fi Channel, Adult Swim, Bought the Metal Case DVD or the many Blu-ray releases...your always in for a spectacle that still holds up to this very day!❤
@jalikquarterman431811 ай бұрын
Well, put Akira was truely groundbreaking and really told an incredibly deep and complex story with so many themes. It definitely still holds up and revivals any live action film.
@DeanWelsh-q9n11 ай бұрын
Akira is an absolute legend of an anime,thank you Toy Galaxy ❤👏
@chrislongbeard11 ай бұрын
I remember buying the VHS in 94. Was a gateway to other movies including Lily CAT and Biohunter. Both of which I still have too. Sometimes it's good to be old.
@exc911ence_channel11 ай бұрын
The "Massive Head Wound Harry" aesthetic really works on Dan!
@NebLleb11 ай бұрын
My favourite movie of all time. Tied for that spot with 1981's Raiders of the Lost Ark, in fact.
@dogewood549911 ай бұрын
You liked “AKIRA”? Then you’d definitely liked Zack Snyder’s Director’s Cut of “Watchmen”. That’s my favorite film of all time.
@NebLleb10 ай бұрын
@@dogewood5499 Watchmen is meant to be up there with the Dawn of the Dead remake as Zack's best film! Thanks for the recommendation!
@jamesrael955711 ай бұрын
Best description of this film in only the first two minutes! Awesome!
@davidfausel902911 ай бұрын
Still one of my favorite films ever. My first exposure came about my happenstance - high school best friend had a buddy who went to japan and brought back a videotape copy (1989/90 or thereabouts). My friend got a dub and then me a dub after watching it with him. I took it to college and showed it to my friends there. Note that this was the original Japanese version - so we literally were trying to piece the story together through the visuals with NO idea what anyone was saying. We just knew it was incredible. (And since I was first exposed to the original version, for me it is always "Kahn-ayy-dah" and not the US dubbed Kah-NAY-da" lol)
@amuroray911511 ай бұрын
lol. That’s a pretty Cool story.
@jimmydragonstudios11 ай бұрын
Great, Dan went and blew us all up... Yes, Akira was my gateway drug into the world of anime. This sparked a slew of titles i ended up watching over the years and loving till this day.
@risel5611 ай бұрын
Normally I skip KZbinr ads as part of a habitual fight-or-flight response, but you had me at dinosaurs. :D
@Harkness7811 ай бұрын
Damn you Toys Galaxy! You Maniacs! You Blew IT Up!
@orenkiyama686010 ай бұрын
Thank you for mentioning 'The Order to Stop Construction'. I feel this work as well as the Neo Tokyo Anthology is an underrated gem. You can see the influence of Akira in this short piece.
@rayscotchcoulton11 ай бұрын
You just unlocked a memory of seeing the commercials on US TV for ordering the VHS cassette of Akira by phone. Unreal.
@acereporter7311 ай бұрын
This movie!!!!! *"TETSUOOOOOO!!!"* *"KANEDAAAAAA!!!"* That's... that's how me and some of my friends used to greet each other after watching Akira.
@alessandrobaggi612911 ай бұрын
👍😎🤟
@Progearspec11 ай бұрын
Nothing like the steamline pictures dub of akira.Beside,kaneda being voiced by the talented cam clarke.
@JoseBronxRican7 ай бұрын
"GETAHOLDOFYOURSELF! You start by stealing my bike and run it into the GROUND, so just cool it, OK?" "ENOUUUGH!! THEYYYY CANNN'T DOOOO THI-I-I-ISSS!"
@heathstaa11 ай бұрын
Well, channel had a great run. See you guys when our atoms coalesce. Great video, and always appreciate your costumes and concepts!
@wstine7911 ай бұрын
I remember my brother renting this for me at Video Village. The animation was great, but the ending when Tetsuo morphs and takes scarred me as a kid.
@stujm8411 ай бұрын
If nothing else, its a visual masterpiece. The balls to do animate Akira, that motorcycle sequence in a night time setting... i have no words, its just so beautifully done.
@JoseBronxRican8 ай бұрын
And I don't care if people here get tired of my praising TMS.... These arguments I see implying a huge budget being the only decider, without considering the talent behind it.... I guarantee giving AKOM the equivalent of a billion yen in the 90's wouldn't give you a result much better than their 'X-Men".
@Winterydee11 ай бұрын
I discovered Akira in a comic book store around 1988 or 1989 with the US colorized books and was blown away. The covers, the drawings of the characters & setting, the coloring and the story. It put so much of the US comic books at the time to shame.While my collection of them is still very far from complete, I still consider them as a major part of my comic book collection from that time.
@thomasschopflin631711 ай бұрын
One of my alltime favorites - thank you for this!
@RobCamp-rmc_011 ай бұрын
I fully agree with you, I’d rather they leave it alone and produce no live action version. If it does get made, I’m not going to bother. Thanks to this video (and an article I read this morning about a couple of guys in Barcelona who are building working versions of Kaneda’s bike), I’ve decided that I may have to start collecting the trade paperbacks, as I’ve never gotten around to reading the whole thing. Now, the soundtrack. Gat damn, that soundtrack. I had it pretty much constantly spinning from 1997 to 2002 and it’s one of the few CDs I’ve held onto in the age of streaming-and I’m glad for it because it’s not available on the service to which I’m subscribed. Geinoh Yamashirogumi’s work was a revelation, it was like nothing I’d ever heard before and I’m pretty sure like nothing I’d hear since.
@Healthy_Toki11 ай бұрын
Simply the best. If anyone reading this comment hasn't read the Akira manga it's a sci-fi experience par excellence and should not be missed.
@reineldobellon612111 ай бұрын
Watched and re-watched the VHS of this so so many times. It has a special place in my heart. Hearing Taika Waititi and Akira in the same sentence terrorizes me
@SuperNormalMode11 ай бұрын
Akira related - I am still searching for that "new season" promo NBC ran as the 1992 Olympics winded down. One segment of the commercial was for Quantum Leap and Scott Bakula was running in place as a montage of the next season's time destinations were teased behind him. One of the clips in this montage was from the opening biker sequence from Akira. I remember seeing this promo myself and there is at least one person online who independently corroborated seeing this too.
@JK-gl7bf11 ай бұрын
This wasn't the 1st anime i saw but it was one of the ones that absolutely made me fall in love with anime. Love the cosplay. Always look forward to each weeks episode Dan thanks for all the great work.
@possumlodge536811 ай бұрын
Picked up the VHS of this off a rental shelf back in the 90s and it's still my favourite animated film of all time. The amount of detail especially just in the environment and backgrounds is top tier even to this day.
@dazatronsdioramallama637011 ай бұрын
Still one of my favourite animated films! It launched the anime boom in the UK and my own love for manga and anime. I owe a lot to this film. Great to see your spotlight on this film Dan
@alexrodriguez944111 ай бұрын
Bandai released a 1/35 scale plastic and die cast Kaneda bike (with a little rubber fixed pose Kaneda figure) in 1988.
@c.o.n.collectingofnostalgi88911 ай бұрын
One of if not the most influential anime for the West, my introduction to adult anime was Akira, and what an introduction it was. With that out of the way, the only way to make this flim into a live action version will flop hard as it would honestly be like remaking Jaws now into either a animated horror movie and expect to have the same financial success that film had for the blockbuster market of film making let alone have a pop culture influence it had in the 70's 80's 90's and beyond. It is that lighting in a bottle effect, and only a few films, in my opinion, have had that impact on a global scale. Now, if we take from what we learn from these to particular suggestions, Akira and Jaws stories in a whole are different enough time to make a difference in the media, so to do so you need to keep the product under wraps before comming out and giving only a slight amount of public engagement of the final product. Today, media is continually changing at a break neck pace, and it is for myself personally to become a fan of new franchises that takes a lot of effective marketing and engagement for me to take notice. We want to be able to find familiarity in a new franchise such as the Dino's that look like a certain teenage mutated ninja amphibians, for example, but those are my thoughts on it.
@BeyondDaX11 ай бұрын
One of most influential for sure. There a good number of other animes too that are around as influential
@6sKi6z611 ай бұрын
I had to watch this anime a good 3-4 times before it made any sense to me. But even the first time through, it just looks so cool. Very smooth animation. Very detailed characters, like Tetsuo at the finale. It’s one of those stories that you want to learn more about the second it’s over.
@Deephouse_Gent664 ай бұрын
For the first two decades of my life, the only Japanese anime I knew was English-dubbed versions of Prince Planet, Speed Racer and Battle of the Planets... Then a friend of mine turned me on to AKIRA, and that was the start of it. To this day, despite all the Dragonballs and Bleaches and Demon Slayers, AKIRA has not yet been matched, IMO. Great video.
@119vaibhavmishra310 ай бұрын
That Canon Camera ad was so well put! Damn, such an incredible video, and such a legendary movie!
@daviddavid588011 ай бұрын
I clearly remember seeing Akira and being blown out of my socks. We rewound it constantly. ("Holy.... Did you see that? Rewind that!", "Was that a tube-burn? Wow!", "Whoa whoa whoa. Did that bike have ELF single side suspension?") We'd seen a lot of anime at the time, but Akira was just towering over the rest. And in a lot of ways it still does.
@tonygonzales72610 ай бұрын
Oh yeah!!! Such a great, surprising animated movie! It was just unbelievable at the time. I remember mail ordering it in 1990 from starlog magazine, I believe, along with the Akira t-shirt, Project A-ko, Robot carnival, and dominion-tank police, all on VHS. Then I left for military service and forgot about it. Came home after training and got a wonderful surprise package waiting, a year later!!!! The best of times!!! Keep up the great videos!!! Love the channel!
@cobaltplasma11 ай бұрын
I remember my mom subscribing to a monthly anime VHS thing when I was a kid and Akira IIRC was the first video they sent. It was *nuts*. I grew up with Mazinger Z and Ultraman but this was something completely different, definitely adult but it never felt like it was gorey or extreme for the sake of being so, just a venue of telling a grown up story. Loved it ever since, it's stuck with me through the decades :)
@johneasterling482011 ай бұрын
My mom got me the same thing. Akira was first and Record of Lodos wars was second for me.
@MattBSmith11 ай бұрын
That is a win for mom!
@thecunninlynguist11 ай бұрын
LOL third here! do you guys remember what it was called? I wonder if we all had the same service. Films I remember getting were Akira, Barefoot Gen, Vampire Hunter D, Gologo 13,
@cobaltplasma11 ай бұрын
@@thecunninlynguist for some reason I keep thinking it had a generic-ish sounding name like "Anime Monthly" or something along those lines. I remember Vampire Hunter D and Record of Lodoss War, I got Fist of the North Star through this service, too, but don't remember getting Golgo 13. Hmmm... maybe it was a different service?
@Sevarrius11 ай бұрын
The advert for the VHS subscription is seemingly shown near the end of this video. I'm not American and wasn't subscribed to it but don't know how everyone that's commented so far missed it, it literally shows Akira as the first VHS you would receive followed by Record of Lodoss War. Watch from 15:35.
@shanegallant901811 ай бұрын
Aw, duuude! You blew us all up! How am I supposed to go to work tomorrow?! LOL! XD
@amuroray911511 ай бұрын
I’ve watched the film numerous times over the years. I advise you all to read the manga because it makes way more sens than the film does. Katsuhira Otomo couldn’t include everything he put in the manga because he directed the film BEFORE he even finished making the manga So half the plot in the film is rushed
@rouenrobinson11 ай бұрын
"In one of the countless billions of galaxies in the universe lies a medium sized star, and one of its satellites, a green and insignificant planet, is now dead."
@RickyRicardo0311 ай бұрын
I really really love this movie! The bike is amazing, the concepts are crazy/intriguing and the art is (even now) beautiful!
@btetschner11 ай бұрын
A+ video! Awesome history of Akira!
@crows280811 ай бұрын
I give to you a single line that has stayed in my head for decades and which I still have to stop myself from saying out loud context-free. "There is no *use* in hiding." Streamline dub 4ever indeed.
@auslander725811 ай бұрын
My favourite KZbin channel with my favourite dude talking about my favourite movie is the best excuse I have to be late for whatever I’m doing today.
@craigbrown0411 ай бұрын
I first saw Akira in the early 90s, on BBC2, late in a Friday night. Introduced by Jonathan Ross…. It blew my 12 year old brains out.
@bluecarpettiles11 ай бұрын
Came here to say the same. BBC2 did a double bill of Mad Max and Akira late one night. I had the recording on VHS tape for years.
@joshuac299111 ай бұрын
Yea.. I was I think 11 or 12 when I first saw Akira on VHS.. it opened my eyes on how good and different animation could be. I had seen more child orientated animation from Japan , Astroboy, Kimba the White Lion but Akira was the first one that was presented to me as from Japan and I was hooked and made me into a life long fan of anime and manga..
@WhispyWoods.10 ай бұрын
So cool to see you featuring this. Thanks for the knowledge 🧠 as well as the uncharacteristicly cinematic ending.
@joseangelhernandez527411 ай бұрын
One of my uncle's had a bootleg version of this movie back in 1990. My 12 year old mind was blown. One of the best movies ever made. Hopefully one day someone makes a true to manga anime series.
@vincentcomeau784411 ай бұрын
Anyone sort of disappointed that Dan didn't fly off the screen at the end screaming "Unlimited Power!!!!"
@lemelstudio11 ай бұрын
there was in fact at least one Japanese toy released in 1988: a 1/35-ish Bandai diecast and plastic of Kaneda's bike with a plastic figure and decals from the film. it's worth noting that McFarlane wasn't able to get the necessary trademark clearance for accurate decals and instead made up fictional replacement brands for his bike.
@grey562611 ай бұрын
Pretty sure there were some resin kits before the McFarlane stuff too. Volks had a 1/6th scale version of Kaneda's bike and some other resource online have even earlier examples of similar things.
@_The_Traveler_11 ай бұрын
I accidentally saw this movie on KZbin when I was 9 (back when monetization and advertisers weren't a thing, and people were uploading full bootleg copies of anime movies like Tree of Might). Kaori's death lived rent-free in my head for years. That movie also ruined animation for me for a solid chunk of time, I could immediately tell the difference in the depth of storytelling and visual quality from a lot of other American content. I had a hard time getting into much of anything until I discovered Miyazaki years later when I watched Princess Mononoke for the first time.
@tigerburn8111 ай бұрын
13:22 At first, I though my cat farted.
@jeremyjedynak11 ай бұрын
The destruction of Toy Galaxy and the rise of Neo Toy Galaxy was inevitable with all of the experiments that were performed on Dan.
@DylanHansenDBH11 ай бұрын
A Fist of the North Star episode I’m sure would be a great episode to see
@Shin_Lona11 ай бұрын
My shirt just exploded off.
@CantankerousDave11 ай бұрын
Speaking of live-action adaptations that don't need to exist...
@DylanHansenDBH11 ай бұрын
@@CantankerousDave there already was a live-action adaptation from the 90s that was just horrible.
@goranisacson250211 ай бұрын
Absolutely territory these guys should cover- famous Japanese properry with much to discuss AND a long history with western adaptations / dubs. And the memes they can inject, the script writes itself!
@DarkOverlord9611 ай бұрын
"Cartoons Aren't Just For Kids!" Ralph Bakshi proved that years before Akira.
@danielderamus957311 ай бұрын
Yeah he kinda teased hentai too
@BeyondDaX11 ай бұрын
@DarkOverlord96 Ralph Bakshi prove that but come on, they needed a selling point its the 80s
@Azrael13811 ай бұрын
And he had like one mildly successful film. Not sure how that "proves" something.
@theLikou111 ай бұрын
When someone says "proved" it means that it was able to reach big audiences. A mild success is not proving anything, if anything it proves the opposite. It means that Akira made a big splash like no other movie before was able to do in a lot of countries. People really try to sound like they are the smartass when they can't even understand what is the real meaning of the expression.
@lemelstudio11 ай бұрын
I first saw Akira in either 1989 or 1990 at the Roxie Theater in San Francisco. I'd been reading the colorized English adaptation. I took home one of the photocopied posters that were all over downtown at the time and used markers to tone it. that hung in my studio for a long time.
@rlpittsjr11 ай бұрын
That was an awesome being to your vid! You are upping your budget, and it looks great!
@OldManTheseDays11 ай бұрын
Fantastic video. AKIRA (all caps, always) was a huge influence for me creatively and professionally. I don’t know if this came up when you were researching, but from what I’ve read one of the live action versions was apparently shelved after “Chronicle” came out as it was a nearly identical movie.
@hilneloms538211 ай бұрын
I was just looking up Akira slides and this popped up - get out of my mind!!!
@JustinDynamicD11 ай бұрын
I still remember going to a gencon convention years ago and seeing a simple tv playing Akira to sell their VHS copies. I was instantly an Anime fan from that day forward and I will always remember 90s Cyberpunk/SciFi as pinnacle anime as I fell down the rabbit hole of Ghost in the Shell, Bubblegum Crisis, Appleseed, Dirty Pair... ... excuse me while I go binge some anime.
@scottcampbell951511 ай бұрын
Oh great! You just reset the *clap clap* multiverse. Way to go. As Spike would say: "Oh shit! What are we going to do now?!"
@tunglam821011 ай бұрын
Akira was released in Australian theatres in 1995 .I was in senior high school and remembered the brief TV ads . Why did it take so long for theatrical release ?
@tbok7510 ай бұрын
The very first time I laid eyes on Akira, it was walking around a local Circuit City store in 91,being showcased on a huge TV and impressive sound system... it was the opening bike chase scene of course. I would later obtain a vhs copy and watch it enough times to wear it out. Lol to this day I still stand behind the original English dialog is way better than the 2001 language update, no matter how accurate it it is, the original voices just work and sound better. I'm 48 now and it will always be at the absolute top of my Anime list with Ghost in the shell a very close second.
@macrosense11 ай бұрын
With telekinesis you could just dampen someone’s blood vessel enough for them to faint. There would be no need to throw lots of heavy stuff around
@_FoxHoleCharlie_11 ай бұрын
Did expect the ending, nice job team!
@blackhood720011 ай бұрын
I love cartoons that give an F you and middle finger to people who think imagination is just for kids.
@animezilla448611 ай бұрын
I agree I always hated that argument that animation is just for kids
@blackhood720011 ай бұрын
@@animezilla4486 Ikr
@dwainsimmons344711 ай бұрын
@@animezilla4486 everyone does hate that argument
@mightyfilm11 ай бұрын
My first exposure to this movie was an out of context showing by another student of the hospital toy hallucination sequence. I was not very familiar with anime at the time, Samurai Pizza Cats, the Saban 13 episode Dragon Ball classic dub, and generously all the cartoons from the 80's animated over there being my only frame of reference. So basically it scared the hell out of me at the time.
@ninjasec11 ай бұрын
Excellent, I learned alot. Akira was one if not the first anime I watched .
@billdefranza492711 ай бұрын
16:35 way to go, Dan. I was using that Earth.
@dolari11 ай бұрын
I remember watching Akira in English during a test run at the Dobie Theater in Austin, which ran a lot of test dubs in the 90s. I saw the Troma Miyazaki dubs there as well....
@Animotions0111 ай бұрын
Akira and Ghost in the shell are the two films that got me hooked into Japanese animation.
@robertwarf331611 ай бұрын
I used to watch Cartoon Sushi on MTV and every episode had a commercial for Akira on VHS along with other anime. I thought it all looked so cool. I wasn't familiar with anime at all at this point except a Jungle Book anime that we had on VHS when I was a bit younger haha. I don't remember anything about Akira since I haven't seen it since 97, but I remember it being awesome
@dex_tha_collector9 ай бұрын
Thanks Secret Galaxy for this video. Now I have a better understanding of the Akira full plot 😮💨. Big thank you for mentioning the 1/6 scale model motorcycle. This was another big purchase I wanted to make but will be revisiting this year 😁…p.s. I hope Dan wasn’t harmed in the making of this video, because that look like a gnarly explosion 💥
@davidjams259611 ай бұрын
this is the best video dan has ever made
@thatsnozakuboi241511 ай бұрын
I have a Big O half sleeve absolutely can't wait for the video! Is escaflowne on your list? Thanks for all the videos
@davidpyott371011 ай бұрын
Bravo Your finest video to date!!
@cravenblack421111 ай бұрын
We are reminded of the ancient adage "check yourself before you wreck yourself."
@ceno1010111 ай бұрын
I saw this and other anime movies for the first time on saturday morning anime on the sci-fi channel in the 90s.
@marekkoodziejak151311 ай бұрын
I was lucky to see Akira 4K before Godzilla Minus One - almost perfect evening! (almost because I had to drive to next city ;p) It was an experience because visuals were crisp and sound rich and clear! I will remember this moment for long.
@PaleHorseShabuShabu11 ай бұрын
Akira is the first anime I watched, the first one I owned, and the first anime soundtrack I owned. I still have it on VHS, LaserDisc, and Blu-Ray.
@tzgaming20711 ай бұрын
Chris D, if you're out there, I am still sorry that I was too hungover that day we went to see Akira in Norwalk & ruined that day 😔
@Jackelmandingo11 ай бұрын
A cool fact. The Akira class starship in Star Trek is named after the movie.
@brianng835011 ай бұрын
I was wondering why Dan had bandages on his head. I thought it was the pounding on his head after picking the 2023 figure of the year😂😂😂. But it was really his cosplay…. It’s been a while since I’ve watched the movie. I wish they would put this in the theaters again. Love the explosive ending to the video…
@NA_49erFan11 ай бұрын
Still have my VHS version. Crazy movie.
@ultramagneticlion214711 ай бұрын
That Geinoh Yamashirogumi score is just in another level, even compared to the animé or manga. Listening to it by itself, it makes the story feel even more gigantic than it already is.
@E.Jean_Carroll-MILLIONAIRE11 ай бұрын
I have the Original Movie Soundtrack, and it sounds AMAZING!! The full versions are intense!!
@phillipjohnson890311 ай бұрын
I can't believe Dan's psychic powers killed us all. I should have watched this video the day it dropped