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K Project Anime Vision

K Project Anime Vision

K Seven Stories is the 2018 cinematic adaptation of K produced by the studio GoHands and directed by Shingo Suzuki . It will premiere on Summer 2018.  Thus far the nature of the film(s) has not been disclosed.

Seven Stories will feature seven different stories. Although the list has been released, GoRA specifies the list is not the definitive order, and the titles are under development.

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One year from Scepter 4's dissolution. While the growing HOMRA members run wild and reckless, many are frustrated with new Red King Mikoto Suoh's increasing power and the possibility of him erasing himself. A news report shows a new Blue King has awakened. Reisi Munakata quickly rebuilts Scepter 4 as the new king, and turns its focus on the confusing acts of HOMRA. The suffering fate of the Red King and the burning ideals of the Blue King. When young kings meet, a new battle will begin.[2] In Japanese Theaters on July 7, 2018.[3]

K: Missing Kings (2014)

After the clash of the Red King and the Blue King, it has been 10 years since the Kagatsu Crater Incident that brought unprecedented damage to south Kanto. One man who survived the incident, Gouki Zenjo now belongs to the Blue King, Reisi Munakata of Scepter 4. Distrust grows in Scepter 4. Munakata recruits Takeru Kusuhara to practice swordsmanship, and plans to establish a Special Forces team to respond to the rapidly increasing number of untrustworthy people.[2] In Japanese Theaters on August 4, 2018.[3]

The Green King uses phone application JUNGLE to award users extra power as they gain points. The Green King weilds followers like Gojo Sukuna while living at home. He is the founder of JUNGLE - Nagare Hisui, also known as the Green King. Sukuna, who has been attracted to the dream that Nagare strives for, becomes the highest ranked member of JUNGLE and challenges Yukari Mishakuji, the strongest member of JUNGLE in order to finally meet Hisui.[2] In Japanese Theaters on September 1, 2018.[3]

Scenes that were brought about by a small prayer. Adolf K. Weismann surrounds the table with his loved ones, Misaki Yata spends fiery days with his friends, Seri Awashima devotes herself to her duties without hesitation, and Sukuna Gojo pursues a dazzling dream, underneath the five Damocles swords floating in the sky. Everything is the road that came someday, or a place that wasn't anywhere. And Everything was a mournful sight brought about by a small prayer.[2] In Japanese Theaters on December 1, 2018.[3]

K: Seven Stories Movie 6

Yashiro Isana and Kuroh Yatagomi, Mikoto Suoh and Misaki Yatta, Reisi Munakata and Saruhiko Fushimi, and Nagare Hisui and Yukari Mishakuji run four different entertainment offices and aim to produce idols - and of course, each group has different views on what an idol should be and how they ought to live.[2] Will screen alongside each episode.[3] References [ ]A brief spoiler-free review of the 13-episode fall 2012 anime “K, ” animated by GoHands, directed by Shingo Suzuki, Hiromichi Kanazawa, and Susumu Kudō, and based on the original story by Tatsuki Miyazawa (and GoRA).

Yashiro Isana seems to be an ordinary boy—and as far as he knows, he is. When a video of the unassuming white-haired teen maniacally shooting a young man is broadcast all across the net, however, “Shiro” finds himself in the midst of a manhunt. To make matters worse, his predators aren’t your typical PD, but rather various vengeful members of the Seven Clans of Color. Ruled by seven unique Kings, these psychic clans are truly the ones responsible for making Japan the technologically advanced superpower that it is currently is.

Wanted for supposedly killing a Red Clansman, Shiro is hunted by the Red Clan as their King, Mikoto Suou, faces his own grievous trials in Blue Clan captivity. Also out to weigh the justice of Shiro’s crime is the infamous “Black Dog” Kurou Yatogami, a skilled swordsman determined to follow the will of his late master, the Seventh King. As Shiro struggles to prove his own innocence for a murder he doesn’t even recall committing, a strange conspiracy starts to unravel that calls his own existence into question. Far from concrete, perhaps memory is just as fragile as a floating cloud.

Gunslinger Stratos Revelation / Two Histories

What started as a puzzling murder case spirals out into a war between supernaturally gifted Kings. Although this first series centers on the conflict between the fiery Red and tactical Blue Clans specifically, I have a hunch that later entries in the franchise expand upon this calamitous war of honor, duty, and brotherhood. Season one in itself has quite a high entertainment value on its own, however; if you were to stop here, you’d still be satisfied by these 13 episodes alone.

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Primarily falls under the action and supernatural genres, but isn’t afraid to sneak in a joke or two here and there. In fact, the entire first half of the series—

—shows off the rather ordinary daily lives of Shiro and his classmates. It’s a peaceful beginning to what will eventually be an all-out war in the latter half (and subsequent adaptations). All the tensions gradually build to this superb midway twist, ending with a grand identity reveal and the inevitable, explosive duel between the Red and Blue Kings.

K Project: Supernatural Secrets & Seven Kings || Review

These first seven or so episodes are spent watching Shiro and Kuroh gradually warm up to one another, and the addition of the mischievous shape-shifting cat girl Neko adds a layer of gag comedy that’s surprisingly effective. I’d even go as far as to say the first half is stronger than the second, but that’s just me being picky—the whole narrative is tons of fun. Finding out how Shiro—

I’ll be up front with y’all, I had a lot of fun with this cast. Shiro’s an adorable and innocent little space cadet, yet holds an allure that you just can’t trust entirely . . . Due to his suspiciousness from the get-go, we are treated to an exciting narrative trick:

How

. We can’t seem to want to trust Shiro 100%, even if we didn’t see him do anything wrong, and that’s half the battle we have to overcome. Shiro’s dub VA Sam Riegel completely sells the role, even if his voice is a little lower and more hollow-y sounding than you’d expect.

K: Seven Stories Complete Movie Collection

The rest of the cast is also PERFECT. Matt Mercer’s Kuroh is deep, but believably young-sounding for his age. Listening to him recite his Master’s teachings at the most odd yet pinnacle moments was hilarious—same for whenever he yells at Neko. Speaking of, Stephanie Sheh’s Neko is everything you’d want from a cat girl—and without being annoying, it’s great! If Kuroh’s view on Shiro is “Guilty until proven innocent, ” Neko is the other way around, representing companionship, warmth, and trust for our protagonist. I could’ve watched this goofy trio dicking around in Shiro’s apartment for hours, their banter balances out so well. But alas, we have a story to tell—and a murder to solve.

I also love how the cast is divided into these Clans, which are, of course, colored by their respective attributes. You can expect Red Clan members to be hanging out in alleyways like a gang, roughing up opponents and violently trying to get their way in literally everything, no matter how childish. Blue Clan members are reserved, focused, and assemble formally at their base desks. They act as a vanguard of knights loyal to their King for his authority, whereas Red Clansmen protect one another out of brotherhood and respect for hierarchy through strength and acknowledgment by “the boss.” Color plays a bigger role in 

On the Blue side, I enjoyed Johnny Yong Bosch’s devilishly deceptive Saruhiko Fushimi and Tara Platt’s sultry yet strong Captain Seri Awashima. For the Reds, Todd Haberkorn’s suave bartender Izumo Kusanagi and Benjamin Diskin’s *holla at ya boy* Yata Misaki were so much fun. Ahh, Yata, DAMN I love this little shit. 

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Explore The Best Saruhiko Art

Is just about one of the most unique series out there. Yes, the fight sequence animation is superb, and the character designs are very signature to each role. But what clearly stands out the most is the cool tone filter that overlays the screen 24/7. Some may find it irritating on the eyes, and I wouldn’t disagree—the bright color contrast and over-saturation can feel overwhelming. When your eyes finally adjust to this artistic decision, however, you find that this omnipresent blue-green color tone could only work on a series like

. The series is oozing with style, from the sharp uniforms and hairstyles to the meaning of color itself in the story. 

‘s OST is comprised of many laid-back jazz and bossa nova-inspired tracks which support the series’ chill atmosphere. Like the visuals, the music is stylish, but it isn’t afraid to pull out a little dubstep during the action sequences or some elegant piano work for the more intimate Clansmen scenes. It’s all great stuff, and angela’s iconic OP aptly titled “KINGS” kicks off each episode with excitement. Meanwhile the ED theme “Tsumetai Heya, Hitori” sung by Neko herself (Mikako Komatsu) nicely provides that dramatic sendoff we need.

How To Watch K Anime Series? Easy Watch Order Guide

Just as K is this tale of power and revenge, it is also the saga

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