Doremon

                Doremon

Doraemon (Japanese: ドラえもん [doɾaemoɴ]) is a Japanese manga series composed and represented by Fujiko Fujio. The manga was first serialized in December 1969, with its 1,345 individual parts ordered into 45 tankōbon volumes and distributed by Shogakukan from 1970 to 1996. The story rotates around an earless mechanical feline named Doraemon, who turns back the clock from the 22nd century to help a kid named Nobita Nobi.


The manga generated a media establishment. Three anime TV series have been adjusted in 1973, 1979, and 2005. Moreover, Shin-Ei Animation has delivered north of forty vivified films, including two 3D PC enlivened films, which are all circulated by Toho. Different kinds of product and media have been created, including soundtrack collections, computer games, and musicals. The manga series was authorized for an English language discharge in North America, by means of Amazon Kindle, by a coordinated effort of Fujiko F. Fujio Pro with Voyager Japan and AltJapan Co., Ltd. The anime series was authorized by Disney for an English-language discharge in North America in 2014, and LUK International in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.


Doraemon was generally welcomed by pundits and turned into a hit in numerous Asian nations. It won various honors, remembering the Japan Cartoonists Association Award for 1973 and 1994, the Shogakukan Manga Award for kids' manga in 1982, and the Tezuka Osamu Cultural Prize in 1997. Starting at 2019, it has sold north of 250 million duplicates around the world, becoming one of the most amazing selling manga ever. Doraemon is additionally one of the greatest earning media establishments ever, of which the enlivened film series has the biggest number of affirmations in Japan. The Doraemon character has been considered to be a Japanese social symbol, and was designated as the principal "anime diplomat" in 2008 by the country's Foreign Ministry.

Manga



In December 1969, the Doraemon manga showed up in six unique kids' month to month magazines distributed by Shogakukan: Yoiko, Yōchien, Shogaku Ichi-nensei, Shogaku Ni-nensei, Shogaku San-nensei, and Shogaku Yon-nensei. The magazines were focused on youngsters from nursery school to 4th grade. In 1973, two different magazines, Shogaku Go-nensei and Shogaku Roku-nensei (focused on 5th grade and 6th grade understudies individually), began distributing the manga. In 1977, CoroCoro Comic was sent off as the leader magazine of Doraemon.

Since the presentation of Doraemon in 1969, the narratives have been specifically gathered into 45 tankōbon volumes that were distributed under Shogakukan's Tentōmushi Comics (てんとう虫コミックス) engrave from July 31, 1974 to April 26, 1996. These volumes are gathered in the Takaoka Central Library in Toyama, Japan, where Fujio was born. Between April 25, 2005 and February 28, 2006, Shōgakukan distributed a progression of five manga volumes under the title Doraemon Plus (Doraemon+), including brief tales which didn't show up in the 45 unique volumes; a 6th volume, the first volume in quite a while, was distributed on December 1, 2014. Additionally, 119 unpublished stories were aggregated into six hued manga volumes under the title Doraemon Kara Sakuhin-shu (ドラえもん カラー作品集, Doraemon Color Works), distributed from July 17, 1999 to September 2, 2006. Between July 24, 2009 and September 25, 2012, Shogakukan distributed an expert works assortment comprising of twenty volumes with every one of the 1,345 stories composed by Fujio. In December 2019, on the 50th commemoration of Doraemon, a "Volume 0" was distributed by Shogakukan highlighting six distinct forms of Doraemon's first appearance.

There have been two series of bilingual, Japanese and English, volumes of the manga by SHOGAKUKAN ENGLISH COMICS under the title Doraemon: Gadget Cat from the Future, and two sound versions. The principal series has ten volumes and the subsequent one has six. what's more, 21st Century Publishing House delivered bilingual English-Chinese adaptations in Mainland China, and Chingwin Publishing Group delivered bilingual English-Chinese variants in Taiwan.

In July 2013, Fujiko F. Fujio Pro reported that they would work together with digital book distributer Voyager Japan and confinement organization AltJapan Co., Ltd. to deliver an English-language adaptation of the manga in full tone carefully through the Amazon Kindle stage in North America. Shogakukan delivered the main volume in November 2013; starting at 2016, a sum of 200 volumes have been published. This English rendition joins an assortment of changes to character names; Nobita is "Noby", Shizuka is "Sue", Suneo is "Sneech", and Gian is "Huge G", while dorayaki is "Yummy Bun/Fudgy Pudgy Pie". Also, starting at 2016, four volumes of the manga have been distributed in English on paper by Shogakukan Asia.

Shogakukan began computerized circulation of each of the 45 unique volumes all through Japan from July 16, 2015.

Anime


The main endeavor of a Doraemon vivified series was in 1973, by Nippon Television. After a January 1973 pilot named Doraemon Mirai Kara Yattekuru (ドラえもんが未来からやってくる, Doraemon Coming from the Future), 26 episodes, each with two fragments, were communicated on Nippon TV from April 1 to September 30 of the equivalent year. The series was coordinated by Mitsuo Kaminashi with voice cast from Aoni Production; the person Doraemon was voiced by Kōsei Tomita, afterwards by Masako Nozawa. Later in the series, the activity studio, Nippon TeleMovie Productions, failed, and the bosses were auctions off or destroyed. The series was re-circulated on Nippon TV and a few nearby stations until 1979, when Shogakukan mentioned Toyama Television to stop broadcasting. Some of the sections were found in the documents of IMAGICA in 1995, and some others were recuperated by Jun Masami in 2003. As of 2013, 21 of 52 portions have known to get by, two of which without audio.

Doraemon remained genuinely selective in manga structure until 1979 when a recently framed liveliness studio, Shin-Ei Animation (presently claimed by TV Asahi) created an energized second endeavor of Doraemon. The series, coordinated by Tsutomu Shibayama, broadcasted on TV Asahi from April 2, 1979 to March 18, 2005. Eiichi Nakamura filled in as overseer of photography and character designer, while Shunsuke Kikuchi was the composer. Nobuyo Ōyama voiced Doraemon in the series; along these lines, in Asia, this adaptation is here and there alluded to as the Ōyama Edition. In all out, 1,787 episodes were delivered and delivered in VHS and DVD by Toho. Celebrating the commemoration of the establishment, a third Doraemon vivified series, additionally delivered by Shin-Ei Animation, started circulating on TV Asahi on April 15, 2005, with new voice entertainers and staff, and refreshed character designs. The third series is in some cases alluded to in Asia as the Mizuta Edition, as a recognition for the voice entertainer for Doraemon, Wasabi Mizuta. It was delivered in DVD on February 10, 2006 under the title New TV-boycott Doraemon (NEW TV 版 ドラえもん, Doraemon NEW TV Version) with Shogakukan Video banner.

In May 2014, TV Asahi Corporation declared a concurrence with The Walt Disney Company to carry the 2005 series to the Disney XD TV slot in the United States starting in the late spring of that year. Besides utilizing the name changes that were utilized in AltJapan's English variation of the first manga, different changes and alters have likewise been made to make the show more interesting to an American crowd, for example, Japanese text being supplanted with English text on specific articles like signs and reviewed papers, things, for example, yen notes being supplanted by US dollar greenbacks, and the setting being changed from Japan to the United States. Initial reaction to the altered name was positive. The Disney transformation started broadcast in Japan on Disney Channel from February 1, 2016. The transmission offered the decision of the English voice track or a recently recorded Japanese track by the Japanese cast of the 2005 series.

Moreover, the anime has been circulated in north of sixty nations worldwide. It debuted in Thailand in 1982, the Philippines in 1999, India in 2005, and Vietnam in 2010. Other Asian nations that broadcast the series incorporate China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan, Malaysia, Indonesia, and South Korea. The series is authorized in EMEA districts by LUK International; it debuted in Spain in 1993 and France in 2003. It has likewise been disseminated in South American nations, remembering Brazil, Colombia, and Chile. For 2017, POPS Worldwide, a Vietnamese media organization, teamed up with TV Asahi to deliver the anime series on YouTube and other computerized platforms.

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