| » Features | » Hey Answerman! | » RIGHT TURN ONLY!! | » Shelf Life |
| » Editorials | » Anime News Nina | » Buried Treasure | » Interviews |
| » Reviews | » Chicks on Anime | » The X Button | » ANNCast and more... |
Darker than Black TV Anime Sequel Green-Lit
posted on 2009-06-03 08:10 EDT
This year's 12th issue of Square Enix's Young Gangan seinen manga magazine will announce on Friday that a television sequel for the Darker than BLACK anime has been green-lit. A file purportedly leaked from the BONES anime studio last July had revealed the plans for a "Darker than BLACK 2" anime series with original director Tensai Okamura. Character designer Yuji Iwahara had launched a new manga version of the anime in the 11th issue of the same Young Gangan magazine last month.
Funimation is releasing the first anime series in North America.
Source: 2channel
Image © BONES•Tensai Okamura / DTB Committee•MBS
discuss this in the forum (35 posts) |
bookmark with:
Digg
del.icio.us
reddit
Facebook
StumbleUpon
this article has been modified since it was originally posted; see change history
Erin tackles an alien invasion, and learns a thing or two about girls' kendo.
- Bamboo Blade pt 1
- Blue Drop complete series
- Tears to Tiara part 1
2009-12-21
Marvel's Black Widow gets an anime makeover. 2009-12-20
A healthy dose of anti-
This time on Hey, Answerman! Brian gives you his thoughts on Studio Ghibli, deciphers the difference between a Director, an Episode Director, and a Series Director, and singlehandedly "saves" anime. Plus a very rude new Flake and Hey Answerfans! 2009-12-18
You may not know his name, but you certainly know his work. Meet the Music Producer behind some of the biggest anime soundtracks in history, and the supervisor of luminaries Yoko Kanno, Yuki Kajiura, and many more. 2009-12-18
Chris Beveridge from AnimeonDVD.com stops by to chat about life, the universe, and his insane anime watching schedule. Plus: the baffling popularity of Spice and Wolf, and James Cameron's Battle Angel. 2009-12-17
Doesn't rectify its shortcomings so much as it steamrolls them with brute narrative force. A propulsive ending to an often uneven first season.
Despite a shaky start, the first half of this light-
Tomoya and Nagisa start formally building their lives and family together, but tragedy awaits, as this Key/
Gets the ball moving again after the filler of the first series, returning to the machinations of the Akatsuki and pushing its characters up a couple of levels power-
Here the series is in balance: an action-
In the long run, Asano says, we are what we choose to make of ourselves—and it is that idea, more than any particular character or storyline, that permeates this entire series.
Yes, it is exactly about a boy who must use his amazing powers to save the world, but such a clichéd description doesn't begin to explain the surprising layers of depth in this historical adventure.
Froglike aliens attempt to invade Earth, only to wind up attached to its inhabitants, hobbies, and conveniences, in this parody-
Regardless of relative storytelling quality, it's always a pleasure to hang with the hep cats of the Bokutou Police Station.
Five art college students and one of their professors share the trials and tribulations of art, school, life, and love in this long-
For the typical anime fan, the book fails in two aspects, but it still provides a wide selection of information that many will find useful.
All material Copyright © 1998-2009 Anime News Network. All rights reserved.
FAQ | Contact us | Staff | Staff openings | Advertise with ANN | Privacy policy
