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NEWS: Sailor Moon Ranks as #7 Graphic Novel in U.S. Bookstores in October




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Tenbyakugon



Joined: 11 Jan 2012
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Location: Ohio, United States
PostPosted: Fri Nov 09, 2012 5:06 pm Reply with quote
It amazes me how much people will watch and read something like The Walking Dead.
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TsukasaElkKite



Joined: 22 Nov 2005
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PostPosted: Fri Nov 09, 2012 9:44 pm Reply with quote
SM has been doing AMAZING.
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roseversailles



Joined: 13 Sep 2012
Posts: 236
Location: Washington, U.S.
PostPosted: Sat Nov 10, 2012 12:16 am Reply with quote
TsukasaElkKite wrote:
SM has been doing AMAZING.


Thank god for that. Since the manga's been doing so well and there is a renewed interest in the series, perhaps someone will license the old anime? Toei, please let someone get the rights to it! As excited as I am for the new series, I grew up with the old one. I had every single VHS tape, every DVD, the wands, the lockets, the dolls, even the moon cycle.... how I would weep over a gorgeous Blu-Ray boxset, released to a NA audience!
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NJ_



Joined: 31 Oct 2009
Posts: 3007
Location: Wallington, NJ
PostPosted: Sat Nov 10, 2012 2:55 am Reply with quote
roseversailles wrote:
TsukasaElkKite wrote:
SM has been doing AMAZING.


Thank god for that. Since the manga's been doing so well and there is a renewed interest in the series, perhaps someone will license the old anime? Toei, please let someone get the rights to it! As excited as I am for the new series, I grew up with the old one. I had every single VHS tape, every DVD, the wands, the lockets, the dolls, even the moon cycle.... how I would weep over a gorgeous Blu-Ray boxset, released to a NA audience!


1. It's not completely Toei's fault, it was revealed in a podcast back in February by a representative of the company who's releasing it in Latin America that everything has to be approved by Naoko Takeuchi herself and she is apprently very hard to please.

Source: http://www.anmtvla.com/2012/02/podcast-plan-b-004-la-caja-parlante-de.html

It's in Spanish so for those who don't understand, here are the details translated in English by two people who listened at the time that it was posted.

http://www.sailormoonforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=545223#p545223 (First post on this page)

http://www.sailormoonforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=550427#p550427 (The Details were split on 2 pages so here's his full translation below)

Vilhem wrote:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Podcast: Plan B: Talk Box Mercury

Invited Guest: Fernando Sanz: Part of the Capital 8 staff and the Official Sailor Moon Fan Club President for Mexico and Latin America. Fernando “Usagifer” Sanz is one of the important people behind the Talk Box series project based on Naoko Takeuchi’s work. Today, Fernando will tell us in detail everything about the upcoming Talk Box Mercury, how they came to an agreement with Toei, the difficulty in negotiating with Takeuchi herself, and an exclusive: what will happen with the Spanish language version of Princess Moon. Who will finally be the singer?

[Introduction of Fernando Sanz and how Capital 8 works as distributors for anime]

Sanz mentions that the staff at Capital 8 are also anime fans, so they know what the fans would like on their DVD releases
Towers Entertainment: licenses and dubs the shows
Capital 8: Distributor

Licensing:
Sanz: It’s a very long process. The public wouldn’t believe just how long it takes working on these long negotiations. For example, with Sailor Moon, it was a process of 2 years before we acquired the license, to be able to come to an agreement to release the series, which happened more or less the same with “los Caballeros del Zodiaco [Saint Seiya]”.

I think the power of conviction that we sometimes have as people and as businesses is important, in that the Japanese people, the executives, will like you. Then, you come to them with your proposition; what you want to do, how you want to do it, and…you have to convince them, you have to sell your idea ver well for them to release the license. It’s not easy; you have to negotiate for a long time, you have to sell very well what you intend to do so they can agree and release the license. The same thing happens with “los Caballeros” [talks about Saint Seiya licensing process which is just as difficult to get as Sailor Moon]

Sailor Moon took a lot of effort, mainly because Naoko Takeuchi, well, I’m sorry Sailor Scouts, but she is who owns 100% of the rights to Sailor Moon. She is the one who has the final say so on whether or not the license will be released to you.

PlanB: Basically, if she likes the products, she says “Sure, go ahead”, but if not, “No” and that’s it.

Sanz: You have to come with a set idea on how you want to exploit the franchise, exploit her product, and she consults, obviously, with people at Toei, but she is the one who decides if she likes the idea of how you’re going to exploit the Sailor Moon franchise. And well, the license did take some time. It’s been a few months since the remastered DVDS were released over in Japan, and obviously, we weren’t going to have them before the Japanese. So because of that, it took a bit longer to release the final product, and so that we could have the series remastered, because it’s very different than the one that came out a couple of years ago on some American DVDS [talks about ADV’s releases, and how the company no longer exists]

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vilhem wrote:
Masters:

Sanz: We want to respect the wishes of the Sailor Scouts, the fans, in what they want, and a quality product. Regarding Sailor Moon, the negotiations to buy the license took a long time. There were many discussions on how the product was going to be released.

They (Toei) lend you the masters, where you take the audio, the image, everything, so you can make the DVDs. And at that moment (negotiations), they would not give us the “remastered” masters.

It was either those (remastered masters), or do a transfer from old Betacam tapes to DVD, and well, it’s not a very good quality image compared to the one all of you have on the DVDs we’ve released. It was an image quite degraded.

PlanB: Comparable to the version of Sailor Moon we saw on TV all those years ago, more or less, or worse?

Sanz: More or less, mainly because the resolution quality is a bit ugly, and also because the tapes are quite old. It’s said that the image on the tape has noise, a noise that’s very hard to remove in a remasterization. So it was a difficult negotiation because they already had plans to release the DVDs commemorating the 20 years of Sailor Moon, and, well, they were DVDs with a new image, sound, and with new characteristics. So Capital 8 and Towers always fought to obtain the remasters, which is now what you have in your hands.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Vilhem wrote:
More stuffs below.

Note: Fernando Sanz specifically mentions, more than once, that the license was very expensive, which pretty much debunks what the Italian site reported as "free license" rantipole. This was a pretty informative segment. Read on!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

PlanB: How was it, after the process, Towers and Capital 8 were able to acquire the remastered versión of Sailor moon from Toei? What did you have to sell (to them)?

Sanz: Basically, it was an expensive product. Sailor Moon is an expensive product, mainly because it's starting to reappear in markets all over the world. It is being relicensed all over.

PlanB: We’re not going to tell you all the details of how it was acquired, etc, because (if we did), Toei’s offices would be burned down at this moment.

Sanz: It was a difficult process. There’s a lot of things that I would take too long in explaining, but basically we fought, we insisted a lot with Toei, with Naoko, so that we could acquire the license. I believe a lot of it had to do with the fondness Naoko Takeuchi has towards the fans in Latin America.
Obviously the license cost much more money so that it could be released. But one of the conditions was to respect not only the version that we had presented to Toei and Naoko (the Talk Box), but also to respect the image, the quality, the audio; in other words, to make it the best we could, to not ruin it like other franchises, where they get cuts here and there; to comply with one of the guidelines which is to not cut anything and to have the best quality audio and video possible so as to not deceive the fans.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Their second set, Talk Box Mercury, also got delayed a while back due to music issues as Naoko apprently didn't approve of any newly-dubbed songs that were made specifically for these sets so the company had to drop their versions of Princess Moon & Otome No Policy (which were already recorded) along with other songs they had planned for future sets.

Source: http://www.sailormoonforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=579938#p579938 (My quote in the second post & the full third post on this page)

2. I doubt Toei would ever allow anyone to release the old anime on Blu-ray before they do one themselves (which I don't see happening anytime soon if ever except for maybe the movies) so don't get your hopes up.
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enurtsol



Joined: 01 May 2007
Posts: 14755
PostPosted: Sat Nov 10, 2012 5:45 am Reply with quote
Tenbyakugon wrote:
It amazes me how much people will watch and read something like The Walking Dead.


And those Compendium books cost $60 each! And yet at the top!
That's what a good series gets ya.

And at #3 Avatar:TLA novels keep selling! If this was Japan, another series would've been called for already!


TsukasaElkKite wrote:
SM has been doing AMAZING.


And it was only released on the last days of October!


NJ_ wrote:

Their second set, Talk Box Mercury, also got delayed a while back due to music issues as Naoko apprently didn't approve of any newly-dubbed songs that were made specifically for these sets so the company had to drop their versions of Princess Moon & Otome No Policy (which were already recorded) along with other songs they had planned for future sets.


And she never used to care! Yet from that arose all those SM OPs in different languages that fans remember fondly! Her micro-managing might backfire on her.
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lostrune



Joined: 09 Jun 2012
Posts: 313
PostPosted: Sat Nov 10, 2012 6:02 pm Reply with quote
enurtsol wrote:
And at #3 Avatar:TLA novels keep selling! If this was Japan, another series would've been called for already!


But in America all you have to do is sell a few thousand copies to hit #1 on the charts. In Japan you need a few million to get the top spot. Laughing

If a manga got that low of sales they wouldn't get another series, they'd be cancelled Wink
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enurtsol



Joined: 01 May 2007
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2012 3:52 am Reply with quote
lostrune wrote:
enurtsol wrote:
And at #3 Avatar:TLA novels keep selling! If this was Japan, another series would've been called for already!


But in America all you have to do is sell a few thousand copies to hit #1 on the charts. In Japan you need a few million to get the top spot. Laughing


Not most of the time actually. It's only a few manga that could do that.


enurtsol wrote:

If a manga got that low of sales they wouldn't get another series, they'd be cancelled Wink


My statement is all relative. As I mentioned above, those Walking Dead Compendium books cost $60 each, so for that kind of franchise, they wouldn't need to sell as much. Or if something is around the top for a long time in the marketplace it's in, that could show the powers-that-be its enduring popularity whatever the competition may be.

Let's turn this around. Compared to America (where may need tens of millions, especially when Disney could sell 5 million in 1 day), Japanese video sales are extremely low; yet those are enough to have a franchise renewed, partly because prices are more expensive but cheaper to make. Relative to what the Japanese need, those are enough.
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littlegreenwolf



Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
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PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:03 pm Reply with quote
enurtsol wrote:
Tenbyakugon wrote:
It amazes me how much people will watch and read something like The Walking Dead.


And those Compendium books cost $60 each! And yet at the top!
That's what a good series gets ya.


It's even more impressive when you take into account that this is after

1) Initial Monthly comic release
2) First TPB volume release
3) First omnibus HC release
4) Special Edition Hardcover release
5) Omnibus TPB release

and I'm sure I'm missing another re-release/edition or two, but yeah, this compendium is not the first collection of volumes this comic has seen
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lostrune



Joined: 09 Jun 2012
Posts: 313
PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:38 pm Reply with quote
enurtsol wrote:
enurtsol wrote:

If a manga got that low of sales they wouldn't get another series, they'd be cancelled Wink


My statement is all relative. As I mentioned above, those Walking Dead Compendium books cost $60 each, so for that kind of franchise, they wouldn't need to sell as much. Or if something is around the top for a long time in the marketplace it's in, that could show the powers-that-be its enduring popularity whatever the competition may be.

Let's turn this around. Compared to America (where may need tens of millions, especially when Disney could sell 5 million in 1 day), Japanese video sales are extremely low; yet those are enough to have a franchise renewed, partly because prices are more expensive but cheaper to make. Relative to what the Japanese need, those are enough.


Japanese home video costs a lot more though, not to mention is broken up into a dozen or more volumes and is all based on midnight no-ratings shows. Unlike a mainstream AMC primetime show. Not to mention Japan is a fraction of the population of America so American sales should be a lot more by that regard but aren't

Though I guess it's a good thing we were talking about a cheap 7 dollar Avatar kiddy comic book and not the Walking Dead Laughing
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LUNI_TUNZ



Joined: 28 Apr 2010
Posts: 809
PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 12:11 am Reply with quote
NJ_ wrote:

Their second set, Talk Box Mercury, also got delayed a while back due to music issues as Naoko apprently didn't approve of any newly-dubbed songs that were made specifically for these sets so the company had to drop their versions of Princess Moon & Otome No Policy (which were already recorded) along with other songs they had planned for future sets.

Source: http://www.sailormoonforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=579938#p579938 (My quote in the second post & the full third post on this page)

2. I doubt Toei would ever allow anyone to release the old anime on Blu-ray before they do one themselves (which I don't see happening anytime soon if ever except for maybe the movies) so don't get your hopes up.


Oh no. I just realized this may affect the English theme being used in the future. I <3 that song.
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enurtsol



Joined: 01 May 2007
Posts: 14755
PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 1:08 am Reply with quote
lostrune wrote:
enurtsol wrote:
lostrune wrote:

If a manga got that low of sales they wouldn't get another series, they'd be cancelled Wink


My statement is all relative. As I mentioned above, those Walking Dead Compendium books cost $60 each, so for that kind of franchise, they wouldn't need to sell as much. Or if something is around the top for a long time in the marketplace it's in, that could show the powers-that-be its enduring popularity whatever the competition may be.

Let's turn this around. Compared to America (where may need tens of millions, especially when Disney could sell 5 million in 1 day), Japanese video sales are extremely low; yet those are enough to have a franchise renewed, partly because prices are more expensive but cheaper to make. Relative to what the Japanese need, those are enough.


Japanese home video costs a lot more though, not to mention is broken up into a dozen or more volumes and is all based on midnight no-ratings shows. Unlike a mainstream AMC primetime show. Not to mention Japan is a fraction of the population of America so American sales should be a lot more by that regard but aren't


Actually, US population (~310 million) is about 3x Japan's population (~130 million), but the US video industry (~$20 billion) is about 8x Japan's video industry (~$2.5 billion) despite Japan's higher prices. So no, population and prices are not the only reasons - Americans simply spend more for videos than Japanese per capita (US just has a more vibrant home video culture).

But as I was saying, that's beside the point. You're looking at this at absolute terms. In absolute numbers, US comic sales are a lot smaller than Japan's, and Japan's video sales are a lot smaller than US's. But that doesn't matter - what matters is relative to the competition. For instance, though paltry in the US, several thousands video sales in Japan is quite good relative to its competition - and thus that franchise may get renewed.

That's why I said that A:TLA being #3 in the charts, if it was Japan and at #3 or near the top of the graphic novel rankings all the time, then that could've called for a renewal of the franchise already. (Because unfortunately in the US, being at the top of the charts in graphic novel sales is usually not enough - but in Japan, it can be.)


lostrune wrote:

Though I guess it's a good thing we were talking about a cheap 7 dollar Avatar kiddy comic book and not the Walking Dead Laughing


Oh, cheap shot 'cause ya missed the argument, though people could say that about trashy otaku-ish things too, so be careful about glass houses and all that. Razz
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StudioToledo



Joined: 16 Aug 2006
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 15, 2012 5:36 pm Reply with quote
[quote="NJ_"]

1. It's not completely Toei's fault, it was revealed in a podcast back in February by a representative of the company who's releasing it in Latin America that everything has to be approved by Naoko Takeuchi herself and she is apprently very hard to please.[quote]
Wouldn't surprise me if she is that stuck-up over what and whom gets approval.
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littlegreenwolf



Joined: 10 Aug 2002
Posts: 4796
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 15, 2012 10:40 pm Reply with quote
enurtsol wrote:

That's why I said that A:TLA being #3 in the charts, if it was Japan and at #3 or near the top of the graphic novel rankings all the time, then that could've called for a renewal of the franchise already. (Because unfortunately in the US, being at the top of the charts in graphic novel sales is usually not enough - but in Japan, it can be.)


lostrune wrote:

Though I guess it's a good thing we were talking about a cheap 7 dollar Avatar kiddy comic book and not the Walking Dead Laughing


Oh, cheap shot 'cause ya missed the argument, though people could say that about trashy otaku-ish things too, so be careful about glass houses and all that. Razz


Eh... maybe I'm completely missing out what you guys are arguing over here but... have you guys heard of this thing called Legend of Korra? Cause... yeah. The Airbender franchise is alive and kicking much in terms of ratings butt.
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Redbeard 101
Oscar the Grouch
Forums Superstar


Joined: 14 Aug 2006
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PostPosted: Thu Nov 15, 2012 11:03 pm Reply with quote
littlegreenwolf wrote:

Eh... maybe I'm completely missing out what you guys are arguing over here but... have you guys heard of this thing called Legend of Korra? Cause... yeah. The Airbender franchise is alive and kicking much in terms of ratings butt.

Think they were arguing over the merits and quality of Airbender and Walking Dead. Maybe not. Hard to keep up with pointless stuff often. I'm just glad SM is even in the top 10 here in the states. Given the age of the series it's nice that after all this time it's still pushing on. Gives me hope for of my favorite older series possibly getting a few cc's of new life injected into them maybe.
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