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Hameyadea
Posts: 3679 |
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Maybe you conflating [season] with [story arc]? A lot of shows can have multiple [story arc] within a [season], and a single [story arc] spread across multiple [seasons].
From a production standpoint, a season is a cour - or quarter-of-a-year: Winter Season starts in January, ends in March; Spring Season starts in April, ends in June; Summer Season starts in July, ends in September, and; Fall Season starts in October, ends in December. |
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Bamble
Posts: 130 |
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While it's unfortunate that the Maison Ikkoku DVD sets 4 to 8 are much harder to find than the first three, it was at least made clear at the time of their original release that they would only be sold through two online outlets - by implication having reduced print runs. It was a similar situation with ADV's release of Prefectual Earth Defense Force; when a company announces one of their products is only going to be on sale from only a couple of online vendors, it's better to bite the bullet at the time rather than regret it later.
With regard rare 80s anime releases on R1 DVD, a much worse situation was seen with ADV's effective "limited edition" runs of City Hunter 3 and '91, and of course the infamous final two volumes of Dunbine. Because ADV never came outright and explicitly mentioned that those releases had much smaller print runs than their (obviously poor-selling) predecessors, it was only about 12 to 18 months before they were gone from pretty much every online retailer going, and then entering the realms of ultra price-gouging. Given Dunbine 11 and 12's particular rarity to this day, I still wonder just how few copies of these were actually printed. It couldn't have been more than a couple of thousand, surely? Funny that Dunbine and Maison Ikkoku shared a similar fate, even though they ended up being fully dubbed in English; very likely the final incidences of series of such vintage and length ever being afforded such expenditure. |
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Alan45
Village Elder
Posts: 9938 Location: Virginia |
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@Hameyadea
No, I'm trying to get across that the production system and cour or season system now used is not applicable to shows made twenty or thirty years ago. Urusei Yatsura does not have story arcs as such. It is almost completely episodic. It started and ran until it was discontinued. Any season breaks when issued on DVD would be artificial. Ranma 1/2 and Inu Yasha were broadcast in a similar method. Even changes in the opening and closing animation seem to be random, without regard to season. |
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EricJ2
Posts: 4016 |
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Although there was a break in the '84 season (fourth?) when Oshii left the series-- Up to that point, we got four cheap-filler clip recap episodes, three of them in a row, building up to the big two part "season-finale" episodes 105 & 106 where Lum is kidnapped at the Mendou estate. After that, the show returned with Maison's Kazuo Yamazaki as the more mellow and wistful lead director. Just because you don't see the spring reruns doesn't mean they don't happen.... |
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Alan45
Village Elder
Posts: 9938 Location: Virginia |
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@EricJ2
Yes, but you are talking about a point two years into the series. You refer to it as season four which would mean two cour seasons. And even with the change in directors, there was only a one week hiatus between 106 and 107 and another between 107 and 108. My point is that season divisions back then were a bit arbitrary. |
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doc-watson42
Encyclopedia Editor
Posts: 1709 |
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I realized that people might find this of interest—it's an article about the beginning of the North American hentai anime market:
Patten, Fred (July 1998). "The Anime 'Porn' Market" (alternate link). Animation World Magazine Issue 3.4.
Actually, about 2400 (today episode #2299 is scheduled, but I believe that count doesn't include specials).
I'd ask Mr. Sevakis those questions—I'm interested in the answers, too. However, TRSI does stream some of their Critical Mass Video titles, specifically the Vanilla Series—the links are on the individual Right Stuf product pages.
That's the (second) English version of DMM's site—DMM is probably Japan's largest porn e-tailer.
Actually, they seem to have bought almost the entire existing catalog, the exceptions being Urotsukidoji and one or two other titles, which MB/Kitty Media picked up.
Err—eighteen (source 2), not twenty one. |
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