Miyazaki's Future w/ Disney
An anonymous reader sent us an interesting little article about
Miyazaki and Disney. Disney of course owns the rights to distribute his films (like to pick a gigantic example Princess Mononoke) to worldwide audiences. Apparently lackluster profits from Mononoke may jeopradize future Miyazaki titles release in the US, which would be terribly unfortunate considering that in the end, the DVD release of Mononoke was absolutely wonderful (although its a somewhat dark film for Mouse) This is all
tied to Spirited Away, his latest film which is apparently doing great things at the Japanese Box Office.
What a shame it is that the big corporations have to market to the lowest common denominator. I too own the DVD of Princess Mononoke, and I love it. I think it really stinks that instead of getting quality movies released, Disney puts out crap like Atlantis, Spy Kids or most recently the Princess Diaries, because they know that people will pay for them.
I read an article over at c|net yesterday discussing the idea of "critic proof" movies (they related it to Windows XP), movies that are commercially successful even though the critics hate them, like Tomb Raider, and most action movies. I dislike that they are willing to release movies like this. It seems like nearly everything released recently falls under this category. I haven't been to the movie theater in months.
Captain_Frisk
Well, that's what you get for capitalism, fortunately or unfortunately. Still, on my experience, some of their bad stuff is good when one's desperate for Sunday afternoon viewing of some kind to avoid going to the outdoors.
Jonathan Ah Kit - Lower Hutt, New Zealand - jonathan@metalab.unc.edu
I've never seen an ad for Mononoke (though, of course, I own the DVD). It's interesting that Disney's compaining about sales but has never really pushed the film....
They'll just add talking animals and bad musical numbers to them first.
This really sucks. Disney shouldn't be in the anime game anyway. Manga has been doing it right for years. It's a shame that Hayao's talent is being wasted with them. Who needs new anime anyway I guess. When there's Boah, Vampire Hunter D, Fists of the North Star, and many other classics to watch.
Speaking of classic anime. I saw Ninja Scroll on cinemax the other day.
- tre
http://piclabs.com
Back in the 70's when I was a kid, there was at least a hint left of the 'we just want to make kids happy, and if we make money doing it, that's cool' vibe from them. No more. Nowadays, Disney is just another evil megacorporation who cranks out unentertaining, ultra-merchandisable dreck with a "G" rating (face it, they are more like 90-minute commercials for the toys in the Disney Store than they are movies now), would pry the pennies off a dead man's eyes if it would add to their profits, and is quick to fire off the lawyers in any direction where there is a little guy to be squashed for painting Donald Duck on the side of his daycare center or otherwise depriving the mother ship of a dollar of profit.
~Philly
Manga (aka Mangle) does anime right? I dare you to Watch the DVD version of Wings Of Honneamise and say that. One of the best movies of all time (not anime movie, movies in general) completely ruined by mistakes in the DVD authoring and manga refuses to acknowledge that they have released a defective product.
...if all you've seen is Mononoke, you'd do well to see Miyazaki's other films as well. I call them films because to call them simply anime or (even worse) "cartoons" is like spitting on a Picasso by calling it a "drawing".
- A.P.
"Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
I first saw a fansub of Nausicaa in the eighties at GenCon, and though already a fan of anime, had never seen something so beautiful. Like many others, I fell in love with it, and wanted more.
Thus the problem. How do you get a copy of a film that no one will distribute here? I'd be thrilled to pay just about any amount of money if someone would just sell the thing. Instead, we're forced to sneak around just to enjoy the art. I wrote Disney a letter thanking them for releasing Mononoke and Kiki (charming movie, even with Phil Hartman's Gigi), and telling them I hoped they would do the same high-quality releases for Miyazaki's other films.
But nothing. We still have their wonderful Mononoke DVD release, and the so-so pan and scan of Kiki, of which every copy I've seen is too bright. They also distributed a widescreen Japanese-language Kiki with English subtitles -- but on VHS only. When I want to see any other Miyazaki films, I have no choice but to view pirated versions.
I know my complaints are old, but they're also current. I am going to watch the movies, even if it means breaking the law. Isn't that a hoot? Having to break the law to watch a family-friendly animated movie. Of course Disney would throw a fit, and Studio Ghibli sure doesn't like it either, but I'm ready, willing, and able to give them money -- even if they want to overcharge -- but they won't sell them!
So is it any wonder that fans of these movies pirate them when there's no legal option for obtaining them? Even Miyazaki fan sites, like http://www.nausicaa.net denounce piracy. But it's sort of two-faced, because that's the only option THEY have for watching the films too. It's very frustrating.
but how often does this happend? >> error?
----
"I believe in karma. That means I can do bad things to people and assume they deserve it" - Dogbert
it was only successfull because of angelena jolie, me and all my male friends saw it, but only because of jolie. Quite ridiculous eh?
and yes it sucked, worst movie ever.
Photos.
I was thrilled to see Mononoke distributed in the United States and voiced by pro actors like Bill Thornton and Claire Danes.
However, I took it with a grain of salt because of the nature of corporat culture.
Consider a big company that makes cars, like Ford. It will sometimes innovate and sometimes fall back to basics, depending on the lemming-like groupthink patterns of middle management.
Sometimes the lemmings will follow a rogue vp or engineer and make something new and brilliant, reaching out to a market of people in a different culture.
Sometimes they will return to some archivally determined basic, conservative operations in an attempt to bring back the good old days.
This cyclical pattern applies to media as well. If one accepts this dynamic, then it may be better for Miyazaki to produce independently, as he would have to conform to a corporate renaissance of classical Disney production standards to continue producing there.
I'd rather he stayed independent than turn into a lemming.
Goat sex free since 2001
Please leave Japanese animation *out* of american hands, all they do is cut, censor and destroy the original content...
Artix
Your Linux, your init.
although its a somewhat dark film for Mouse
Well, Disney could have released the film under one of their many other brands. Like GM (Oldsmobile, Buick, Saturn, etc), Disney has many brands. So, if Miyazaki's film is "too dark", then why not just release it under Dimension or Miramax?
Much like how many people don't know that Pontiac and Oldsmobile are "cousins" (the Grand Am and Alero are almost identical under their skin), most people probably aren't aware that Disney owns these other brands. So, by releasing the movie under a different brand, Disney could give the film a "new image".
Alex Bischoff
HTML/CSS coder for hire
it never made it into the cineplexes. None of the chains thought it would do well for them, especially people bringing their children in to see a nice cartoony movie and getting Mononoke instead. So in order to see it you'd have to go to some art type theater thats only open one day a week. And most people don't even know about it, let alone care enough to find their local film as art theater.
I Browse at +4 Flamebait
Open Source Sysadmin
Miyazaki needs to ignore horrible corporations such as Disney. Although the distribution would be less. Let's keep this at a grassroots level where people actually enjoy the movie rather than buying it because "my friends have it, so i bought it too". We don't want Disney to also create a trends setting fad with Anime that could die down within a year. That would be disaster to the Anime Industry.
People take their kids to see violent films nowadays. I remember children as young as six when I went to see "Kiss of the Dragon." Talk about family material ...
What was bizzare about the film is that it was culturally very different. Miyazaki has a small obsession with the relationship with man and nature, and his film go far beyond in exploring this than anything I've seen in the US. Afterall, who in the US would create a God character resembling a deer that gives and takes life as it walks about? It was differences like the above that made it hard for people to swallow, not the "darkness."
While I'm here, I'll also rant about the dub for Mononoke. Claire Daines as the princess completely ruined it for me. Billy Bob Thorton's southern voice as an old Japanese monk type character put the icing on the cake. What a half-ass job for the voice actors Disney did.
Enonu
Given the weak treatment Disney gave the theatrical release of Mononoke, I can see why Miyazaki would be concerned. Disney spent a ton of money doing one of the best anime dubs ever, and then released the movie to a handful of arty theatres, most of which were located in major cites. Most of the US population never even had a chance to go see the movie.
On top of that, advertising was weak, with short commercials restricted to slimly targeted timeslots.
I almost wonder if Disney did this with Mononoke because they did not realize until AFTER buying the rights that it would be competing with Disney's own animated films, which of late have been generally poor compared to older films, and also bear a heavy semblance to anime style. Perhaps Disney is pushing Miyazaki's work to the back burner to protect the films where they get exclusive profits.
I HATE watching a great anime when the English dub sucks with those whiny American voices. So I usually switch it to Japanese and turn on the subtitles.
:(
But, guess what. While the English dub is done in dolby 5.1, the Japanese is done in stereo! AGGGHHH!!! (Ninja Scroll, Ghost in the Shell, and Akira come to mind)
It makes me want to go out and buy the Japanese marketed version to see if it has english subtitles.
You know, I wonder if such movies fail at the box office simply because of the crappy voices. Makes me cringe when I hear them.
I actually read a while ago that Disney was not happy with Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke and wanted him to edit the film to give it a a G rating. Miyazaki declined and said that if he has to edit his films, he will go through another company. I am sure that this upset DEisney quite a bit.
I'll be glad when Disney relinquishes their rights to Studio Ghibli's material. I remember the uproar it caused among fans back when Disney first got their grubby hands on Studio Ghibli... I remember that even Miyazaki himself was opposed to the idea. He only went through with it as a favour to his long-time, publisher friend who was in financial trouble and was looking for a way out by selling out to the Mouse.
What an insult it was to Studio Ghibli to be subjugated under the Disney banner when their artistry was nothing like Disney's. Work coming out of Studio Ghibli has such tremendous quality. It has the power to change lives; this is no joke. I remember watching Porco Rosso for the first time, and damn -- I just felt good about Life after that. It was so fscking beautiful in so many ways. The characters and the interplay between them, the subtlety, the life-like ambiance throughout... their work is so tight. Disney (at least their new stuff)[0] is contrived and formulaic by comparison.
In the long run, it will be much better this way. The fansubs will become available again, and Miyazaki's work will be more widely available as a result.
We in the Free Software / Open Source communities should understand better than anyone that wide distribution of information doesn't require big corporations and advertisement. Just let the quality speak for itself.
[0] As much as I've been coming down on Disney, I have to give props to them for their older work -- that was good stuff.
Pardon, I meant to say given Miyazaki's prior reputation. Shoulda used the preview button...
Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
I have deselected Anime AND Cmdr Taco and this bullshit still shows up on my page!
.
.
Don't read this!
You get what you pay for. Hell, if any microsoft product actually did what it was supposed to do, it would certainly be worth at least what they charge for it, if not even more. Look at what still is a premium price paid for ANY SCO product, for example.
I just put a Mandrake box in as a qmail server/firewall and it initially cost the client $200 in setup fees. As time progresses, and it needs to do more (Apache for administrative front ends, as well as Samba for the obvious) the cost of administration will grow. On the other hand, the Win2k server behind the Linux box cost them at least $1500 (SBS 10 user - alotta shit...)in setup, once tweaked, but the administration cost will be almost nil.
db
Cig:
ôô
While I liked Mononoke Hime okay, my favorite two films are Kaze no Tani no Naushika and Tenku no Shiro Laputa. (sorry, I only know the movies by their Japanese titles). These were great films. It is very disappointing that I can't share these enjoyable films with my English speaking friends and family.
In my mind, Disney has no business even touching these films. Disney's talent at story telling and detailed animation cannot touch the likes of these films. It's completely beyond them. I hope somebody eventually gets it right.
It's also sad that I can only buy these films on VHS even if I travel to Japan. They really need to be released on a region free DVD.
regards animation as something only for kids, it can't be helped.
Well, it is seen as such in my country (guess which), too. But the producers don't pinpoint their focus as much as American ones. In other words, they are not as super-commercial, and directors like Miyazaki has more say in the work.
The parents are not as crazy as in the US either; e.g. they clearly tolerate the violence in Prince Mononoke.
Why is slashdot still obsessed with Anime bashing?
You would have thought that AC etc would have grown out of this pathetic obsession with bashing Anime while watching dumb American cartoons like The Simpsons, not to mention paedophile-pleasing imagery.
Don't go with Disney. Hayao Miyazaki's 1996 contract only seems to cover Mononoke and not Spirited Away. Also I hate to break it to some of the fanboys but anime is largely a fring/aquired taste here. Expecting mass american acceptance usually means accepting american style marketing, edits, etc.
Considering where the anime DVD market is right now this thing is going to sell like hotcakes when released. I'd much rather have it on DVD, say in a few months, than wait for 4 theaters to play it nationwide pushing back the DVD release a year.
The best part of going straight to DVD is you can still have your local arthouse theater showings at midnight and the fanboys and fangirls will come just to see it on the big screen.
With grown men who obsess over anime bashing while still watching stupid American cartoons like The Simpsons.
They should leave things uncensored and release subs, or they shouldn't buy rights at all.
Disney is only so "powerful" these days because of their huge marketing.
I was about to disagree with the parent post, about lack of advertising. Living in the Twin Cities, I remember seeing a ton of ads for P. M. You Are Correct, Sir!
--hongpong.com
What phallic symbols will we see in this Disney rendition of a "classic"? Penis swords? Vagina shields? Brick configurations that spell sex?
release here in Japan until the winter of 2002 (maybe even 2003). There
was a schedule of sorts attached to the pre-order display for Totoro, but
I was so shocked at the delay, I forgot the specifics. The Japanese
auction sites all have several US versions listed (as well as Akira, which
will cost 9800 yen -- that's >$80!!) when it's released next month).
Needless to say, region free players are quite common.
So if Disney was thinking about family friendly materials, why did they not simply release 'Castle in the Sky' instead? Sure, we know there is that problem with the original title 'Laputa - Castle in the Sky' and that the word 'Laputa' appears a few times in the film, but this is probably the most family friendly, heart warming of all Miyazaki films that would've, in my opinion, done extremely well in the States... There isn't too much of a cultural gap and the characters can be easily related to by all.
Anyways, I just hope Disney doesn't just hold the rights tightly in their grip and not let others pick up the film for a release, guess the other thing to do will be to write to Disney and complain.
The Disney translations have generally poor voice acting (even by name celebreties) and have every silent gap filled up with music because "That's what American audiences are used to." Baloney.
The Castle of Cagliostoro disc is a good buy however, it is released by Manga Entertainment, not Disney. (it's a pre-Ghibli Miyazake film)
The Japanese Miayzake DVD's are becoming the definitive item to have for the Miyazake collector. Original everything, plus English DVD captioning.
Also, if you're a huge fan of Laputa: Castle in the Sky like I am, you can get the (surprisingly good!) Streamline Pictures dub on the analog tracks of the Laputa laserdisc in the Miyazake box set. That being said, I now have two pristine fan-subtitled versions as well as the old dub in my hands, so I'm happy for the time being. (please don't email for copies) Streamline was run by Jerry Beck (famed animation historian) and Carl Macek (of Harmony Gold/Robotech fame) which is why you will hear robotech voice actors in their Laputa dub, including none other than the voice actress known as Reba West (English Minmei in Robotech) as the voice of Sheeta. Laputa enjoyed a small art house run in America during the early 90's. Most people don't remember this, but I have all my flyers and and newspaper articles saved. :) Aside from the occasional horrible one-liners, it's a good view. ("We can go all the way...")
Regarding Miyazake's reluctance for video release, yes, old-time anime fans will remember the horribly slaughtered New World Video release of Nausicaa, a.k.a. Warriors of the WInd, with none other than June Foray (the voice of Rocky the Flying Squirell) as Nausicaa. I don't think she did a bad job, it's just that New World cut 1/2 hour out of the film, removing all the important bits about the overall plot and theme. It's a travesty.
Cheers, and happy Miyazake-ing,
--Mike
but you're a real faggot if you do like anime.
-- You see, there would be these conclusions that you could jump to
In the USA, new media ideas spread from the coasts, not from the midwest.
Or Holland, MI for that matter!
I have to agree, Disney did not promote Mononoke well in the theater.
I had to drive 20 miles to a large city to see it, in a small theater that its big thing was non-main stream films.
I bet they spent more money on some of their past duds.
I think if they had did a main stream release of Kiki's delivery service it would have done well.
All of the people I have shown my copy of the Disney release and are not anime fans like it..
I have been looking for the forward to the release of Laputa: Castle in the sky, my thought is they held it up since in some way's similar to Atlantis.
But then again look at Atlantis, it is not the happy singing disney we have seen in the past.
I was unhappy back when the Disney deal went through and look's like I will have to wait longer to see the rest of Miyazaki's work done in English.
Wise men speak because they have something to say, Fools because they have to say something!!!!
I am glad we in the geek community can maintain such a united front against Disney and the rest of the MPAA even when they produce stuff we crave like anime. I am glad we can resist the urge to let our "geek portal" put up an article which would encourage the consumption of Disney and the MPAA's content right on the front page, with nary a reference to the freedoms that they are taking away. I am glad we don't have people here that want to get lots of DVDs of that stuff, in spite of Johannsen and others who put their livelihood and personal liberty on the line for freedom. I am glad we aren't supporting a technology like DVD which is so entwined with the DMCA, which is the law used to illegally arrest Dmitry Sklyarov under the legal theory that the DMCA has jurisdiction in Moscow.
</sarcasm>
Before you mod this down as offtopic, think, what are you supporting here?
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
You have no soul. Can I interest you in a slightly used one, at a great price?
News for Nerds. Stuff that Matters? Like hell.
there's a grey market collection of *ALL* the major studio ghibli films available on dvd. it comes from singapore and is probably marginally legal. it comes on 6 dvds, with 2 movies on each disc, and selectable english/chinese subtitles. I ordered a copy off of ebay, but haven't recieved it yet so I can't comment on quality. but it sells for a mindblowingly low price as well. oh yeah, region 0 - viewable on all dvd players.
also, there are region 2 (or 3 possibly?) collectors' sets for tonari no totoro and kiki's delivery service, which probably offer the best possible transfer, as well as a second disc on each with extras. they also have english subtitles. they're pretty expensive though, and available only through expensive japanese mailorder.
Why have you not gotten the message that anime is for homos!?
And by homos I mean not the dick sucking faggot kind, but the lame douche bags who might, and I mean *might*, once in a bazillion years get some pussy, but not likely as even dumb fat chicks are repulsed by anime-dorks "gay" antics that any nearby-poon runs for the hills. They give good honest bone-smugglers a bad image, with their nancy-boy, "ooooh I got a cell from the original Akira series, naaa nanana naaah!"
The current Slashdot moderation system is made by gay communists!
I am a HUGE miyazaki fan. Princess Mononoke is very good, but I think some of his older films (Laputa, Porco Rosso) are even better, and it's sad that none of these videos are being released. It IS true that mononoke bombed (well, it made money, but not the kind of money disney expects), and that dissapointed them from releasing Laputa, which was to be their next theater release. Disney also released one of his movies, Kiki's Delivery service, which is also a very good movie. Go watch it, trust me, you'll love it.
;-)
The problem is that Miyazaki's company picked the wrong company to do the job. It's not their fault, really; They've had very bad luck with exporting their movies.
To cite an example, his Nausicaa movie was brought over to America by one company. (the manga is better than the movie, BTW, and is commercially available from Viz) That company did a DISQUISTING job of the dubbing, they cut 30 MINUTES of the movie, changed characters names, cut music, dialouge, and did a terrible dubbing job. Ever since then, Miyazaki's lost all interest in bringing his movies over to the states. Then he picked disney, and they botched it too. Sure, they might be the best quality dubbers on the market, but I'd rather settle for a little less quality, and much better consistancy.
I think it would have been better done by a smaller anime company, such as Manga or ADV. Miyazaki would disagree with me, because he wants his movies to be seen on the big screen, not on televisions. This is a perfect death trap for his movies, because, lets face it folks, Miyazaki is great, but he's not mainstream around here. He's not 'pop culture'. All the diva queens are going to go see American Pie 2 instead of great movies like his, and I guess I don't mind. Who wants to share the same favorite movies with people that like having sex with pies, anyways? So I'm snobby, sue me
As for availability, the bootleg market for that stuff is pretty strong. You can find his stuff on popular movie downloading networks, and places like that. My reccommendations are Laputa and Porco Rosso, but they're all gems. It's a shame that he's retiring.
If you're interested in more info about his movies, go check out http://www.nausicaa.net
-vmalloc
I used to frequent their mailing list, I got in big arguments with the more snidey members of the list about how THERE WAS NO WAY TO GET THE MOVIES LEGALLY. At semi-resonable prices, anyways. Bunch of losers, the some of them.
The reason Miyazaki did the contract with Disney, and not the 2 other candidates, is because they were the only ones that wouldn't censor and cut his films. And most of the small anime companies never cut things, unless they're putting them to TV. I've yet to see a film done by a recent anime company that has been cut in any way.
why would disney actually bring us real anime when they can steal the ideas and take all the credit for themselves. See atlantis, lion king ect....
is quick to fire off the lawyers in any direction where there is a little guy to be squashed for painting Donald Duck on the side of his daycare center or otherwise depriving the mother ship of a dollar of profit.
This copyright will not expire in our lifetimes. Unless the Supremes get involved, DisneyCo will keep buying bad law from Congress, such as a 20-year copyright term extension every 20 years and a law making 8-bit XOR encryption unbreakable.
Will I retire or break 10K?
Having to break the law to watch a family-friendly animated movie. Of course Disney would throw a fit, and Studio Ghibli sure doesn't like it either, but I'm ready, willing, and able to give them money -- even if they want to overcharge -- but they won't sell them!
They are overcharging. You can buy those movies in the United States for several billion dollars; simply buy Disney Enterprises Inc.
Will I retire or break 10K?
So if Disney was thinking about family friendly materials, why did they not simply release 'Castle in the Sky' instead?
Disney didn't release Laputa because it would compete with the company's own similar Atlantis movie.
-- Fuck Disney. Fuck Sonny Bono. And fuck USA corporate puppet government. Pinocchio wasn't even this easy to manipulate.Will I retire or break 10K?
Cagliostro and Kiki (possibly all future releases) have a neat second disc with the entire film in key frame/story board form synched to the audio.
This aint Geeky, at all. Who gives a flying **%$ whether or not Disney releases some anime movie. Y
When Mononoke was released here in Melbourne, Australia I can recall seeing the trailers for it in some cinemas. One thing that I, in my deranged way, found hillarious was the fact that while the "star voices" were being displayed, the cinema had projected "Original Japanese Dialogue - English Subtitles" below the screen ;)
;)
I'm glad I was never forced to sit through the bullshit redubbing that occurs all to often. Why can't people just be a little less lazy - it's not like it's stressful to read a few lines of dialogue when they're printed on the screen that you're looking at anyway. (Unless you're blind of course, in which case stick with the dubs
Disney has already done a full dubbed version of Castle in the Sky, even with a new score by Hisaishi, so why don't they release this movie ? Castle in the Sky is a movie that isn't dark like Princess Mononoke and doesn't contain much violence. Disney mustn't do any cuts to make it family friendly. An DVD/Video release should easily make much more money than letting the dub get old in some desk. A Castle in the Sky release could be sold to all the anime fans out there and to the normal small children disney market too.
Or another maybe better solution:
Disney IMHO only owns the VHS and cinema rights to Miyazaki's movies. Couldn't ADV or some other other Anime Video firm buy the DVD release rights for Castle in the Sky ?
Jan
That's because it was heavily influenced by the Gainax anime series Nadia: Secret of the Blue Water.
Some fans insist that it was stolen broadcloth a la The Lion King, but not having seen Atlantis, I can't comment.
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
Actually a lot of anime has become so much a part of American culture that Joe Sixpack wouldn't think of it as anime. Speed Racer, Astro Boy, Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Dragon Ball Z, Tranzor Z, Gigantor, Battle of the Planets/G-Force, etc.
I agree though that Miyazaki should do everything in his power to avoid sending his new movie to The Black Hole of Disney.
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
Honestly, how is paying for the rights for the movies then not releasing them (i.e. taking a loss on the whole package) somehow more profitable than doing moderately-successful releases to DVD?
This is Disney being irresponsible with their shareholder's money, pure and simple.
Can someone with the facts tell me, did Disney lose money on Mononoke? I really doubt it.
If Disney had been releasing the movies one or maybe two a year on DVD, they'd be millions of dollars ahead by now. They could probably recoup their production costs on a subtitled-only DVD via sales at OTAKON alone.
Jon Acheson
All opinions expressed herein are my own, and not those of my employers, who are appalled.
Simple if the mouse wont sell em over here, just import the japanese DVD and get a multi region player.
All the Japanese ghibli DVD releases so far have had good English subtitle tracks.
Lion King vs. Kimba the White Lion. ht ml
www.thecastleofmagic.homestead.com/KimbaVsSimba
www.efst.hr/~arslan/kimbas50th/simbakimba.htm
Nadia VS. Atlantis
www.zero-city.com/nadia/nadia_vs_atlantis.html
The only thing I missed about Atlantis was the still image sketch that most older anime had when something happened at the end of the chapter.
Unfortunately most anime released in the US is badly translated, abusively expensive (series), and worst - butchered (edited). And most series are missing.
You can find more anime translated to spanish than english, especially series. And the translation is pretty nice, the voice aren't. And they don't heavely edit them. For example, Dragonball Z and GT are already in spanish, but not available for purchase unless you own a TV station.
Unfortunately for me, here in PR watching my food spin in a microwave is better than local TV. I think Chile and/or Peru is were almost all anime is shown.
I worked for an AMC 30 in Kansas City(never again!) when Princess Mononoke went to theater, and we didn't show it, and we're like 20 min from home office. I guess its good for Home Office to have an example of how not to run a theater real close by.
I Browse at +4 Flamebait
Open Source Sysadmin