Goodbye to live-action: Kamen Rider teams up with Aniplex to make anime

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If you grew up watching guys in rubber suits punching each other with evil monsters, the name Kamen Rider is sure to give you goosebumps. This legendary Japanese franchise has dominated the live-action format for decades, but it seems that they have outgrown the suit. This weekend they dropped a media bombshell: the official creation of a new division dedicated purely and exclusively to producing animated films. And to open the curtain? A first project backed by two of the biggest monsters in the industry.


 

The Titans Behind This Historic Animated Alliance


When you get into the animation film market, you can't go halfway. The Toei Company knows this perfectly, and that's why they decided to partner with studios that guarantee brutal sales and a graphic quality that leaves you glued to your seat. Here are those responsible for leading this first visual blow:


  • Aniplex as Main Producer.

The entertainment giant responsible for producing media phenomena and breaking the box office with Demon Slayer and Sword Art Online.


  • Shirogumi as Animation Studio

The absolute masters of visual effects and 3D integration, masterminds behind Stand By Me Doraemon and the award-winning CGI of Godzilla Minus One.


A legacy of tokusatsu that cried out to evolve


Bringing tokusatsu to other formats is not totally forbidden, but opening an entire film label is another level of ambition. The work originally conceived by the late Shotaro Ishinomori has always relied on physical stunts, motorcycles flying through the air and explosions full of sparks in abandoned quarries. But of course, the physical limitation of the actors and the cables is always there. By diving into animation, these transformable heroes will have the freedom to break all the laws of gravity and take epic battles to scales so ridiculous that in a traditional format they would cost an entire country's budget.


What are they looking for with this jump to cartoons?


At the moment, the details of this first film are under seven security keys. There is no official title, no leaked synopsis, not even a sketch to calm the cravings. What the producers did make very clear to us is that they seek to keep intact that righteous essence and heroic spirit of the original saga, but presenting us with stories that feel extremely fresh. It is, basically, a way to reconnect with the public that has been following television series for years, and at the same time, hook the new generation of otakus who consume high-quality animation in cinema.

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