Katana VentraIP

Tatsunoko Production

Tatsunoko Production Co., Ltd. (株式会社タツノコプロ, Kabushiki gaisha Tatsunoko Puro)[a] and often shortened to Tatsunoko Pro (タツノコプロ, Tatsunoko Puro), is a Japanese animation company. The studio's name has a double meaning in Japanese: "Tatsu's child" (Tatsu is a nickname for Tatsuo) and "sea dragon", the inspiration for its seahorse logo.[3][4]

Native name

株式会社タツノコプロ
(formerly spelled as 竜の子プロダクション)

Kabushiki-gaisha Tatsunoko Puro

Tatsunoko Productions Co, Ltd. (1962–2013)

Katana VentraIP

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#0__titleDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#0__subtitleDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

Tatsunoko Production was established in 1962 and is engaged in the planning and production of anime films and television series, as well as character licensing.[5] The company produced many hit anime series from the 1960s through the 1980s, and holds numerous original rights and character copyrights for its original works in Japan and abroad.[5] The company is one of Japan's leading anime studios in terms of the breadth and richness of its content, ranging from hard action heroes to comedies, science fiction, anthropomorphic animals, and domestic dramas.[6][7][8] Since the first work, Space Ace, they have produced many works such as Speed Racer, Hakushon Daimaō, Science Ninja Team Gatchaman, and the Time Bokan series, supporting the dawn of Japanese animation.[7][9] Although the company later began producing works set in Japan, it has basically aimed from its inception to produce works that can be used anywhere in the world in a stateless manner.[7]


In the genealogy of animation studios in the history of Japanese animation, Tatsunoko is known as the studio that created many derivative studios along with Toei Doga (currently Toei Animation), Mushi Production, and Tokyo Movie (currently TMS Entertainment).[10][11][12]


In the past, Tatsunoko had a production system in which almost all processes, from planning to scriptwriting, drawing, cinematography, and editing, were completed in-house. The company continued to use this system for a long time after Toei Doga and Mushi Production, which had a similar production system, became unsustainable due to streamlining and bankruptcy.[6][13][b]


Initially, Founder Tatsuo Yoshida tried to establish his studio's own style with realistic drawings that accurately depicted muscles and skeletons.[9][14] At that time, it was common knowledge that animation was to be abbreviated or deformed, and that pictures were to be simplified as much as possible to show movement.[14][15] Even Mushi Production and Disney used to draw the car so that when it starts, it first contracts like rubber and then jumps out like a bullet due to the recoil, and when it stops, it contracts once due to braking and then extends and returns to its original state.[14][15] However, Tatsuo Yoshida insisted on realistic animation and produced Mach GoGoGo.[6][16] For the scene where the car spins, he rented a driving school and had the driver actually demonstrate the spin with the car, and had the animators draw the scene without deforming it by referring to the demonstration.[14][15][17] It was so well received that it became the studio's origin and led to subsequent realistic, hard-action works.[7] However, Yoshida's drawings, with their many lines, precision, and sharpness, were unsuitable for animation, which required many drawings of the same picture, and were difficult for other animators to imitate.[7][17] Most animators refused to participate in the production, and the company's schedule was on the verge of collapse. However, the company was able to get through the busy season when a comedy with a simple design happened to enter the production rotation.[14] This allowed the company to learn how to run a studio that alternated between serious action animation with detailed drawings and comedy animation with simple drawings using deformation, resulting in a wide range of styles.[9]

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#3__descriptionDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#2__titleDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#2__descriptionDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#4__descriptionDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#5__descriptionDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

(NTV) (2015)

Gatchaman Crowds insight

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#3__titleDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

(1962–1977)

Tatsuo Yoshida

(1977–1987)

Kenji Yoshida

(1987–2005)

Ippei Kuri

Kouki Narushima (2005–2010)

Keita Satou (2010–2012)

Shuuichirou Tanaka (2012–2014)

[44]

Yuuzou Kuwahara (2014–2019)

Daisuke Kadoya (2019–2022)[46]

[45]

Kyou Itou (2022–present)

[47]

(Character designer, illustrator)

Yoshitaka Amano

(Producer, founder of Bee Train Production & P.A. Works)

Kenji Horikawa

(Producer, founder of Production I.G)

Mitsuhisa Ishikawa

(Scriptwriter)

Takao Koyama

(Anime director, founder of Bee Train Production)

Koichi Mashimo

(Art director, mecha designer, founder of Design Office Mekaman)

Mitsuki Nakamura

Koji Nanke (Animation artist)

Toshihiko Nishikubo (Mizuho Nishikubo) (Animation artist, animation director)

(Producer, founder of Pierrot)

Yuji Nunokawa

Shigekazu Ochiai (Anime producer)

(Mecha designer, founder of Design Office Mekaman)

Kunio Okawara

(Anime director, film director)

Mamoru Oshii

(Anime director)

Hiroshi Sasagawa

(Character designer, illustrator)

Akemi Takada

Tomoyuki Miyata (Producer, founder of )

J.C.Staff

(Anime director, scriptwriter, novelist, founder of Pierrot)

Hisayuki Toriumi

(Scriptwriter)

Jinzo Toriumi

Hidehito Ueda (Anime director)

(Nintendo Wii) (January 26, 2010)

Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars

: Yuki no Melody (2010; co-production with Group TAC)

Hutch the Honeybee

: Hoshi no Umi (2010; co-production with KMMJ Studios)

Yozakura Quartet

(2010; remake of original TV series)

Princess Resurrection

(Fuji TV) (2011)

[C]: The Money of Soul and Possibility Control

(TV Tokyo) (2011–2012)

Sket Dance

(TV Tokyo) (2011)

Pretty Rhythm: Aurora Dream

(TV Tokyo) (2012–2013; co-production with DongWoo A&E)

Pretty Rhythm: Dear My Future

Ippatsu-Hicchuu! Devander (2012; in celebration of Tatsunoko Productions' 50th anniversary)

OVA

(MBS) (2013)

Namiuchigiwa no Muromi-san

(TV Tokyo) (2013–2014; co-production with DongWoo A&E)

Pretty Rhythm: Rainbow Live

(NTV) (2013)

Gatchaman Crowds

/Yozakura Quartet: Tsuki ni Naku (2013)

Yozakura Quartet: Hana no Uta

Triple Combination: (2013)

Transformers Go!

(2013) (Robotech version of the MOSPEADA OVA: Love Live Alive)

Robotech: Love Live Alive

(2014; co-production with Ordet)

Wake Up, Girls!

(Fuji TV) (2014)

Ping Pong

(TV Tokyo) (2014–2017; co-production with DongWoo A&E)

PriPara

(Fuji TV) (2014)

Psycho-Pass 2

(MBS) (2015)

Yatterman Night

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#6__quote--0DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#6__name--0DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#6__company_or_position--0DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

(TV Tokyo) (2016)

PriPara Mi~nna no Akogare Let's Go PriPari

(2016; co-production with Hasbro Studios and Machinima Inc.)

Transformers: Combiner Wars

(YTV /NTV) (2016–2017; co-production with Level-5)

Time Bokan 24

(NTV) (2017, co-production with Digital Frontier)

Infini-T Force

(TV Tokyo) (2017–2018; co-production with DongWoo A&E)

Idol Time PriPara

(2017–2018; co-production with Hasbro Studios and Machinima Inc.)

Transformers: Titans Return

(2018; co-production with Hasbro Studios and Machinima Inc.)

Transformers: Power of the Primes

(TV Tokyo) (2018–2021; co-production with DongWoo A&E)

Kiratto Pri Chan

(2019, Tatsunoko's 55th anniversary work)

The Price of Smiles

(2019)

King of Prism: Shiny Seven Stars

Ninja Box (2019–2020; co-production with )

C2C

(1978–1981; produced by Procidis)

Once Upon a Time...Man

(1981–1982; co-production with Christian Broadcasting Network)

Superbook

(1982–1983; co-production with Christian Broadcasting Network)

The Flying House

(MBS) (1982–1983; produced by Studio Nue and Artland)

Super Dimension Fortress Macross

(1984; produced by Studio Nue and Artland)

Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love?

Genesis Climber MOSPEADA: Love Live Alive (1985; co-production with Artmic)

(1985; produced by AIC and Artland)

Megazone 23

(1985; co-production with Harmony Gold USA and Big West)

Robotech

(1986; co-production with Harmony Gold USA)

Robotech II: The Sentinels

(Fuji TV) (a.k.a. Anmitsu Hime: From Amakara Castle) (1986–1987; produced by Studio Pierrot)

Anmitsu Hime

(1987; co-production with Studio Nue and Artland)

Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Flash Back 2012

(TV Tokyo) (1989–1990; co-production with Mondo TV and Nippon Animation)

The Jungle Book: The Adventures of Mowgli

(Fuji TV) (a.k.a. Time Quest Tondekeman!) (1989–1990; produced by Ashi Productions)

Time Travel Tondekeman

(1990–1992; co-production with Mondo TV)

Robin Hood

(1994–1995; co-production with Mondo TV)

The Legend of Snow White

(TV Tokyo) (1995–1996; co-production with Gainax)

Neon Genesis Evangelion

(1996; co-production with Mondo TV)

The Story of Cinderella

(1999; contributed with animated cutscenes)

Simple 1500 Series Vol. 24: The Gun Shooting

(since 1975)

Ashi Productions/Production Reed

(1978–1997) (defunct)

Artmic

(since 1979)

Pierrot

(since 1986)

J.C.Staff

(since 1987)

Production I.G

(since the 1990s)

Animation 21

(1995–2019) (defunct)

Xebec

(1995–2006) (defunct)

Radix Ace Entertainment

(since 1997)

Bee Train Production

(since 1998)

Actas

(since 1999)

TNK

(September 1, 2000). Buta mo Odaterya Ki ni Noboru: Watashi no Manga-dō to Anime-dō ぶたもおだてりゃ木にのぼる: 私のマンガ道とアニメ道 [Even pigs will climb trees if you flatter them: My Manga Way and Anime Way]. Wani Books. ISBN 4-8470-1358-1.

Sasagawa, Hiroshi

Official website

at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

Tatsunoko Production

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#1__titleDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#1__subtextDEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#1__answer--0DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#1__answer--1DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

$_$_$DEEZ_NUTS#1__answer--2DEEZ_NUTS$_$_$

October 19, 1962 (1962-10-19)[1]

Kyou Itou
(President and CEO)

Nippon TV (54.3%)
Tomy (20.0%)
Horipro (13.5%)
Production I.G (11.2%)

70[2] (2022)

I.G Tatsunoko (1987–1993)