Netflix releases the trailer for the second season of Ultraman
Netflix and Tsuburaya have recently released the trailer for the second season of Ultraman, the animated adaptation of the streaming platform based on the famous Japanese franchise.
Together with the trailer, the release date of the second season of Ultraman on Netflix, which will arrive on the platform on April 14, 2022. The press release was also released by Tsuburaya, the company that produced the animated series, and by the official website of Ultraman. During the video, which you can see at the bottom of this article, other characters also appear who will become part of the cast of the series and of the Ultramen team; the original Ultraman also appears in the trailer, starring in the Japanese tokusatsu series of the 1960s.
if (jQuery ("# crm_srl-th_culturapop_d_mh2_1"). is (": visible")) {console.log ( "Edinet ADV adding zone: tag crm_srl-th_culturapop_d_mh2_1 slot id: th_culturapop_d_mh2"); } During the 6 episodes of the new season, Maaya Sakamoto, who has already lent her voice for The Vision of Escaflowne, Ouran High School Host Club and the Rebuild Evangelion films, will also join the dubbing cast, and will play the character of Izumi , girlfriend Kotaro Higashi, aka Ultraman Taro. The rest of the cast will also see Hideyuki Tanaka (Metal Gear Solid, Saint Seiya), Ryohei Kimura (Eden of the East).
The Netflix series is inspired by the manga by Eiichi Shimizu and Tomohiro Shimoguchi, published since 2011 (published in Italy by Star Comics and available here on Amazon.it). The story, which stars Shinjiro Hayata, son of the original Ultraman Shin Hayata, is a direct sequel to the 1966 Japanese TV series. The anime was produced by Production IG and Sola Digital Arts, who have already jointly created Ghost. in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex and Blade Runner anime Black Lotus. Ultraman has also recently been relaunched by Marvel with a regular series, while Hideaki Anno has made its own film about the character, Shin Ultraman, due out next summer in Japanese theaters.
Netflix releases the trailer for the second season of Ultraman
The trailer for the second season of the Ultraman anime, the CGI adaptation distributed by the streaming platform, has been published on Netflix's social channels.Together with the trailer, the release date of the second season of Ultraman on Netflix, which will arrive on the platform on April 14, 2022. The press release was also released by Tsuburaya, the company that produced the animated series, and by the official website of Ultraman. During the video, which you can see at the bottom of this article, other characters also appear who will become part of the cast of the series and of the Ultramen team; the original Ultraman also appears in the trailer, starring in the Japanese tokusatsu series of the 1960s.
if (jQuery ("# crm_srl-th_culturapop_d_mh2_1"). is (": visible")) {console.log ( "Edinet ADV adding zone: tag crm_srl-th_culturapop_d_mh2_1 slot id: th_culturapop_d_mh2"); } During the 6 episodes of the new season, Maaya Sakamoto, who has already lent her voice for The Vision of Escaflowne, Ouran High School Host Club and the Rebuild Evangelion films, will also join the dubbing cast, and will play the character of Izumi , girlfriend Kotaro Higashi, aka Ultraman Taro. The rest of the cast will also see Hideyuki Tanaka (Metal Gear Solid, Saint Seiya), Ryohei Kimura (Eden of the East).
The Netflix series is inspired by the manga by Eiichi Shimizu and Tomohiro Shimoguchi, published since 2011 (published in Italy by Star Comics and available here on Amazon.it). The story, which stars Shinjiro Hayata, son of the original Ultraman Shin Hayata, is a direct sequel to the 1966 Japanese TV series. The anime was produced by Production IG and Sola Digital Arts, who have already jointly created Ghost. in the Shell: Stand Alone Complex and Blade Runner anime Black Lotus. Ultraman has also recently been relaunched by Marvel with a regular series, while Hideaki Anno has made its own film about the character, Shin Ultraman, due out next summer in Japanese theaters.