Galaxy Express 999
Galaxy Express 999 | |
銀河鉄道999 (Ginga Tetsudō Surī Nain) | |
---|---|
Genre | Space opera[1] |
Manga | |
Written by | Leiji Matsumoto |
Published by | Shōnen Gahōsha and Shogakukan |
English publisher | |
Magazine | Weekly Shōnen King |
English magazine | |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | January 24, 1977 – November 6, 1981 |
Volumes | 18 |
Anime television series | |
Directed by | Nobutaka Nishizawa |
Written by | Hiroyasu Yamaura Keisuke Fujikawa Yoshiaki Yoshida |
Music by | Nozomi Aoki |
Studio | Toei Animation |
Licensed by |
|
Original network | FNS (Fuji TV) |
Original run | September 14, 1978 – March 28, 1981 |
Episodes | 113 |
Anime film | |
Galaxy Express 999 | |
Directed by | Rintaro |
Written by | Shiro Ishimori |
Music by | Nozomi Aoki |
Studio | Toei Animation |
Licensed by | |
Released | August 4, 1979 |
Runtime | 132 minutes |
Anime film | |
Adieu Galaxy Express 999 | |
Directed by | Rintaro |
Written by | Hiroyasu Yamaura |
Music by | Osamu Shoji |
Studio | Toei Animation |
Licensed by | |
Released | August 1, 1981 |
Runtime | 130 minutes |
Anime film | |
Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy | |
Directed by | Osamu Dezaki |
Written by | Kazumi Koide |
Music by | Ichiro Nitta |
Studio | Toei Animation |
Licensed by | |
Released | March 7, 1998 |
Runtime | 54 minutes |
Original video animation | |
Maetel Legend | |
Directed by | Yōsuke Kuroda |
Produced by |
|
Written by | Mugi Kamio |
Music by | Masamichi Amano |
Studio | Vega Entertainment |
Licensed by | U.S. Manga Corps (USA) |
Released | 2000 |
Runtime | 41 minutes (each) |
Episodes | 2 |
Anime television series | |
Space Symphony Maetel | |
Directed by | Shinichi Masaki |
Produced by |
|
Written by | Mugi Kamio |
Music by | Taro Hakase |
Studio | Azeta Pictures |
Original network | Animax (PPV Premier) |
Original run | August 6, 2004 – June 20, 2005 |
Episodes | 13 |
Manga | |
Galaxy Express 999 Another Story: Ultimate Journey | |
Written by | Leiji Matsumoto |
Illustrated by | Yuzuru Shimazaki |
Published by | Akita Shoten |
Magazine | Champion Red |
Demographic | Shōnen |
Original run | March 19, 2018 – present |
Volumes | 7 |
Galaxy Express 999 (銀河鉄道999, Ginga Tetsudō Surī Nain) is a Japanese manga series. It is written and illustrated by Leiji Matsumoto, later adapted into a number of anime films and television series. It is set in a spacefaring, high-tech future in which humans have learned how to transfer their minds and emotions with perfect fidelity into mechanical bodies, thus achieving practical immortality.[2][3]
The manga won the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen in 1978.[4] The anime series won the Animage Anime Grand Prix prize in 1981.
Matsumoto was inspired to create Galaxy Express 999 by the idea of a steam train running through the stars in the novel Night on the Galactic Railroad by Kenji Miyazawa.[5]
Plot
[edit]Anime and manga
[edit]An impoverished ten-year-old named Tetsuro Hoshino desperately wanted an indestructible machine body, giving him the ability to live forever and have the freedom that the unmechanized do not have. While machine bodies are impossibly expensive, they are supposedly given away for free on the planet Andromeda, the end of the line for the Galaxy Express 999, a space train that only comes to Earth once a year.
The series begins with Tetsuro and his mother making their way to Megalopolis where they hope to get jobs to pay for passes for the 999. Along the way, however, Count Mecha and a gang of "human hunters" kill Tetsuro's mother. Before she dies, she tells him to continue the journey they started and to get a machine body to live the eternal life she could not. Tetsuro tries to forge on toward the city alone but is quickly overcome by the brutal cold and wind. As he succumbs, he cries out an apology to his mother for failing to fulfill her wish and hopes that in his next life, he will be born as a robot to begin with.
Tetsuro is surprised to awaken by the fireplace in the home of a beautiful woman, Maetel, who is the spitting image of his dead mother. Maetel tells him she had heard the entire incident with a long-range directional microphone she had been idly scanning around the area with. Maetel offers him an unlimited use pass for the 999 if he will be her traveling companion, to which Tetsuro agrees. She provides him with a gun and directs him to the Count's residence, telling him that the Count and his henchmen will be too distracted with their revelries to defend themselves against a surprise attack. Tetsuro bursts in on them in their meeting hall and cuts them down with a spray of gunfire. With the Earth police in hot pursuit, Tetsuro and Maetel flee the planet aboard the 999.
Along the way, Tetsuro has many adventures on many different and exotic planets and meets many kinds of people, both human and alien, living and machine. Increasingly, Tetsuro realizes that a machine body will not fix all of his problems. Most of the machine people[a] he meets regret the decision to give up their humanity.
Eventually, Tetsuro and Maetel reach the Planet Prometheum, the final stop for the 999. He is shocked by the cruelty and indolence of the machine people there and witnesses a mechanized human committing suicide, an event to which the others react with scoffs and derision. He asks the dying man why he wished to end his life, and is told that eternal life on Prometheum is utterly empty of joy or purpose. When Tetsuro mentions the name of his traveling companion, the man is horrified and tells him that Maetel is the daughter of Queen Prometheum, the supreme ruler of the Machine Empire and that she is thoroughly untrustworthy. Tetsuro is outraged at having been kept in the dark and rushes off to confront Maetel. Maetel is at a loss for words, but a government spokeswoman inserts herself into their conversation and begins giving answers on Maetel's behalf. Tetsuro is not impressed and he storms off in a blind fury.
Tetsuro does not understand why he has been betrayed by Maetel, but Maetel has plans of her own and seeks to destroy the mechanized civilization. With the help of her father, Dr. Ban (only named in the film), whose consciousness resides in a pendant she wears around her neck, Maetel destroys her mother and the planet. Afterward, Maetel and Tetsuro return to the penultimate station on the Planet of Bats where Tetsuro tells Maetel his intention to return to Earth and lead it toward a new future.
Maetel, proud of Tetsuro for his decision to reject mechanization, tells him she has something to take care of and that he should board first, but Tetsuro finds a letter from Maetel telling him that it is time for them to part ways. Maetel had secretly boarded the 777 (three-seven), a nearby train, with the intention of "leading another boy to his future", but it is unclear as to whether or not this means that the Mechanization Empire still exists elsewhere, or if Maetel will lead the boy to some other "future". The series ends as the trains both depart the Planet of Bats.
Film versions
[edit]Galaxy Express 999
[edit]The film version of Galaxy Express 999 was released in 1979. Maetel and Tetsuro again set out for the home planet of the Mechanized Empire, visiting four planets. Planet Maetel is a mechanized world where machine bodies are made.
Godiego performed the film's theme song "The Galaxy Express 999".
Adieu Galaxy Express 999
[edit]Adieu Galaxy Express 999 is a 1981 sequel to the film adaptation. Adieu presents an entirely new storyline that takes place three years after the destruction of Planet Maetel. The Machine Empire now has even more of a stranglehold over the Galaxy. Rumors are afoot of Maetel becoming its new Queen. Tetsuro, now a fifteen-year-old freedom fighter, is shocked when a messenger brings him news that the 999 is returning and that Maetel wants him to board it. Tetsuro narrowly makes his way to the 999 and departs Earth, now a battlefield.
Although Tetsuro finds that Maetel is not present on the 999, he does meet Metalmena, a machine woman who has replaced the waitress Claire. Also, a mysterious Ghost Train has been traveling the universe and nearly crashes into 999. The 999 then pouts about the humiliation of being overtaken by the Ghost Train. The 999 heads to the planet La Metal, portrayed here as the birthplace of Prometheum and Maetel. Here Tetsuro helps in the resistance, befriending a cat-like teenage boy named Meowdar. While exploring the ruins of an old castle, Tetsuro discovers a portrait of a beautiful, blonde queen who looks very much like Maetel. He learns that it is, in fact, La Metal's Queen Prometheum, even though she looks nothing like she did at their last confrontation. As the 999 departs, Maetel finally makes her appearance.
Shortly after leaving La Metal, the 999 is forced to dock at a station where Tetsuro meets a mysterious machine man named Faust. When Tetsuro attacks him, Faust causes Tetsuro to drop into a flashback where he must relive his mother's death. The 999 continues to the planet Mosaic, the last stop before Great Andromeda, the capital of the mechanized empire. Here Tetsuro finds the Ghost Train and is nearly killed.
The 999 finally makes its way to Great Andromeda where Faust greets Tetsuro once more. Meanwhile, Maetel travels down to the center of the planet where Prometheum's consciousness still exists. Maetel is put in charge of the mechanized empire, just as the rumors said, but again, she intends to put an end to the operations, and attempts to shut Prometheum's machinery down. She reveals the horrible truth to Tetsuro that the energy the machine people use is drained from living human beings, and that they were transported there by the Ghost Train. Tetsuro is shocked to find his old friend Meowdar among a pile of dead, drained bodies. Metalmena shows indifference to Meowdar's death until Tetsuro reveals the source of the energy she has been existing on. As a patrol of guards comes to arrest the group, Metalmena, disgusted and enraged by what she has learned, attacks and destroys them, apparently at the cost of her own life.
Prometheum proves that she cannot be killed with just the flip of a switch, and all seems hopeless. At about the same time, a space anomaly called Siren the Witch approaches Great Andromeda, attracted to its abundant energy and absorbing all machine energy. With Great Andromeda collapsing, the 999 is set to depart, but Tetsuro must face Faust one last time. After dealing Faust with a fatal blow, it is revealed to Tetsuro that Faust is Tetsuro's father (in the manga and television series, it is never made clear what became of Tetsuro's father). The 999 heads back to La Metal where Maetel and Tetsuro separate for the last time, and "the boy [Tetsuro] becomes a man".
Two songs were written and performed by Mary MacGregor: "Love Light" and the ending theme "Sayonara" were used for the film. Kumiko Kaori recorded a Japanese version of the ending song.
Helen McCarthy in 500 Essential Anime Movies called it a "dense, fascinating story".[6]
New manga series and Eternal Fantasy
[edit]In 1996, Matsumoto began a new GE999 series, set a year after the original, in which the Earth is destroyed and Tetsuro sets out to discover the source of the "darkness" that threatens all life in the universe.
The film Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy was released in 1998. This film takes place a few years after the events of Adieu Galaxy Express 999 and is the third film in the anime series,[7][8] where Maetel and Tetsuro reunite to save the universe again from another evil. It also serves as a link between this film and The Galaxy Railways.
The Alfee performed the theme song "Brave Love: Galaxy Express 999 / Beyond the Win".
Also, space battleship Yamato, from the Japanese show of the same name, and the English version of Star Blazers, which are both Matsumoto creations, make a cameo appearance.
The manga has been partially published in English by Viz. The film was released by Discotek Media on DVD on October 16, 2012 and Blu-ray in 2020. The latter includes a newly produced English dub by Sound Cadence Studios in Dallas, Texas with a new cast.[9]
Maetel Legend
[edit]This two-part OVA from 2000 serves as a prelude for Galaxy Express 999 and explains the series' backstory. Maetel, the protagonist, is the daughter of Queen Prometheum of the Planet La Metal (both from Queen Millennia), a wandering planet, and one of the first civilizations to have mechanized their bodies. As Queen Prometheum becomes fearful of the natural decline of her people's lifespan on their freezing world, which has fallen out of orbit, she decides to mechanize them all, in order to enable her people to survive the harsh climate. The complete series was released on DVD by Central Park Media.
Space Symphony Maetel
[edit]Following on from Maetel Legend, this 13-part OVA from 2004 reveals that the newly created machine people of La Metal began to mechanize galaxy after galaxy against the will of many humans, and ended up creating rebellions and revolutions. Maetel is asked to return to La Metal to succeed her mother, only to discover the many hardships her mother has inflicted on the humans.
In this series, Captain Harlock and Emeraldas (Maetel's sister) also appear and work together to assassinate Prometheum, along with Maetel. Parallels with Galaxy Express 999 are prevalent. Instead of a boy who wants a mechanized body meeting her, she meets a boy who has a grudge against Prometheum and detests being mechanized.
The final lines of dialogue reveal that this is a prequel to the 1979 film Galaxy Express 999.
Galaxy Railways: Letter from the Abandoned Planet
[edit]This OVA series was released from December 30, 2006, to January 5, 2007 (on SKY PerfectTV!) in Japan. The story takes place between Seasons 1 and 2 of Galaxy Railways: Crossroad to Eternity, and presumably after the events of Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy, where the Earth has since been destroyed. The OVAs featured Maetel, Tetsuro, and the Conductor, with their original voice actors from the Galaxy Express 999 television series.
For unknown reasons, this series started production earlier than Galaxy Railways: Crossroad to Eternity, but was aired much later.
Galaxy Express 999 Another Story: Ultimate Journey
[edit]A manga re-telling of the original manga illustrated by Yuzuru Shimazaki began serialization in Akita Shoten's Champion Red magazine on March 19, 2018. The manga was part of a project celebrating Matsumoto's 80th birthday.[10] The future of the manga was unknown due to Leiji Matsumoto's death in 2023, but the manga returns in December 2024 after a two-and-a-half-year hiatus.[11]
Characters
[edit]- Tetsuro Hoshino (星野 鉄郎, Hoshino Tetsurō): The main character of Galaxy Express 999, Tetsuro is a poor Earth boy who witnessed his mother die at the hands of Count Mecha. With his mother's dying wish being for him to obtain a machine body, Tetsuro embarks on the Galaxy Express with Maetel. Tetsuro has also been mentioned in the 2014 Captain Harlock: Dimensional Voyage manga.
- Maetel (メーテル, Mēteru): The mysterious blonde woman who accompanies Tetsuro on the Galaxy Express 999, Maetel is in actuality the daughter of Queen Prometheum, ruler of the mechanized empire. In the film version, Maetel is responsible for bringing youths from around the universe to the mechanized homeworld where they are turned into mechanized human components to serve the mechanized empire, whereas in the television series, she is grooming them to grow up to become generals in her mother's imperial military. Maetel is secretly plotting with her father, Dr. Ban (who is contained within the pendant around her neck) to destroy the machine empire, and finally does so (in the film) when it is Tetsuro's turn to be turned into a bolt.[12] Maetel's soul exists in the body of a human copy, which she occupies until it grows old and she exchanges it for a new one. It is explained in the film version that she occupies a clone of the body of Tetsuro's mother, which explains the resemblance between the two.
- Conductor (車掌, Shashō): The Conductor is the main crew member of the Galaxy Express 999. He is an alien being with an invisible body made of gas; only his eyes can be seen while he is wearing his conductor uniform. The Conductor prefers to go 'strictly by the book'[12] and frequently cites the Galaxy Express rule book, but occasionally ends up bending the rules and getting into adventures with Tetsuro and Maetel.
- Claire (クレア, Kurea): The dining car waitress on the 999, Claire has a machine body made of clear crystal glass. Unlike others who gave up their humanity by choice, Claire was forced into this existence by her vain mother. She works on the 999 in order to save up enough money to buy back her human body, which is stored on Pluto.[12] Claire quickly befriends Tetsuro and sacrifices herself for him when a hallucination taking the guise of his mother tries to pull him out of the train. Her body is shattered, and all that remains is a single glass tear which Tetsuro holds with him as a memento.[12] In the film version, Claire has a somewhat larger role, but suffers the same fate, sacrificing herself for Tetsuro when Prometheum tries to kill him (a machine girl named "Mirai" ("Future") has this role in the television series). Claire returns to life in both Eternal Fantasy and the new Galaxy Express manga published by Matsumoto in the 1990s.[13]
- Captain Harlock (キャプテンハーロック, Kyaputen Hārokku) and Emeraldas (エメラルダス, Emerarudasu): Famous space pirates who are idolized by Tetsuro. Both have only minor cameos in the original manga and television series, but have significantly larger roles in the films and assist in defeating the machine empire.
- Antares (アンタレス, Antaresu): A well known bandit who sneaks aboard the 999 after their stop on the planet Titan. Antares despises machine people for the death of his wife and has many unexploded bullets lodged within his abdomen. He warns Tetsuro to "shoot first, ask questions later".[14] In the manga and television series he lives in a large home with his many children; in the film he lives on Titan with other bandits and many children orphaned by Count Mecha. In the film version he assists Tetsuro in his quest to kill Count Mecha at the Time Castle, and is killed when the bullets in his body explode after taking multiple shots from the Count.
- Count Mecha (機械伯爵, Kikai-hakushaku): The wealthy machine man who murdered Tetsuro's mother. In the manga and television series, he is a minor aristocrat, and is killed by Tetsuro before he leaves Earth. In the film version he appears to have considerably more power, and rules the Time Castle. Acquiring a machine body to get revenge on Count Mecha is Tetsuro's primary motivation in the film version, and he accomplishes his goal with the assistance of Antares while on the planet Heavy Melder.
- Queen Prometheum (プロメシューム, Puromeshūmu): Maetel's mother, and ruler of the mechanized empire. Once a gentle woman, Prometheum created the machine empire believing it would be good for humanity. Prometheum has considerably difference physical characteristics in each of her appearances, appearing as a humanoid in the television series and film, and a two-faced head in the manga. Prometheum is destroyed with the destruction of Andromeda in the manga and television series, and killed by Claire in the film version. Her spirit occupies the planet Great Andromeda in Adieu Galaxy Express 999 but perishes when that planet is destroyed by Siren the Witch.
English-language versions
[edit]In 1980, Roger Corman produced an English-language dub of the first Galaxy Express 999 film. The film changed the character names (for example changing Tetsuro to Joey and Harlock to Warlock), and removed approximately 30 minutes of content.[15] Antonia Levi, the author of Samurai from Outer Space, said that the edited film, released by New World Pictures, was "heavily edited" and that many otaku fans considered it too damaged to watch.[16]
In 1986, Harmony Gold produced rarely seen English dubs of two of the GE999 television specials, Galaxy Express 999: Can You Live Like a Warrior? and Galaxy Express 999: Can You Love Like a Mother?
In the late 1980s the TV series only aired with English subtitles on the Nippon Golden Network.
The first film was dubbed into English again in 1996 by Viz, titled Galaxy Express 999: The Signature Edition. Released on VHS, this dub was produced by Ocean Studios in Vancouver, British Columbia, and was more true to the source material. Viz also released Adieu, Galaxy Express 999 subbed and dubbed on VHS. They were never released on R1 DVD by the company. For years, the only official English-language release of Galaxy Express 999 material on DVD were a Korean release of the two films which utilizes Viz's subtitle scripts. The English dubs of both films were run regularly on the Canadian channel Space in 1997 and 1998. They were also run in a heavily edited form on the American Sci-Fi Channel.[17]
Viz later released five volumes of the second Galaxy Express manga, which was the basis for the third film, Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy. The original manga has yet to be officially translated into English.
A subtitled version of the television series was available on IGN's Direct2Drive service. The streaming website Crunchyroll began streaming a subtitled version in January 2009.[18]
DVD versions of both Galaxy Express 999 and Adieu, Galaxy Express 999 were released in the United States on June 28, 2011 by Discotek Media. Both DVDs feature the English subbed and dubbed (Viz dub) versions of the films. Discotek also released "Eternal Fantasy" on DVD on October 16, 2012. It is in Japanese only, but with English subtitles.[19] A Blu-ray release with a newly produced English dub was released in 2020. This dub was produced by Sound Cadence Studios in Dallas, Texas with a new cast.[9]
The television series was licensed for a subtitled North American home video release by S'more Entertainment in 2012 as one their first anime releases.[1]
Discotek Media released three Blu-ray sets for the entire series. They contain a new upscale that preserves more detail and grain, in contrast to Toei Company's Blu-ray boxes that showed smeared colors to make the picture look smooth. Discotek's first collection, titled Departure, which contains episodes 1–39, was released on December 24, 2019,[20] followed by Layover on July 28, 2020, which contains episodes 40–76 and includes the TV special Can You Live Like a Warrior?, whose Harmony Gold dub has been restored for this release.[21] The third collection Terminus was released on September 29, 2020. It contained episodes 77–113 along with TV specials Eternal Wanderer Emeraldas and Can You Love Like a Mother?, the latter's dub also being restored.[22]
Publication history
[edit]- First manga series (Andromeda edition) serialized in Shōnen King (Shōnen Gahosha), 1977–1981
- New manga series (Eternal edition) serialized in Big Gold (Shogakukan), 1996–1999
- TV series, 113 episodes + 4 TV specials (1978)
- Television specials, Can You Live Like A Warrior (1979), Emeraldes the Eternal Wanderer (1980) and Can You Love Like a Mother (1980)
- Film, Galaxy Express (1979)
- Featurette, Galaxy Express 999 Glass no Clair – Glass-made Claire (1980)
- Film, Adieu Galaxy Express 999 Terminus Andromeda – Sayonara Galaxy Express 999 (1981)
- Film, Galaxy Express 999 ~Eternal Fantasy~ (1998)
- TV series, Space Symphony Maetel, 13 episodes (2004–2005)
Cast
[edit]Character | Japanese actor (TV series) |
Japanese actor (film) |
English actor (film) |
Japanese actor (live action) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Tetsuro Hoshino | Masako Nozawa | Saffron Henderson | Ohshirô Maeda | |
Maetel | Masako Ikeda | Kathleen Barr | Chiaki Kuriyama | |
Conductor | Kaneta Kimotsuki | Terry Klassen | ||
Engine Computer | Kōji Totani (ep. 8, 50~113) Keaton Yamada (ep. 14~45) |
Hidekatsu Shibata | Don Brown | |
Captain Harlock | Makio Inoue | Scott McNeil | ||
Emeraldas | Ikuko Tani | Reiko Tajima | Nicole Oliver | Kaname Ouki |
Claire | Chiyoko Kawashima | Yōko Asagami | Janyse Jaud | |
Antares | Masao Imanishi | Yasuo Hisamatsu | Don Brown | Takashi Ukaji |
Count Mecha | Hidekatsu Shibata | Paul Dobson | Toshiyuki Someya | |
(Le)Ryuzu[23] | Haruko Kitahama (Ryuzu) Kumiko Kaori (Leryuzu) |
Noriko Ohara | Willow Johnson | |
Queen Prometheum | Ryōko Kinomiya | Kathleen Barr | ||
Dr. Ban | Tamio Ōki | Gorō Naya | Gerard Plunkett | |
Kanae Hoshino | Akiko Tsuboi | Kathleen Barr | ||
Shadow | Mieko Nobusawa | Toshiko Fujita | Jane Perry | |
Tochiro Ōyama | N/A | Kei Tomiyama | John Payne | Jun Hashimoto |
Narrator | Hitoshi Takagi | Tatsuya Jo | Don Brown |
Video games
[edit]The Nintendo DS and PlayStation games were not released outside Japan.
Title | System | Release date | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|
Freedom Fighter | Laserdisc arcade | 1986[24] | Millenium Games |
Escape From Cyber City (port of Freedom Fighter)[25] |
Philips CD-I | 1992 | Philips Media |
Matsumoto Leiji 999: Story of Galaxy Express 999 | PlayStation | June 28, 2001 | Banpresto |
Ginga Tetsudō 999 DS | Nintendo DS | October 14, 2010 | Culture Brain |
Game designer Fumito Ueda cited Galaxy Express 999 as an inspiration behind his video game Ico (2001), which was influenced by the manga's relationship involving a woman who is a guardian for the young hero as they adventure through the galaxy.[26]
Appearances in media
[edit]- The anime was referenced in the song "Express 999" by South Korean female group Girls' Generation from their fourth Korean studio album I Got a Boy.
- Galaxy Express 999 was mentioned in late Korean idol Sulli's song "On the Moon".
- Virtua Fighter 3 contains a nod to the show as an Easter egg hidden in one of the game's secret stages where upon completing a specific move, a subway train will fly in the background.
- Honkai: Star Rail has a lot of direct similarities with Galaxy Express 999, including the concept of a train that travels through space to different planets.
Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^ 機械人間 Kikai ningen, often translated, somewhat confusingly, as "cyborg".
References
[edit]- ^ a b "S'more Entertainment Adds Galaxy Express 999 TV Anime – News". Anime News Network. October 4, 2013. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ "2011 is 1981: Adieu Galaxy Express 999 | Otaku USA Anime Coverage". Otakuusamagazine.com. Archived from the original on July 30, 2014. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
- ^ "2011 is 1981: Adieu Part Two | Otaku USA Anime Coverage". Otakuusamagazine.com. Archived from the original on July 30, 2014. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
- ^ 小学館漫画賞:歴代受賞者 (in Japanese). Shogakukan. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-08-19.
- ^ "One Hundred Japanese Books for Children (1946–1979)". International Institute for Children's Literature, Osaka. Retrieved February 7, 2007.
- ^ McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 35. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
- ^ "Galaxy Express 999: Eternal Fantasy". Anime News Network. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
- ^ Uda, Kônosuke (March 7, 1998), Ginga tetsudô Three-Nine: Eternal Fantasy (Animation, Sci-Fi), Masako Nozawa, Masako Ikeda, Kaneta Kimotsuki, Emily Fajardo, Sound Cadence Studios, Toei Doga, retrieved January 1, 2021
- ^ a b "Discotek Licenses Symphogear, Dokuro-chan, Medabots, Cleopatra, Battery, Great Passage, More Anime". August 5, 2023.
- ^ Hodgkins, Crystalyn (February 19, 2018). "Galaxy Express 999 Gets New Manga in March". Anime News Network. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
- ^ "Galaxy Express 999 Another Story: Ultimate Journey Manga Resumes After 2 Years".
- ^ a b c d Galaxy Express 999 Graphic Novel Volume 1. Viz Communications Inc. October 1998. p. 8.
- ^ Galaxy Express 999 Graphic Novel Volume 1. Viz Communications Inc. October 1998. pp. 134–146.
- ^ Galaxy Express 999 Graphic Novel Volume 1. Viz Communications Inc. October 1998. p. 9.
- ^ "Roger Corman's Galaxy Express". Retrieved January 1, 2009.
- ^ Levi, Antonia (1996; fifth printing, 2000). "Chapter Five: Androids, Cyborgs, and other Mecha". Samurai from Outer Space. Chicago: Open Court. p. 94. ISBN 9780812693324.
- ^ Galaxy Express 999 Graphic Novel Volume 1. Viz Communications Inc. October 1998. p. 7.
- ^ "Crunchyroll Site Simulcasts Shugo Chara!! Doki— Anime". Anime News Network. Retrieved January 10, 2009.
- ^ "Discotek Media Adds 3rd Galaxy Express 999 Film – News". Anime News Network. October 4, 2013. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
- ^ @discotekmedia (August 12, 2018). "Galaxy Express 999 – the TV series – is coming to Blu-Ray! This is an upscale, but it's not the Japanese one. It is a new upscale that preserves more detail and film grain" (Tweet). Retrieved August 16, 2018 – via Twitter.
- ^ @MarcFBR (May 3, 2020). "Galaxy Express 999 set 2 is coming soon from @discotekmedia! It's been a bit of a wait for the new set, but that's because this one has a bunch of fun stuff! The old 'lost' Harmony Gold special dub is included!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ @MarcFBR (May 3, 2020). "Galaxy Express 999 set 3 is also coming from @discotekmedia! The discs were so full... More specials! More recovered dubs!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ The character Ryuzu in the film version of Galaxy Express 999 is called Leryuzu in the manga and television series. This is because the film came out before the 3 part episode where this character appeared aired, and the name Ryuzu had already been used for that of the character's sister.
- ^ Wolf, Mark J. P. (2008). The Video Game Explosion. ABC-CLIO. p. 101. ISBN 9780313338687. Retrieved July 31, 2017 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Computer Gaming World". Golden Empire Publications. 1991. p. 82. Retrieved July 31, 2017 – via Google Books.
{{cite magazine}}
: Cite magazine requires|magazine=
(help) - ^ "The PlayStation 2 Interview: Fumita Ueda", Official PlayStation 2 Magazine, no. 19, April 2002
External links
[edit]- Galaxy Express 999 and Space Battleship Yamato statues in Tsuruga (in Japanese)
- All 113 episodes of Galaxy Express 999 at Crunchyroll
- Galaxy Express 999 (manga) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Manga series
- 1977 manga
- 1978 anime television series debuts
- 1979 anime films
- 1981 anime films
- 1998 anime films
- 2000 anime OVAs
- 2004 anime television series debuts
- 2018 manga
- 1981 films
- 1998 films
- Akita Shoten manga
- Animated space adventure films
- Animated space adventure television series
- Fiction about intergalactic travel
- Fiction about rail transport
- Fictional trains
- Films directed by Rintaro
- Films scored by Kohei Tanaka
- Fuji Television original programming
- Funimation
- Japanese animated science fiction films
- New World Pictures films
- Fiction about prosthetics
- Seinen manga
- Shogakukan franchises
- Shogakukan manga
- Shōnen Gahōsha manga
- Shōnen manga
- Space opera anime and manga
- Toei Animation films
- Toei Animation original video animation
- Toei Animation television
- Trains in fiction
- Transhumanism in anime and manga
- Viz Media manga
- Winners of the Shogakukan Manga Award for shōnen manga
- 1979 films