Kuroko's Basketball The Movie: Last Game (Japanese: 劇場版 黒子のバスケ LAST GAME, Hepburn: Gekijō-ban Kuroko no Basuke Rasuto Gēmu) is a 2017 Japanese animated film produced by Production I.G and distributed by Shochiku. This is the first film in the Kuroko's Basketball franchise, created by Tadatoshi Fujimaki. It was released in Japanese cinemas on March 18, 2017.[2] ODEX later screened the film in Singapore and Malaysia on May 4, 2017,[3] Philippines on May 17, 2017,[4] Indonesia on May 17, 2017, and Vietnam on July 18, 2017.[5] The film began streaming on Netflix on November 15, 2021 with an English dub.[6]
Download Film Anime 18 Subtitle Indonesia It 2017
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The film opened in Japan on March 18 on 91 screens. The company sold 124,000 tickets on the weekend for 190 million (about US$1.7 million). The film was ranked 6th in attendance on average per screen in its opening weekend having been defeated by Pretty Cure Dream Stars! by Izumi Todo who debuted the same week and beat Sword Art Online The Movie: Ordinal Scale by Reki Kawahara and Your Name by Makoto Shinkai.[10][11] As of May 15, 2017 the film has grossed a total of over 1 billion from 752,856 admissions.[1]
On May 17, 2017, GSC Movies posted that the parts of the film were supposedly recorded during the Malaysian screening time, and posted online.[12] GSC Movies later wrote the apology statement that it was "greatly threatening" to ODEX, GSC Movies and Japanese film copyright holders.[13]
Hideaki Anno announced the Animator Expo weekly anime shorts at the Tokyo International Film Festival in October 2014, with The Dragon Dentist as its first short.[2] The short was written and directed by Ōtarō Maijō and produced by Tomoyuki Ogata, with Anno and Nobuo Kawakami of Dwango serving as executive producers. Animation was produced by Khara and directed by Kazuya Tsurumaki. Yasuyuki Kosaka served as character designer in collaboration with Yoshimichi Kameda, who served as animation character designer. Yuka Kawai served as art director under the supervision of Kentaro Akiyama. Hiroyasu Kobayashi provided CGI direction, and Toyotoku Yamada handled cinematography. Shin Inoie produced the anime's special effects. Yoshitaka Koyama composed the series music, while Toru Noguchi produced sound effects under the direction of Toshiharu Yamada. The short was edited by Hidemi Li, and Dan Kanemitsu translated it for the English subtitles.[3][4]
The 8-minute long Dragon Dentist short was first shown at the Tokyo International Film Festival in October 2014,[2][3] before being posted online with English subtitles on 7 November 2014.[3] The ONA, along with the first and second seasons of the Animator Expo shorts, were removed from the series' website on 23 November 2015.[8] Following the announcement of the TV special on 26 August 2016, the short was again made available to stream until 31 March 2017.[6]
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