Gisaku
Gisaku is a Spanish animated feature film directed by Baltasar Pedrosa Clavero. It was first released in Japan on March 4, 2005, and in Spain on March 17, 2005. The film has three official soundtracks: Japanese, Spanish, and English.
Gisaku | |
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![]() Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Baltasar Pedrosa Clavero Antonio Santamaría |
Produced by | Julio Fernández |
Music by | Óscar Araujo |
Distributed by | Filmax |
Release date |
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Running time | 78 minutes |
Country | Spain |
Language | Japanese Spanish English |
Plot
The film relates the adventures of a young Japanese samurai named Yohei who visited Spain in the 17th century, in a story loosely taking its inspiration from the travels of historic samurai Hasekura. Yohei survived in hiding to the present day due to magical powers ("After centuries of lethargy, he awakes in a World he does not know"), and accomplishes many adventures in modern Spain as a superhero.[1]
Characters
- Gisaku is the demonical pet (of Gorkan) who lost its power after swallowing the piece of Heart; now an adorable metal-eating baby lion.
- Riki is a young Spanish boy, who lost his parents in a car accident.
- Yohei is a brave samurai from the past the last surviving of the guardian that defeated Gorkan 400 years ago, who awakened after centuries of sleep to stop Gorkan again.
- Moira is an individualistic girl, whose interests lie in both high-tech and protection of the environment, she is a genius-level inventor
- Linceto is a mutated Spanish lynx who can speak and walk like a person. He blames the human race for the extinction of his species.
- Gorkan is the only demon who survived the battle between men and the forces of evil 400 years ago, and now plans to dominate the world.
gollark: PotatOS has approximately that under evilify.
gollark: PotatOS is highly amazing and not a virus, actually...
gollark: Sunk cost fallacy = UTTER bees.
gollark: > This book is intended as a text for a second or third level undergraduate course in introductory ethical calculus or morality science. Ethical Calculus on the Astral Manifold demonstrates foundational concepts of ZFC+DMR axiomatic moral theory in particularly novel ways. Join an autonomous car as it journeys across the utility isosurface, restricted in phase-space by the physical constraints of spacetime. Follow the thought processes of the man at the lever in the modified manifold trolley problem. Watch as a eigenmoses maximizer behaves in a simulated environment, following an instinct one might find very familiar. These are just a few of many case studies presented, analyzed in detail in a manner both interesting, easy to read, and highly informative. Freshman knowledge of real analytical techniques is recommended but not necessarily required.
gollark: I was hoping for the realization of this random book cover.
See also
- Hasekura Tsunenaga
- List of animated feature films
References
- Gisaku, the Movie Archived 29 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine
External links
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