Urban Vision

Urban Vision Entertainment Inc. was an American-based production/distribution company created in Los Angeles, California formed in July 1996 by Mataichiro Yamamoto to help introduce the animation medium known as anime to the American mainstream.

For the television network known as "Asia Vision", see Asia Vision (TV network).
Urban Vision Entertainment, Inc
Animation film studio
IndustryMedia and Entertainment
FoundedJuly 1996 (1996-07)
FounderMataichiro Yamamoto
DefunctNovember 11, 2016
HeadquartersLos Angeles, California
Key people
Mataichiro Yamamoto (CEO)
ProductsAnime, Live-action
DivisionsAsiaVision

History

Urban Vision Entertainment was formed in July 1996 by Mataichiro Yamamoto to help introduce the alternative animation genre known as anime to mainstream media. The company primarily produced and acquired Japanese animation for direct-to-home video release. Urban Vision founder Mataichiro Yamamoto helped pioneer the anime genre in the US with the computer-generated theatrical release, Golgo 13: The Professional in 1983.

Urban Vision worked closely with the world-renowned Studio Madhouse animation studio in Tokyo, Japan (Wicked City, Ninja Scroll, Vampire Hunter D). The company's initial release, another Madhouse project, was Bio Hunter, released on home video in July 1997. Additional Urban Vision releases included Gatchaman, Twilight of the Dark Master, Dragon Slayer, Psycho Diver: Soul Siren and Final Fantasy: Legend of the Crystals.

In the mid-2000s Urban Vision shifted its focus from anime to live-action movies with the launch of two sub-labels, Ciudad for Spanish-language films and AsiaVision for Japanese-language films.

Decline

Urban Vision became inactive since the late 00's, not acquiring any more titles. On September 7, 2010, the online retailer Right Stuf removed all of their Urban Vision catalog due to the distributor not shipping out orders to them.[1] The following day, Urban Vision released a statement saying that the company had been restructuring itself and were halting their home video production unit and focusing on digital distribution.[2] In November 2016, the company was shut down. Currently, a majority of their titles have since been re-licensed and re-released by Discotek Media and Sentai Filmworks.

Films licensed by Urban Vision Entertainment

Anime

Live action (AsiaVision)

Live action (Ciudad)

Miscellaneous

  • Slammin' Sammy: The Sammy Sosa Story (American animation; Lil' Vision)
gollark: Plethora Peripherals/CC can do very generalized item transfer, but probably quite laggily.
gollark: Mods have done basically everything vanilla ever has.
gollark: Older versions did *not* do this that much.
gollark: The server I've got up has 3.5GB of RAM allocated to it (the actual dedicated box it on has 4... planning to upgrade eventually), and constantly just spends 30% of CPU whenever anyone's on, probably garbage collecting.
gollark: Also RAM use.

References

  1. "Right Stuf Removes Urban Vision Titles From Catalog". Anime News Network. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  2. "Urban Vision Release Statement About Company Status". Anime News Network. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.