We're not pulling any punches this season, as the English dub of Viral Hit officially squares up on Crunchyroll tomorrow! Here's the cast and crew for Episode 1: Viral Hit English Dub Cast Hobin voiced by Brandon Acosta Snapper voiced by Jessie James Grelle Pakgo voiced by Corey Wilder Rumi voiced by Morgan Lauré Bomi voiced by Molly Zhang Jihyeon voiced by Stephanie Young Gaeul voiced by Trina Nishimura Munseong voiced by Ricco Fajardo Viral Hit English Dub Crew Voice Director: Cris George Producer: Zach Bolton Adaptation: Jared Smith Mixer: Gino Palencia Engineer: Jeremy Woods Related: Crunchyroll Spring 2024 Dubs Include Kaiju No. 8, Konosuba Season 3 and More Key Visual Related: Wind Breaker English Dub Reveals Cast and Crew, Release Date Based on the manhwa by Taejun Park and Kim Junghyun, Viral Hit is directed by Masakazu Hishida ( Fairy Ranmaru ) at studio Okuruto Noboru, with series composition by Toshiya Ono, character designs...
- 4/23/2024
- by Liam Dempsey
- Crunchyroll
Anime director Masakazu Hishida, known for his work in Yashahime, InuYasha, Ensemble Star!, recently gave an interview to Mantan Web talking about the currently airing anime adaptation of Taejun Pak and Kim Junghyun’s Viral Hit webtoon.
Hishida, who is currently helming the series, shared insights into the adaptation process of webtoons into anime series in the interview, where he emphasized the unique compatibility between the storytelling of webtoon with that of anime storyboard structures.
While this might not always be the case with other webtoon to anime adaptations, Hishida felt that unlike traditional manga, which often relies on double-page spreads, the one-way scrolling of webtoon is more compatible with anime storyboard structures.
He then went on to back the statement with an example and also highlighted the seamless flow and continuity of storytelling facilitated by this format, likening it to the passage of time in animated sequences.
“It’s completely different from traditional manga.
Hishida, who is currently helming the series, shared insights into the adaptation process of webtoons into anime series in the interview, where he emphasized the unique compatibility between the storytelling of webtoon with that of anime storyboard structures.
While this might not always be the case with other webtoon to anime adaptations, Hishida felt that unlike traditional manga, which often relies on double-page spreads, the one-way scrolling of webtoon is more compatible with anime storyboard structures.
He then went on to back the statement with an example and also highlighted the seamless flow and continuity of storytelling facilitated by this format, likening it to the passage of time in animated sequences.
“It’s completely different from traditional manga.
- 4/22/2024
- by Ami Nazru
- AnimeHunch
The official music video recently launched for "Viral Hack," the ending theme to the Viral Hit anime by Crab Kani Club. A creditless version of the anime's ending video has since gone live, and you can check it out to the tune of the catchy theme song below. Viral Hit Creditless Ending Video Related: Viral Hit Anime Streams Creditless Opening Video Ahead of April 10 Premiere Writer Taejun Pak and illustrator Kim Junghyun’s Viral Hit originally premiered on the Webtoon platform in November 2019 in Korean, and English in October 2020. The Viral Hit TV anime premiered in Japan on April 10, 2024. The first episode "First Upload" is now available for Crunchyroll Premium members in North America, Central America, South America, Europe, Africa, Oceania, Cis, India and Southeast Asia. Crunchyroll describes the series: Like and subscribe to NewTube’s latest streaming sensation, Hobin Yu! Tired of bullies, the scrawny high schooler is fighting back and streaming it.
- 4/11/2024
- by Joseph Luster
- Crunchyroll
Industry platform awarded several titles with funding and in-kind prizes.
Nothing In Its Place by Turkish filmmaker Burak Çevik, Nadia by Korean director Moon Chang-yong and Mimang by Korean director Kim Taeyang won the top prizes tonight (May 2) at the 15th Jeonju Project industry programme.
The Jeonju Cinema Project: Next Edition prizes – awarded to an international and Korean feature – went to Nothing In Its Place, which focuses on the night of Turkey’s bloodiest massacre in 1978, and Nadia, a documentary about the children who live in poverty in Indonesia’s trash mountain. Each will receive a production investment of KW...
Nothing In Its Place by Turkish filmmaker Burak Çevik, Nadia by Korean director Moon Chang-yong and Mimang by Korean director Kim Taeyang won the top prizes tonight (May 2) at the 15th Jeonju Project industry programme.
The Jeonju Cinema Project: Next Edition prizes – awarded to an international and Korean feature – went to Nothing In Its Place, which focuses on the night of Turkey’s bloodiest massacre in 1978, and Nadia, a documentary about the children who live in poverty in Indonesia’s trash mountain. Each will receive a production investment of KW...
- 5/2/2023
- by Silvia Wong
- ScreenDaily
Vesoul Unveils Asian Lineup
The Vesoul International Film Festival of Asian Cinema has unveiled its 85-title lineup for the edition that starts later this month. Elements include a 10-film competition section, a 10-film documentary film section, a tribute to the Turkish director Semih Kaplanoglu; a thematic section “Asian Diaspora Cinema” offering a panorama of works by directors from Asian countries living in exile; and a Philippines cinema sidebar.
Fiction films in competition include: Azerbaijan’s “Cold as Marble,” by Asif Rustamov; China’s “In Our Prime,” by Liu Yulin; Korea’s “A Letter from Kyoto,” by Kim Min-ju; India’s: “Behind Veils,” by Praveen Morshhale; Iran’s “No End,” by Nader Saievar; Mongolia’s “The Sales Girl,” by Sengedorj Janchivdorj; The Philippines’s “Feast,” by Brillante Mendoza; Singapore’s “#LookAtMe,” by Ken Kwek; and Vietnam’s “Memento Mori: Earth,” by Marcus Vu Manh Cuong. The president of the jury is Lee Yong-kwan,...
The Vesoul International Film Festival of Asian Cinema has unveiled its 85-title lineup for the edition that starts later this month. Elements include a 10-film competition section, a 10-film documentary film section, a tribute to the Turkish director Semih Kaplanoglu; a thematic section “Asian Diaspora Cinema” offering a panorama of works by directors from Asian countries living in exile; and a Philippines cinema sidebar.
Fiction films in competition include: Azerbaijan’s “Cold as Marble,” by Asif Rustamov; China’s “In Our Prime,” by Liu Yulin; Korea’s “A Letter from Kyoto,” by Kim Min-ju; India’s: “Behind Veils,” by Praveen Morshhale; Iran’s “No End,” by Nader Saievar; Mongolia’s “The Sales Girl,” by Sengedorj Janchivdorj; The Philippines’s “Feast,” by Brillante Mendoza; Singapore’s “#LookAtMe,” by Ken Kwek; and Vietnam’s “Memento Mori: Earth,” by Marcus Vu Manh Cuong. The president of the jury is Lee Yong-kwan,...
- 2/20/2023
- by Patrick Frater
- Variety Film + TV
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