Draft:Nippon TeleMovie Productions
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NTV Douga | |
Formerly | Nippon Broadcast Video Studio (日本放送映画者) (1965–1967) Tokyo TV Douga (東京テレビ動画) (1968–1971) |
Industry | Anime |
Founded | 1965 |
Defunct | September 30, 1973 |
Nippon TeleMovie Productions (日本テレビ動画) (also known as NTV Douga) was a Japanese animation studio that operated for 8 years. It is most famous for producing the 1973 adaptation of Fujiko Fujio's Doraemon.
History
[edit]The studio was created as Nippon Broadcast Video in 1965 with Fight! Osper and lasted with the name until 1968, when it changed to Tokyo TV Douga and later, Nippon TeleMovie Productions in November 1971. In 1973, the Kiyoshi Watanabe, the president of the company and a subject of controversy, left and disappeared. The studio declared bankruptcy and dissolved on 30 September 1973, during the last episode of Doraemon. As of now, most of its anime (most famously Doraemon and Yuyake Banchō) are lost media.
Selected productions
[edit]- Fight! Osper (1965)
- Tobidase! Bacchiri (1966)
- Adventure Boy Shadar (1967)
- Yuuyake Banchō (1968)
- Red-Blooded Eleven (1970)
- Mon Chérie Coco (1971)
- Doraemon (1973)
References
[edit]