U.S. Renditions

Last updated

U.S. Renditions
FoundedFebruary 1987
Defunctmid-1990s
FateDefunct
Headquarters Carson, California, USA
Key people
Robert Napton
David Keith Riddick
Kevin Seymour
Products Anime
Parent Books Nippan

U.S. Renditions was a Special Projects Division of Books Nippan (which was the American branch of Nippon Shuppan Hanbai) and one of the pioneers of anime home video distribution in North America.

Contents

The company also had a label called Dark Image Entertainment, which was geared for mature audiences. Titles under Dark Image Entertainment included Ambassador Magma , Devilman and Guyver: Out of Control .

History

The division was founded in February 1987 by Kevin Seymour, David Keith Riddick, Sho Nagata and Satoshi Komatsu. Robert Napton later joined the division and became a key figure in its productions.

After producing two music projects for the Robotech television series, U.S. Renditions produced the very first subtitled direct-to-home anime video for the American anime market. In March 1990, they began a release of a subtitled version of Gunbuster , followed in the same month by Dangaioh . They also released such subtitled hits as Appleseed and Black Magic M-66 , and even began dubbing anime in 1992, the year their release of Dangaioh was completed. Their first dubbing projects included Macross II , Giant Robo and Fight! Iczer-One . These video projects were a joint venture with L.A. Hero, which was headed by Ken Iyadomi. U.S. Renditions also worked with U.S. Manga Corps on a select number of titles.

U.S. Renditions had a deal with Manga Entertainment's UK Division to distribute selected anime titles and have them dubbed in-house, before Island Records established Manga's North American operations via its acquisition of L.A. Hero in 1994.

When Books Nippan ceased operations in the mid-1990s, U.S. Renditions was dissolved. Books Nippan's animation division was later acquired by Digital Manga. [1] Kevin Seymour went on to become a successful anime English voice director and co-founded Animaze. Robert Napton became the director of Bandai U.S.A.'s manga division. Ken Iyadomi went on to produce/co-produce domestic releases by Manga Entertainment and Bandai Entertainment. Although some of their releases have seen re-release through Bandai Visual USA (which subsequently merged with Bandai Entertainment), Manga Entertainment and Media Blasters, other titles such as the original uncut subtitled version of Dangaioh, Ambassador Magma and Guyver: Out of Control were never re-released and have remained out of print on home video.

Releases

U.S. Renditions releases
YearTitleMediumNotes
1987 Robotech: BGM Collection, Volume 1 Music LP
1989 Robotech: Perfect Collection Music LP
1990 Dangaioh OVA series3 eps.; later released by Manga Entertainment
1990 Gunbuster OVA series6 eps.; later released by Bandai Visual and Discotek Media
1991 Black Magic M-66 OVA series1 ep.; later released by Manga Entertainment and Sentai Filmworks
1992 Kabuto the Golden Eye Monster, AKA Raven Tengu KabutoOVA series1 ep.
1992–1993 Macross II: Lovers Again OVA series6 eps.; later released by Manga Entertainment; currently on Kickstarter by AnimEigo
1992 The Guyver: Bio-Booster Armor OVA series12 eps.
1993 Guyver: Out of ControlOVA series1 ep.
1993 OutlandersOVA series1 ep.; later released by Central Park Media
1994 Giant Robo: The Day the Earth Stood Still OVA series7 eps.; later released by Media Blasters and Discotek Media
Ambassador Magma OVA series13 eps.
Appleseed OVA series1 ep.; later released by Manga Entertainment and Discotek Media
Devilman OVA series2 eps.; later released by Discotek Media
Dragon Century OVA series2 eps.
Fight! Iczer One OVA series3 eps.; later released by Media Blasters
Super Dimension Century Orguss TV series17/35 eps.; later released by ImaginAsian and Discotek Media
† = Released under the imprint Dark Image Entertainment.

References

  1. "Digital Manga Acquires Books Nippan Animation Division to Form Digital Manga Distribution". Anime News Network . Retrieved December 2, 2015.