Three Tales (film) explained

Three Tales
Ja Kanji:新しい動画 3つのはなし
Ja Romaji:Mittsu no Hanashi
Genre:Fantasy
Type:tv film
Director:Keiko Kozonoe
Network:NHK
Released:January 15, 1960
Runtime:30 minutes

was a black and white Japanese anime direct-to-TV short film aired in 1960. It was the first domestic anime ever televised.

Background

The show was an experimental anthology broadcast on the NHK channel. It was divided into 3 parts featuring individual short fairy tales. The first part of the show titled "The Third Plate" is technically the first anime segment ever televised.[1] In total, the show was 30 minutes long.[2] Though it is questionable as to how widespread the anime actually was, since NHK was only broadcasting to 866 TV sets as of 1953.[3] There is no known estimate as to how much their infrastructure scaled just 7 years later. Though the best evidence pointing to the anime as being black and white comes from the NHK station record, which indicated they did not make their first analog color broadcast until September 10, 1960, at 8:55pm 9 months later in Tokyo and Osaka.[4]

Story

The story is an anthology of 3 separate fairy tales.

width=10%Storywidth=10%Japanese Namewidth=30%English Namewidth=30%Original Story by
Story 1 第三の皿 The Third Plate Hirosuke Hamada
Story 2 オッペルと象 Oppel and the Elephant Kenji Miyazawa
Story 3 眠い町 Sleepy Town Mimei Ogawa

Staff

Kenji Miyazawa had already died when the show saw his story turned into an anime, even Mia Ogawa would also die just 1 year after the show's first broadcast in 1961.

width=30%Functionwidth=15%Japanese Namewidth=20%English Namewidth=20%Alternate English Name
Director, Supervisor 小薗江圭子
Director, Supervisor 中原収一
Director, Supervisor 和田誠
Original Story Author 浜田広介
Original Story Author 宮沢賢治
Original Story Author 小川未明 Bimei Ogawa

External links

Notes and References

  1. Clements, Jonathan. McCarthy Helen. [2006] (2006). The Anime Encyclopedia: Revised & Expanded Edition. Berkeley, CA: Stone Bridge Press.
  2. "AllCinema Online." "AllCinema.net Japan." Retrieved on 2006-12-08.
  3. Gravett, Paul. [2004] (2004). Manga: 60 years of Japanese Comics, UK: Laurence King Publishing Ltd.
  4. "Wikipedia Japan." NHK article in Wikipedia Japan. Retrieved on 2006-12-08.