Anime
Anime is Japanese animated film and television, recognized worldwide for its vivid art style, fantastical themes, and emotional storytelling. From hand-drawn cels of the Shōwa era to GPU-rendered digital productions streamed globally in real time, anime represents one of the most culturally influential entertainment industries on the planet.
Full Guide →Key Milestones
- 1917
Japan produces its first short animated films: Seitarō Kitayama's Momotarō and Seitaro Shimokawa's Imokawa Mukuzo.
- 1945
Momotarō's Divine Sea Warriors becomes Japan's first feature-length anime, running 74 minutes and produced for the Imperial Navy.
- 1963
Osamu Tezuka's Astro Boy premieres as the first weekly TV anime series, establishing the format still used today.
- 1985
Studio Ghibli is founded by Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata; Castle in the Sky is its first production.
- 1995
Neon Genesis Evangelion airs, redefining what anime storytelling can explore and sparking global cult fandom.
- 1997
Princess Mononoke breaks Japanese box-office records; Pokémon anime launches a franchise worth $150 billion.
- 2007
Crunchyroll begins legal streaming, making simulcasts — anime broadcast globally hours after Japanese airing — the norm.
- 2022
Demon Slayer: Mugen Train becomes the highest-grossing anime film ever, earning $504 million worldwide.
Did You Know?
Japan produces around 200 new anime series per season (roughly 800 per year), more than any other country produces scripted television.
Spirited Away (2001) was the first non-English film to win the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.
The term "anime" in Japan refers to all animation regardless of origin; outside Japan it specifically means Japanese animation.
Voice actors (seiyuu) are celebrities in Japan, with dedicated fan clubs and sold-out live performances.
Dragon Ball Z's Kamehameha is one of the most recognized fictional techniques in the world, inspiring countless imitations across sports and pop culture.
Kyoto Animation's meticulous production process — hand-drawing details like fabric wrinkles — is so labor-intensive some episodes take four times longer than industry standard.
Notable Works & Names
Anime Openings: How 90 Seconds Became Their Own Art Form
Anime Openings: How 90 Seconds Became Their Own Art Form
Slice of Life: Why "Nothing Happens" Anime Is the Hardest Genre to Make Well
Slice of Life: Why "Nothing Happens" Anime Is the Hardest Genre to Make Well
Serial Experiments Lain: The 1998 Anime That Predicted What the Internet Would Do to Identity
Serial Experiments Lain: The 1998 Anime That Predicted What the Internet Would Do to Identity
Cowboy Bebop: Why the Most-Discussed "Perfect Anime" Almost Never Got Made
