Kemono Michi: Rise Up (2019)
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Kemono Michi: Rise Up is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Apple TV, Google Play Movies, Amazon Video, Hulu, Microsoft Store, Crunchyroll, Crunchyroll Amazon Channel
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
Cast & Crew.
Katsuyuki Konishi
Genzo Shibata
Yuki Yagi
Hanako (voice)
Arisa Sakuraba
Camilla (voice)
Tetsu Inada
Macadamian Ogre (voice)
Akira Sekine
Shigure
Mie Sonozaki
Hiroyuki
Rie Suegara
Hiroyuki (voice)
Kenichirou Matsuda
Wolfgang von Craftman (voice)
Mallorie Rodak
Carmilla
Apphia Yu
Hanako
Taketora
Edgar (voice)
Chika Noumi
Character Designer / Supervising Animation Director / Supervising Animation Director / Character Designer
Rina Oguchi
Editor
Kazuya Miura
Series Director
Yuki Hayashi
Sound Effects
Touko Machida
Series Composition
Haruki Satomi
Executive Producer
Lindsay Seidel
Joanna
Minoru Oonishi
Supervising Art Director
Ayako Aihara
Color Designer
Ryu Sakamoto
Art Designer
Toshiki Kameyama
Sound Director
Daiji Horiuchi
Executive Producer
Fumihiko Shinozaki
Executive Producer
Shunichi Uemura
Music Producer
Kyoko Haruna
Art Direction
Asuka Yamazaki
Executive Producer
Takahiro Yamauchi
Executive Producer
Makoto Hojo
Executive Producer
Hiroyasu Taniguchi
Producer
Kenichi Tokumura
Producer
Shunsuke Takizawa
Original Music Composer
Sojiro Arimizu
Producer
Manami Kabashima
Producer
Norifumi Ikeuchi
Producer
Takashi Tachizaki
Producer
NoB
Theme Song Performance
Toshihiko Masuda
Storyboard Artist
Shinichi Fukumoto
Storyboard Artist / Director
Fumio Itou
Director
Media.
Details.
Release DateSeptember 29, 2019
Original Name旗揚!けものみち
StatusEnded
Seasons1
Episodes12
Running Time24m
Genres
Last updated:
This TV Show Is About.
Wiki.
Antony Rayns (born 1948) is a British writer, commentator, film festival programmer and screenwriter. He wrote for the underground publication Cinema Rising (its name inspired by Kenneth Anger's Scorpio Rising) before contributing to the Monthly Film Bulletin from the December 1970 issue until its demise in 1991. He has written for the British Film Institute's magazine Sight & Sound since the 1970s, and also contributed extensively to Time Out and to Melody Maker in the late 1970s.
He provides commentary tracks for DVD releases of Asian films. He coordinated the Dragons and Tigers competition for Asian films at the Vancouver International Film Festival from 1988 to 2006. In the 1980s, he presented a series called New Chinese Cinema on British television, showing (sometimes rare) films and biographies of eminent Chinese directors. He has also worked as a translator for English subtitles on films from Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, Taiwan and Thailand. For example, he wrote the English subtitles for the films of Huang Ming-chuan in the 1990s in Taiwan. He has also been given two awards for services to Japanese cinema: the Kawakita Prize in 2004 and the Foreign Ministry of Japan’s Commendation in 2008.He wrote the screenplay for Away with Words, a feature film directed by cinematographer Christopher Doyle, starring Asano Tadanobu. He has written books about Seijun Suzuki, Wong Kar-wai and Rainer Werner Fassbinder. In the 1970s, he began a book on Kenji Mizoguchi, which he had not completed at the time he recorded audio commentary for the Criterion Collection DVD release of Ugetsu in 2005.