Tsuchida Production
Tsuchida Production (土田プロダクション Tsuchida Purodakushon) is a defunct anime production company in Japan. After Osamu Tsuchida (originally of Hōsō Dōga) left Studio Yuni (not to be confused with the anime background art company of the same name), he founded Tsuchida Production in 1976 to do animation, production, finish animation, and other contract work related to the production of anime. The company became well known after working on Captain Tsubasa in 1983. However, when the Japanese economy went into a depression in the mid-1980s, Tsuchida Production collapsed into bankruptcy in July 1986 after being unable to reimburse its investors and various toy manufacturers with which it was working.[1] Some of the employees went on to form Studio Comet.
Projects
Projects are listed chronologically.
- Dokaben (1976–1979, contracted by Nippon Animation)
- Yakyūkyō no Uta (1977–1979, contracted by Nippon Animation)
- Kagaku Bōkentai Tansā 5 (1979–1980, contracted by Sunrise)
- Ojamanga Yamada-kun (1980–1982)
- Manga Kotowaza Jiten (1980–1982)
- Ganbare Gonbe (1980)
- Urusei Yatsura (1981–1986, contracted by Studio Pierrot, then by Studio Deen)
- Game Center Arashi (1982, contracted by Shin-Ei Animation)
- Rainbowman (1982–1983)
- Sasuga no Sarutobi (1982–1984)
- Manga Nihonshi (1982–1984)
- Captain Tsubasa (1983–1986)
- Kuroi Ame ni Utarete (1984)
- Ashita Tenki ni Naare (1984–1985)
- Ranpō (1984)
- Chūhai Lemon Love30S (1985)
- High School! Kimengumi (1985–1987, through episode 7, episodes 8-26 were done by Gallop, with all episodes after 9 being produced by Studio Comet)
Notable former employees
- Hajime Watanabe
- Hideki Okamoto
- Hiroshi Ogawa
- Yoshitaka Koyama
- Shin Misawa
- Kōji Beppu (went on to Gallop)
- Tomohisa Iizuka (founder of Studio Fantasia)
References
- ↑ "土田プロ,倒産!!!". 横浜戸塚BBS. 1986-07-11. Archived from the original on 2006-07-19. Retrieved 2007-01-15.
External links
- Tsuchida Production at Anime News Network's encyclopedia