Street Fighter II V (Japanese: ?????????? II V , Hepburn: Sutor? to Fait? Ts? Bui ) , is an anime series produced by TAC Group based on Street Fighter II fighting game. Directed by Gisaburo Sugii (who also directed previous Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie), the series was first aired in Japan in 1995, from 10 April to 27 November at YTV. The English adaptation of the series was produced by the dubbing group Animaze and Manga Entertainment in 1996, and was released in Australia and the United States as a series of VHS tapes in 1997-1998. Each cassette includes three episodes, and is released in a dubbed version and subtitle version (which is priced 5 US dollars more than the dub version). In 1997, ADV Films produced a special English rank for the UK market, also released on VHS. The Animaze/Manga dub had a DVD release on April 29, 2003 in a set of four disks in North America and then released on DVD in Australia.
Video Street Fighter II V
Premise
The series tells the story of Ryu and Ken's adventures, two teenage martial artists who embarked on a journey to upgrade their skills after a brutal defeat at the hands of Guile. Along the way, they get acquainted with other Street Fighter characters like the 15-year-old Chun-Li tour guide, Fei Long martial arts film star, Muay Thai Sagat champion, and Dhalsim Indian monk. Finally, they find themselves in the crosshairs of the criminal syndicate Shadowlaw, led by the enigmatic M. Bison, having defeated one of their subordinate organizations (Ashura). Among Shadowlaw agents including Russian bear wrestlers and rented Zangief, British assassins tease Cammy (who does not know his master's relationship with Shadowlaw), and Interpol's double agent, Balrog. Spanish nobleman Vega also appears as an antagonist, though he is not connected with Shadowlaw in this series.
Japan
- Opening Themes
- "Kaze Fuiteru" by Yuki Kuroda (eps 1-19)
- "Ima, ashita no tame ni" by Shuji Honda (eps 20-29)
- Ending Themes
- "Cry" by Yuki Kuroda (eps 1-19)
- "Lonely Baby" by Shuji Honda (eps. 20-29)
The English and Australian Manga/Animaze releases by the Americans and Australians use the unmedited instrumental theme music by Mike Egan who is composed exclusively for rank. ADV Film Version stores original Japanese intro and outro themes.
Maps Street Fighter II V
Note
References
External links
- Street Fighter II Project V
- Street Fighter II V on IMDb
- Street Fighter II V (anime) in the Anime News Network encyclopedia
Source of the article : Wikipedia