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2nd Space Battleship Yamato 2202 Film's 1st 10 Minutes Streamed
posted on by Egan Loo
The official website for the Uchū Senkan Yamato 2202: Ai no Senshi-tachi (project began streaming the first 10 minutes from the project's second film, Hasshin-hen (Departure Chapter), on Saturday. The video features the project's new opening sequence.
The same footage aired in a television special on MX on June 17 and will run on Kenichi Suzumura take part in an interview on the program.
The anime's story is set in the year 2202, three years after the Yamato's return from the planet Iscandar. The people of Earth restored their Planet With the Cosmo Reverse System, and they signed a peace treaty with Garmillas. In addition to reconstruction, Earth developed a new defense fleet that includes the state-of-the-art battleship Andromeda. The Earth goes down a path of military expansion, despite Starsha Iscandar's wishes. The Yamato helps accomplish this so-called peace, but it comes at the price of many invaluable sacrifices. The goddess Teresa, who prays for tranquility in space, summons the Yamato on a new voyage. The threat of Gatlantis is sweeping over the universe and approaching Earth.
The anime features the following returning cast from Space Battleship Yamato 2199:
- Daisuke Ono as Susumu Kodai
- Yūki Mori
- Houchu Ohtsuka as Shiro Sanada
- Mugihito as Hikozaemon Tokugawa
- Yasuo Nanbu
- Masato Kokubun as Yoshikazu Aihara
New cast include:
- Keiji Fujiwara)
- Hiroshi Kamiya as Klaus Keyman
- Masaki Terasoma as Lauren Barel
- Hideaki Tezuka as Zordar
- Sayaka Kanda as the "legendary goddess" Teresa
Kanda plays the "legendary goddess" Teresa in the anime and sings the ending theme song "Tsuki no Kagami" (Moon Mirror). She played Yuna and performed hiatus in December. Kanda played Anna in the Japanese-dubbed version of the American animated film "Frozen."
Akira Miyagawa is composing the music.
The project is a seven-part theatrical anime project, and the first film, subtitled Kōshi-hen (Starting Chapter), premiered in Japan on February 25. A trailer for the second film debuted in April.
The second film will open in Japan on June 24, and will screen in five more theaters than the first film, for a total of 20 theaters.
Similar to the first film, the second film will screen in a limited two-week engagement. Director Nobuyoshi Habara, Harutoshi Fukui (series composition), and cast will appear at stage greeting events at several theaters in Tokyo, Kanagawa, and Saitama Prefectures on June 24 and June 25. Stage greeting events for the film's second week will be held in Aichi, Kyoto, and Osaka Prefectures on July 1 and July 2. In addition, Fukui will hold a talk sessions after two screenings on June 29 and July 6 at Tokyo's Shinjuku Piccadilly theater, accompanied by writer Hideki Oka on the first night and Miyagawa on the second night.
As with the first film, theaters that are screening the second film will also sell a limited-edition Blu-ray Disc starting on the day the film opens. The new film will also start streaming online for a fee on the same day the film opens in Japanese theaters. Digital rentals of the new film will start on July 8, and the standard edition Blu-ray Disc and DVD will ship on July 28. Advance tickets for the third film will go on sale with a bonus poster on June 24 as well.
While supplies last, people who see the second film in theaters will receive a set of character animation sketches and mecha line art in the first week, and a second set in the second week.

Source: The Animate Times