Madhouse (company)

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MADHOUSE Ltd.
株式会社マッドハウス
Type Business corporation
Founded October 17, 1972
Headquarters Flag of Japan Ogikubo, Suginami-ku, Tokyo
Key people Jungo Maruta, President
Industry Animation studio and production enterprise
Owner Index Holdings (majority shareholder)
Nippon Television
Dentsu
Sony Pictures Entertainment
Hakuhodo DY
WOWOW
Website http://www.madhouse.co.jp/

MADHOUSE Ltd. (株式会社 マッドハウス Kabushiki-gaisha Maddohausu?) is a Japanese animation studio, founded in the early 1970s by ex–Mushi Pro animators including Masao Maruyama, Osamu Dezaki, Rintaro, and Yoshiaki Kawajiri. It has created and helped to produce many well known shows, starting with TV anime series Ace o Nerae! in 1973, and including western favourites Ninja Scroll, Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, Trigun and Di Gi Charat. Madhouse produced animation in OVA format in the late 1980s and early 1990s, but unlike studios founded at this time such as AIC and J.C.Staff, their strength was in TV shows and theatrical features. They were also responsible for the first Beyblade anime series as well as the Dragon Drive anime.

Another close tie to the studio is mangaka Naoki Urasawa. Madhouse has made adaptations of three of his manga: Yawara!, Master Keaton and Monster. They have also animated some of CLAMP's catalogue: Tokyo Babylon, two versions of X, Cardcaptor Sakura and Chobits.

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[edit] Films

Their theatrical work includes assistance on the Barefoot Gen films, an anime movie based on the space opera Lensman series by pulp science fiction legend E.E. "Doc" Smith, animating the Osamu Tezuka version of Metropolis as well as two feature-length films for Sanrio starring Tezuka's unicorn character Unico, and producing all four (to date) of Satoshi Kon's films: Perfect Blue, Millennium Actress, Tokyo Godfathers, and Paprika. Madhouse produced the 2003 anime film, Nasu: Summer in Andalusia, which was adapted from the seinen manga Nasu by Iou Kuroda and directed by Studio Ghibli veteran Kitaro Kosaka.

[edit] List of anime series

[edit] Collaborations

Madhouse worked with Square Enix on the OVA Last Order: Final Fantasy VII. They also contributed to Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli's 2004 feature, Howl's Moving Castle. They also animated the intro cutscene to Wild Arms. The studio contributed some animation work to the second season of The Boondocks.

[edit] External links