User: Bluemothsword/Sandbox 3: Difference between revisions

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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
==Saint Seiya (lost unreleased alternate Sentai Filmworks English dub of episodes of anime series, 2020)==
|-
{{InfoboxLost
! style="background-color:lightblue" | #
|title=<center>Saint Seiya Sentai Filmworks dub</center>
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Episode Title<ref group=Notes>Episode title and broadcast dates via the CRTC logs for YTV in [ftp://support.crtc.gc.ca/logs/200406/YTV_0406_YTV0406.ZIP June] and [ftp://support.crtc.gc.ca/logs/200407/YTV_0407_YTV0407.ZIP July] 2004.</ref>
|image=
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Air Date
|imagecaption=Key artwork.
! style="background-color:lightblue" | Status
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|-
}}
|1||Sightless Dragon's Tears||June 5th, 2004||On DVD
 
|-
'''Saint Seiya''' is a shounen manga series written by Masami Kurumada, which ran from 1986 to 1990. It was adapted into an anime series by Toei Animation on that same year, and ran until 1989. It follows a 13-year-old boy named Seiya, who was sent to the Sanctuary in Greece to obtain the Pegasus Bronze Cloth, and returns to Japan to find his sister. There are a total of three different English dubs made for the 1986 anime, one of which is the Sentai Filmworks dub that was available on Netflix from 2019 to 2021. This dub reuses voice actors from the Japanese-American CGI reboot ''Knights of the Zodiac: Saint Seiya'', as well as several others from the ADV dub, and is notable for being the most complete English dub of the anime in existence, having all 114 episodes dubbed.
|2||Farewell, Comrade||June 12th, 2004||On DVD
 
|-
For the first 41 episodes, the terms "Cloth" and "Saint" were used for accuracy to the original Japanese audio, but due to Netflix wanting Sentai Filmworks to use terminology that was used in the CGI reboot, "Armor" and "Knight" were used instead starting with episode 42. However, '''Sentai Filmworks confirmed that they also made an alternate version of episodes 42-114 that uses the accurate terminology''' whenever the anime is distributed elsewhere. As of 2022, the alternate dub for these episodes have yet to surface publicly, and it is unknown if Sentai Filmworks will ever release it to the public.
|3||Seiya's Journey of Hope||June 19th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|4||Twelve Gold Cloths||June 26th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|5||Decision of the Mask||July 3rd, 2004||On DVD
|-
|6||Battle of the Gold Knights||July 10th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|7||Dragon Defends His Master||July 17th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|8||Away We Go!||July 24th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|9||Sightless Dragon's Tears||June 5th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|10||Farewell, Comrade||June 12th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|11||Seiya's Journey of Hope||June 19th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|12||Twelve Gold Cloths||June 26th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|13||Decision of the Mask||July 3rd, 2004||On DVD
|-
|14||Battle of the Gold Knights||July 10th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|15||Dragon Defends His Master||July 17th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|16||Away We Go!||July 24th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|17||Sightless Dragon's Tears||June 5th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|18||Farewell, Comrade||June 12th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|19||Seiya's Journey of Hope||June 19th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|20||Twelve Gold Cloths||June 26th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|21||Decision of the Mask||July 3rd, 2004||On DVD
|-
|22||Battle of the Gold Knights||July 10th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|23||Dragon Defends His Master||July 17th, 2004
|-
|24||Away We Go!||July 24th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|25||Sightless Dragon's Tears||June 5th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|26||Farewell, Comrade||June 12th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|27||Seiya's Journey of Hope||June 19th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|28||Twelve Gold Cloths||June 26th, 2004||On DVD
|-
|29||Decision of the Mask||July 3rd, 2004||Lost
|-
|30||Battle of the Gold Knights||July 10th, 2004||Lost
|-
|31||Dragon Defends His Master||July 17th, 2004||Found
|-
|32||Away We Go!||July 24th, 2004||Lost
|-
|33||Sightless Dragon's Tears||June 5th, 2004||Lost
|-
|34||Farewell, Comrade||June 12th, 2004||Lost
|-
|35||Seiya's Journey of Hope||June 19th, 2004||Lost
|-
|36||Twelve Gold Cloths||June 26th, 2004||Lost
|-
|37||Decision of the Mask||July 3rd, 2004||Lost
|-
|38||Battle of the Gold Knights||July 10th, 2004||Lost
|-
|39||Dragon Defends His Master||July 17th, 2004||Lost
|-
|40||Away We Go!||July 24th, 2004||Lost
|}

Latest revision as of 15:25, 15 August 2022

Saint Seiya (lost unreleased alternate Sentai Filmworks English dub of episodes of anime series, 2020)

Missing.png

Key artwork.

Status: Lost


Saint Seiya is a shounen manga series written by Masami Kurumada, which ran from 1986 to 1990. It was adapted into an anime series by Toei Animation on that same year, and ran until 1989. It follows a 13-year-old boy named Seiya, who was sent to the Sanctuary in Greece to obtain the Pegasus Bronze Cloth, and returns to Japan to find his sister. There are a total of three different English dubs made for the 1986 anime, one of which is the Sentai Filmworks dub that was available on Netflix from 2019 to 2021. This dub reuses voice actors from the Japanese-American CGI reboot Knights of the Zodiac: Saint Seiya, as well as several others from the ADV dub, and is notable for being the most complete English dub of the anime in existence, having all 114 episodes dubbed.

For the first 41 episodes, the terms "Cloth" and "Saint" were used for accuracy to the original Japanese audio, but due to Netflix wanting Sentai Filmworks to use terminology that was used in the CGI reboot, "Armor" and "Knight" were used instead starting with episode 42. However, Sentai Filmworks confirmed that they also made an alternate version of episodes 42-114 that uses the accurate terminology whenever the anime is distributed elsewhere. As of 2022, the alternate dub for these episodes have yet to surface publicly, and it is unknown if Sentai Filmworks will ever release it to the public.