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hell on earth (place to store drafts)


'''<big>Perman (partially lost anime;1967-1968)</big>'''
= Zhuangzhi Tests His Wife (lost Hong Kong drama film; 1913)=
Zhuangzhi Tests His Wife (Chuang Tzu in Wades-Giles Romanization, 莊子試妻) is a 1913 silent Hong Kong drama film and was the only one made by Huamei Studio. It is an adaption of "The Butterfly Dream".


Perman is a manga series that ran from 1966-1986 and was authored by Fujiko Fujio (though new chapters were not published from 1968-1983 and Fujiko F. Fujio was the only author from 1983). It focuses on four (five, in this and the old manga) children who are one day chosen by Birdman (Superman in older versions) to be fighters of justice. The 1983 anime is the more well-known of the two adaptions, being more recent and much longer with it being dubbed into far more languages, while the first adaption is only known to be dubbed into Latin American Spanish and Brazilian Portuguese.
It is only known to have been shown to Chinese communities in the United States making it the first Chinese film known to be shown abroad. <ref>[https://www.cuhk.edu.hk/rct/pdf/e_outputs/b2930/v29&30P293.pdf]</ref>


==Availability==
-Plot-
After the series ceased airing and prior to 2014, virtually the entirety of the 1967 adaption was unavailable to view as it stopped airing before most home recording technology came to existence, with only very rare rebroadcasts of episodes and one of the versions Opening and Ending being available online.


In 2014, the majority of the series was re-released to celebrate the 50th anniversary of TMS Entertainment after being restored over the course of 2 years. This however, excluded most ending sequences which were lost by this time, four segments missing their audio in their entirety, two segments slightly damaged and two segments unreleased for an undisclosed reason leading to them both still being lost.
The main plot of the film is that Zhuangzi's wife has a new lover before her husband dies. But this lover was Zhuangzhi who faked his death to test his wife's fidelity.


In 2024, audio was found for "Perman's Counterattack" and subsequently added to the following Blu-ray release.
= Stealing a Roast Duck (lost Hong Kong silent film; existence unconfirmed; 1909)=
Stealing a Roast Duck is often considered the first film in Hong Kong history with Lai Pak-hoi and Liang Shao-Bo as the main characters with the former being a street hawker and the latter being the thief.


==Segments with parts missing after 2014==
Its existence and creation date are in dispute, with some believing it was created after 1914 and some believing it never existed in the first place. If it did exist, it was most likely melted down to make bombs for the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II and since became lost.<ref>[https://www.theguardian.com/film/2009/mar/06/hong-kong-stealing-roast-duck] Retrieved '06 Sep 24</ref>
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
 
|-
The only known existence of someone claiming to see the film was in 1917 in San Francisco.
! style="background-color:green" | #
 
! style="background-color:green" | Segment title
= Xiangyin Publishing House and Ching Wen Publishing House (partially found Taiwanese bootlegs of manga series; 1984-1993)=
! style="background-color:green" | Status
Xiangyin Publishing House, also going by Biaozhi Bookstore and Typhoon Enterprise, was a Taiwanese publishing company that published manga series from both Fujiko F. Fujio and Fujiko Fujio A. when they were still uncopyrighted in Taiwan from 1984-1992. While also publishing manga directly created from the Fujiko Fujio duo, they also published several original pieces as well as others copied from other manga franchises. <ref>[https://doraemon.fandom.com/ja/wiki/%E8%B1%A1%E5%8D%B0%E5%87%BA%E7%89%88%E7%A4%BE Japanese Doraemon Wiki article on the company] Retrieved '06 Sep 24</ref>
|-
 
|4A||Copy Robot Riot||<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost, missing audio'''
Ching Wen Publishing House is a Taiwanese publishing company that publishes multiple manga series with direct authorization by their original owner. However, they originally published Doraemon without any permisssion from the original holders from 1976-1993. While originally merely copying the original manga, it began to slowly publish its own stories nearly being solely comprised of original content until its cessation of publication in 1993.<ref>[https://chinesedora.com/news/4489.htm Taiwanese Doraemon website covering the version.] Retrieved '06 Sep 24</ref>
|-
 
|16A||Where are the Dinosaurs?||<span style="color:red;">'''Lost, incomplete foreign dub version online'''
-Avaliablity-
|-
While Ching Wen's old version occasionally pops up time and again for resale on various online shop websites from Taiwan and Hong Kong (though many volumes have never been resold or ripped online), Xiangyin's version has seen very few (if any) instances of such, with contents of many volumes being lost to the wider public with the likelihood of knowledge of them being buried by the official translations they received decades later.
|17A||The Story of How I Washed My Pants Down the River||<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost, missing audio'''
 
|-
-list of volumes-
|26A||The Story of the Broken Robot||<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost, audio partially damaged'''
later
|-
 
|39A||Perman: The King of Toys||<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost, missing audio'''
<gallery mode="packed" heights="300px">
|-
Bootlegdoraemon.webp|Volume 7 of the Xiangyin version of Doraemon; use this for image on top right
|45B||Perman's Counterattack||<span style="color:green;">'''Found'''
</gallery>
|-
 
|47A||Perman, King of the Jungle||<span style="color:red;">'''Lost, incomplete foreign dub version online'''
-See Also-
|-
 
|51A||Perman's Pinch||<span style="color:orange;">'''Partially Lost, video and audio partially damaged'''
==References==
|}
{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 12:59, 6 September 2024

hell on earth (place to store drafts)

Zhuangzhi Tests His Wife (lost Hong Kong drama film; 1913)

Zhuangzhi Tests His Wife (Chuang Tzu in Wades-Giles Romanization, 莊子試妻) is a 1913 silent Hong Kong drama film and was the only one made by Huamei Studio. It is an adaption of "The Butterfly Dream".

It is only known to have been shown to Chinese communities in the United States making it the first Chinese film known to be shown abroad. [1]

-Plot-

The main plot of the film is that Zhuangzi's wife has a new lover before her husband dies. But this lover was Zhuangzhi who faked his death to test his wife's fidelity.

Stealing a Roast Duck (lost Hong Kong silent film; existence unconfirmed; 1909)

Stealing a Roast Duck is often considered the first film in Hong Kong history with Lai Pak-hoi and Liang Shao-Bo as the main characters with the former being a street hawker and the latter being the thief.

Its existence and creation date are in dispute, with some believing it was created after 1914 and some believing it never existed in the first place. If it did exist, it was most likely melted down to make bombs for the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II and since became lost.[2]

The only known existence of someone claiming to see the film was in 1917 in San Francisco.

Xiangyin Publishing House and Ching Wen Publishing House (partially found Taiwanese bootlegs of manga series; 1984-1993)

Xiangyin Publishing House, also going by Biaozhi Bookstore and Typhoon Enterprise, was a Taiwanese publishing company that published manga series from both Fujiko F. Fujio and Fujiko Fujio A. when they were still uncopyrighted in Taiwan from 1984-1992. While also publishing manga directly created from the Fujiko Fujio duo, they also published several original pieces as well as others copied from other manga franchises. [3]

Ching Wen Publishing House is a Taiwanese publishing company that publishes multiple manga series with direct authorization by their original owner. However, they originally published Doraemon without any permisssion from the original holders from 1976-1993. While originally merely copying the original manga, it began to slowly publish its own stories nearly being solely comprised of original content until its cessation of publication in 1993.[4]

-Avaliablity- While Ching Wen's old version occasionally pops up time and again for resale on various online shop websites from Taiwan and Hong Kong (though many volumes have never been resold or ripped online), Xiangyin's version has seen very few (if any) instances of such, with contents of many volumes being lost to the wider public with the likelihood of knowledge of them being buried by the official translations they received decades later.

-list of volumes- later

-See Also-

References