One Piece has become one of the biggest pop cultures in Japan with its epic tale of pirate adventure, friendship, and chasing of dreams. As the anime continues to air, it sometimes detracted from the main story to allow the manga to progress further. These detractions resulted in what fans commonly refer to as filler episodes.
Filler episodes provide room for the manga to advance and ensure that the anime doesn’t overtake the original manga storyline. In the case of One Piece, these 5 best filler episodes have become fan favorites in their own right. These episodes sometimes explore character development, introduce entertaining side stories, or simply provide moments of fun.
5. The Slow-Slow Menace! “Silver Fox” Foxy Returns! (Episode 382) Episode 382 | Credit: Toei animation
Episode 382 kicks off the Spa Island filler arc, providing a break from the main narrative. It introduces Sayo and Rina, two sisters neglected by their inventor father...
Filler episodes provide room for the manga to advance and ensure that the anime doesn’t overtake the original manga storyline. In the case of One Piece, these 5 best filler episodes have become fan favorites in their own right. These episodes sometimes explore character development, introduce entertaining side stories, or simply provide moments of fun.
5. The Slow-Slow Menace! “Silver Fox” Foxy Returns! (Episode 382) Episode 382 | Credit: Toei animation
Episode 382 kicks off the Spa Island filler arc, providing a break from the main narrative. It introduces Sayo and Rina, two sisters neglected by their inventor father...
- 9/11/2024
- by Akihito Chakma
- FandomWire
The fourth season of Demon Slayer nears its conclusion as the tedious “Hashira Training Arc” reaches its final lap. After receiving extensive training from all the Hashiras (minus Shinobu Kocho), Tanjiro and his Demon Slayer buddies are better equipped to take on the king of demons, Muzan Kibutsuji, and his lackeys. However, with Nakime’s surveillance eye familiar with charting nearly the entirety of the Corps’ location, the Slayers might be in for a nasty surprise. In the previous episode, Tanjiro managed to complete Stone Hashira Gyomei Himejima’s rigorous training, thanks to Genya’s advice. In the penultimate episode, in true Demon Slayer tradition, we get a brief look at Himejima’s past, which not only allows Tanjiro to relate to him but also evokes a sense of respect for the Stone Hashira in him. As far as the Hashira backstories go, Himejima’s seems to be one of...
- 6/26/2024
- by Siddhartha Das
- Film Fugitives
Stars: Julia Nagano, Yuichi Nakamura, Kohshu Kirano, Shun Nishime, Kanon Miyahara | Written by Junichiro Ashiki | Directed by Kôichi Sakamoto
With a title like Ninja vs Shark you might think this is another Mark Polonia film along the lines of Sharkula or Shark Encounters of the Third Kind. Or maybe one of the more bizarre Chinese kaiju films such as Land Shark. But you’d be wrong, it’s actually a Japanese film written by Junichiro Ashiki and directed by Kôichi Sakamoto.
During Japan’s Edo Period, Sayo, a pearl diver from the village of Okitsu, swims back to shore only to find the remains of one of her fellow divers washed up on the beach. This has been happening a lot since Lord Koshiro Mizuchi of the Crimson Devil Clan demanded the villagers hand over their pearls to him. When they refused he used sorcery to turn the sharks into living weapons.
With a title like Ninja vs Shark you might think this is another Mark Polonia film along the lines of Sharkula or Shark Encounters of the Third Kind. Or maybe one of the more bizarre Chinese kaiju films such as Land Shark. But you’d be wrong, it’s actually a Japanese film written by Junichiro Ashiki and directed by Kôichi Sakamoto.
During Japan’s Edo Period, Sayo, a pearl diver from the village of Okitsu, swims back to shore only to find the remains of one of her fellow divers washed up on the beach. This has been happening a lot since Lord Koshiro Mizuchi of the Crimson Devil Clan demanded the villagers hand over their pearls to him. When they refused he used sorcery to turn the sharks into living weapons.
- 1/23/2024
- by Jim Morazzini
- Nerdly
Surrounded by zombies in a desolate mountain village, Miyamoto Musashi (Ôtsuka Akio) hatches a plan to corral the creatures and blast them en masse. But the samurai needs bait, so he dangles a young girl named Sayo (Yamane Aya), the town’s sole survivor, in front of the horde. A close-up centers her trembling face and chattering teeth. “Don’t worry,” Musashi says, flashing an impish smile. “I won’t let them lay a finger on you.” Sayo steels herself, nodding with quiet confidence in her newfound companion.
The scene, which takes place midway through the second episode of Netflix’s Onimusha, is emblematic of the animated series, based on Capcom’s supernatural samurai video game series of the same name. Beneath the show’s slick, ferocious action—a hallmark of supervising director Miike Takashi—lies a surprisingly touching emotional core.
Set during the Edo period, Onimusha begins shortly after...
The scene, which takes place midway through the second episode of Netflix’s Onimusha, is emblematic of the animated series, based on Capcom’s supernatural samurai video game series of the same name. Beneath the show’s slick, ferocious action—a hallmark of supervising director Miike Takashi—lies a surprisingly touching emotional core.
Set during the Edo period, Onimusha begins shortly after...
- 11/3/2023
- by Niv M. Sultan
- Slant Magazine
There was a time, maybe fifteen years ago, when a title like “Ninja vs. Shark” would have been enough to whip up some early-viral excitement. In those days, the tongue-in-cheek grindhouse homage was still a novel idea, and upstart filmmakers were in a rush to combine b-movie tropes into self-consciously “epic” packages. Now, after more than a decade of lazy faux-exploitation productions dropped on streaming, the freshness factor has worn off. Still, not all filmmakers are created equally, and it’s important to note that “Ninja vs. Shark” is directed by stunt legend Koichi Sakamoto, who has made a career crafting dizzying fight choreography and directing live action anime and Tokusatsu features. His reputation made the idea of yet another “[B-Movie Creature] vs. [“B-Movie Creature]” title a little more exciting, and the good news is that he’s created a legitimately entertaining and refreshingly brief movie that, for better or worse, plays a little...
- 9/22/2023
- by Henry McKeand
- AsianMoviePulse
"It's ready to blow your mind!" Let! Them! Fight! A Japanese trailer is out for an epic B-movie battle called Ninja vs. Shark, made by filmmaker / stunt expert Koichi Sakamoto. If you can believe, it isn't an Asylum creation, but an actual live-action movie from Japan. Set in the Edo period, the film is about a village that hires a ninja warrior to help them fight off evil sharks that are attacking pearl divers. That's pretty much all you need to know, other than that it will likely by pretty gnarly. Kohshu Hirano of "Ultraman Z" will play Kotaro, and Shun Nishime of "Kamen Rider Ghost" will play Shinsuke, who fights with Kotaro. Yuichi Nakamura plays Sameshiro. In addition, the heroine Sayo is played by Julia Nagano, while Kikuma, a female ninja who loves Kotaro, is played by Kanon Miyahara. This trailer is a bloody, gory first look at the film,...
- 3/13/2023
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Sayombhu Mukdeeprom (he goes by “Sayo”) has distinguished himself over the last two decades as the cherished cinematographer of directors Luca Guadagnino and Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Cannes Palme d’Or winner “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives”).
And though the works by those filmmakers are renowned for their many gorgeous evocations of nature, whether sun-dappled countryside or dense foggy jungle, Mukdeeprom faced one of the biggest challenges of his career with “Thirteen Lives,” his first collaborations with Oscar-winner Ron Howard.
Dramatizing the implausible 2018 story of 12 boys and their soccer coach who became trapped deep in a flooded cave, “Thirteen Lives” is set entirely in Mukdeeprom’s native Thailand — though the movie was actually filmed, apart from a few establishing shots, in sets created on the Gold Coast of Australia.
“Actually the whole thing was all a set that had been built for us,” Mukdeeprom told TheWrap. “Which was an amazing thing to see.
And though the works by those filmmakers are renowned for their many gorgeous evocations of nature, whether sun-dappled countryside or dense foggy jungle, Mukdeeprom faced one of the biggest challenges of his career with “Thirteen Lives,” his first collaborations with Oscar-winner Ron Howard.
Dramatizing the implausible 2018 story of 12 boys and their soccer coach who became trapped deep in a flooded cave, “Thirteen Lives” is set entirely in Mukdeeprom’s native Thailand — though the movie was actually filmed, apart from a few establishing shots, in sets created on the Gold Coast of Australia.
“Actually the whole thing was all a set that had been built for us,” Mukdeeprom told TheWrap. “Which was an amazing thing to see.
- 11/30/2022
- by Joe McGovern
- The Wrap
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