1. Steamboy | Steampunk Wiki - Fandom
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Steamboy (スチームボーイ, Suchīmubōi) is a 2004 steampunk anime film. Due to its particular elements, Steamboy is a prime example of quintessential, pure steampunk. Ray is a young inventor born in 1853 and living in Great Britain in the middle of the 19th century. Shortly before the first ever World Expo, a marvelous invention called the "Steam Ball", behind which a menacing power is hidden, arrives at his door from his grandfather Lloyd in Russian Alaska. Meanwhile the nefarious O'Hara Foundation has
2. Steamboy - The Anime Review
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When in doubt, blow stuff up.
3. Katsuhiro Otomo Retrospective: Steamboy | by DoctorKev - Medium
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After you’ve directed the most expensive Japanese animated film in history, and it’s proven to be wildly successful, what comes next? If…
4. Steamboy | Animation and Cartoons Wiki - Fandom
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Steamboy (スチームボーイ Suchīmubōi) is a 2004 Japanese epic steampunk animated action film produced by Sunrise, directed and co-written by Katsuhiro Otomo, his second major anime release, following Akira. The film was released in Japan on July 17, 2004. Steamboy is one of the most expensive Japanese animated movies made to date. It was internationally distributed by Triumph Films. In 1863, where an alternate nineteenth century Europe has made tremendous strides in steam-powered technologies, scientist
5. Steamboy (Anime) - TV Tropes
A description of tropes appearing in Steamboy. Young James Ray Steam is a maintenance boy in a Manchester mill and a Steampunk inventor in his own right.
Young James Ray Steam is a maintenance boy in a Manchester mill and a Steampunk inventor in his own right. When his grandfather sends him a steam-producing ball, he is kidnapped by the O'Hara Foundation and taken to his cyborg father on the Steam …
6. Steamboy (movie) - Anime News Network
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7. Steampunk anime: Steamboy - Reactor
Oct 31, 2009 · Refreshingly, the villain doesn't want money or power or to conquer the world—he only wants change. ... look at, because the pacing can also be ...
Katsuhiro Otomo is best known for his post-apocalyptic anime Akira (1988), which became an instant hit in Japan and a cult classic in the United States. Though he wrote the screenplay for another futuristic anime film, Metropolis (2001), Otomo didn’t direct another full-length theatrical feature until 2004’s Steamboy, which took ten years to complete. Instead […]
8. Steamboy: Director's Cut review by Shay Marx (Guest)
It does not include the theatrical version of the film. The second disc contains a lengthy (85 minutes) making of documentary that surprisingly changes from ...
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