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Bleach (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese anime television series
This article is about Japanese anime television series. For other uses, seeBleach (disambiguation).

Bleach
Key visual of the series featuring (from left to right)Rukia Kuchiki, Kon,Yasutora "Chad" Sado,Ichigo Kurosaki,Uryū Ishida, andOrihime Inoue
Genre
Anime television series
Directed byNoriyuki Abe
Produced by
  • Ken Hagino
  • Noriko Kobayashi (#1–86, #226–328)
  • Yutaka Sugiyama (#1–25, #355–366)
  • Yukio Yoshimura (#26–133)
  • Shunji Aoki (#87–225)
  • Aya Mizobuchi (#134–157)
  • Mai Nagai (#158–354)
  • Hatsuo Nara (#343–366)
Written by
  • Masashi Sogo (#1–229, #266–316)
  • Tsuyoshi Kida (#230–265)
  • Kento Shimoyama (#317–366)
Music byShirō Sagisu
StudioStudio Pierrot
Licensed by
Original networkTXN (TV Tokyo)
English network
Original run October 5, 2004 March 27, 2012
Episodes366(List of episodes)
Anime television series
Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War[c]
Directed by
Produced by
Written by
Music byShirō Sagisu
StudioStudio Pierrot[g]
Licensed by
  • Viz Media
Original networkTXN (TV Tokyo)
English network
  • US:Adult Swim (Toonami)
Original run October 11, 2022 – present
Episodes40(List of episodes)
Related works
iconAnime and manga portal

Bleach (stylized inall caps) is a Japaneseanime television series based on themanga seriesBleach byTite Kubo. It was produced byStudio Pierrot and directed byNoriyuki Abe. The series aired onTV Tokyo from October 2004 to March 2012, spanning 366 episodes. The story follows the adventures of the teenagedIchigo Kurosaki after he obtains the powers of aSoul Reaper—a death personification similar to theGrim Reaper—from a Soul Reaper namedRukia Kuchiki. His newfound powers allow him to take on the duties of defending humans from evil spirits Hollows and guiding departed good souls to the afterlife. In addition to adapting the manga series it is based on, the anime periodically includes original self-contained storylines and characters not found in the source material.

Viz Media obtained foreign television and home video distribution rights to theBleach anime in March 2006.Bleach was broadcast in the United States onAdult Swim from September 2006 to November 2014.

Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War, a sequel series covering the manga's final story arc, also animated by Studio Pierrot (by studio Pierrot for the first two parts and by Pierrot Films for the third part) and directed byTomohisa Taguchi, aired its first 13-episodecours on TV Tokyo from October to December 2022. The second 13-episode cours aired from July to September 2023. The third 14-episode cours aired from October to December 2024. The fourth and final cours is set to premiere in 2026.

Plot

[edit]
See also:List ofBleach characters

The series adapts Kubo's manga with the main story arcs and introduces anime exclusive ones. In Karakura Town, high school studentIchigo Kurosaki becomes a substitute Soul Reaper (死神,Shinigami; literally, "Death God"), whenRukia Kuchiki risks her life to protect him from aHollow who attacks Ichigo's twin younger sisters. Although initially reluctant to accept his responsibility, he takes her place, and during this time they discover that a few classmates are spiritually aware and have their own powers: Quincy survivorUryū Ishida uses spiritual particles,Orihime Inoue has a group of protective spirits calledShun Shun Rikka andYasutora Sado ("Chad") has strength equal to the Hollows encased in his arm.

When Rukia is sentenced to death for transgressions in the human world and sent to the Soul Society, Ichigo meetsKisuke Urahara andYoruichi Shihōin, the duo of exiled Soul Reapers. They allow him and his friends to save Rukia. After this, it is revealed that ex-squad captainSousuke Aizen framed Rukia for the crime and has been illegally experimenting on Soul Reapers and Hollows. Aizen plans to conquer the Soul Society by using the Hōgyoku, a legendary powerful substance turning Hollows into half Soul Reapers. After faking his death and his reappearance caused a fight with some people, Aizen escapes into Hueco Mundo, the realm of Hollow, and later kidnaps Orihime as she is instrumental in creating the Oken, a power that will allow him to kill the Soul King, the ruler of the Soul Society.

After being trained by theVizards, other exiled Soul Reapers and the victims of Aizen's experiment, Ichigo and his friends travel into Hueco Mundo. Facing a group ofArrancar, who are Hollows given Soul Reaper abilities, led by an elite group known as theEspada, which are composed of ten Arrancars with exemplary strength. Espadas serve as commanders in Aizen's army and each has the factions of weaker Arrancars. Along with Aizen,Gin Ichimaru andKaname Tōsen, the Espada as a group possess comparable strength to Soul Reaper captains. After Ichigo rescuing Orihime, Aizen reveals her kidnapping was a distraction to allow him to take Karakura Town, as its spiritual energy is what is needed for the Oken. After being trained by his fatherIsshin, another exiled Soul Reaper, Ichigo sacrifices his Soul Reaper power to seal Aizen away when the Hōgyoku rejects its master, and the Soul Reapers defeat the Espadas.

Months later, Chad and the members reveal themselves as Fullbringers in a group called Xcution. They can give up their powers to restore other ones and they plan on doing so for Ichigo, who uses the power of Fullbringer. However, it is all a ruse by their leader Kugo Ginjo, a Fullbringer and former Substitute Soul Reaper, to extract his powers and empower all of them. Ichigo has his Soul Reaper powers restored, when he gains his trust from the Soul Society. After helping other Soul Reapers defeat Ginjo's team, Ichigo resumes his duty as an official Substitute Soul Reaper.

Several anime exclusive story arcs are introduced during the series. The first arc focuses on the Bount, a group of spiritual humans who are immortal longer by stealing souls. Their leader, Jin Kariya, seeks to destroy the Soul Society in revenge. However, Ichigo and his allies defeat them. The second arc focuses on Shūsuke Amagai, a Soul Reaper captain replacing Ichimaru. Amagai seeks revenge against Captain Yamamoto for the death of his father and uses the clan's forbidden experiment. However, Amagai realizes his mistake and kills himself. The third arc features the evil Zanpakutō spirit Muramasa, who turns itself and other ones into spiritual beings to take revenge on the Soul Society for imprisoning its master Kōga Kuchiki. After succeeding, he is double-crossed and transforms into a monstrous creature that Ichigo defeats, but after Muramasa reveals the intention was to have Soul Reapers and Zanpakutō communicate on equal terms. The fourth and final arc features an event in which Kagerōza Inaba creates modified copies of all Soul Reapers in Reigai bodies. He attempts to fuse with Nozomi Kujō into an original being Ōko Yushima. However, Nozomi sacrifices herself to defeat Inaba and Ichigo loses his power.

Voice cast and characters

[edit]
Further information:List ofBleach characters
CharacterJapaneseEnglish
Ichigo KurosakiMasakazu MoritaJohnny Yong Bosch
Rukia KuchikiFumiko OrikasaMichelle Ruff
Orihime InoueYuki MatsuokaStephanie Sheh
Uryū IshidaNoriaki SugiyamaDerek Stephen Prince
Yasutora "Chad" SadoHiroki YasumotoMarc Worden (untilep. 85)
Jamieson Price
KonMitsuaki MadonoQuinton Flynn
Kisuke UraharaShin-ichiro MikiMichael Lindsay
Yoruichi ShihōinSatsuki Yukino
Shirō Saitō (cat form)
Wendee Lee
Terrence Stone (cat form)
Renji AbaraiKentarō Itō
Reiko Kiuchi (young)
Wally Wingert
Yuri Lowenthal (young)
Byakuya KuchikiRyōtarō OkiayuDaniel Woren
Yuri Lowenthal (young)
Shunsui KyōrakuAkio OtsukaSteve Kramer
Tōshirō HitsugayaRomi ParkSteve Staley
Rangiku MatsumotoKaya Matsutani [ja]Megan Hollingshead
Shūhei HisagiKatsuyuki KonishiSteve Staley
Kenpachi ZarakiFumihiko TachikiDavid Lodge
Yachiru KusajishiHisayo Mochizuki [ja]Dina Sherman
Ikkaku MadarameNobuyuki HiyamaVic Mignogna
Michael Sinterniklass (stand-in)
Yumichika AyasegawaJun FukuyamaBrian Beacock
Jūshirō UkitakeHideo IshikawaLiam O'Brien
Kim Strauss (stand-in)
Sajin KomamuraTetsu InadaKim Strauss (first voice)
JB Blanc
Gin IchimaruKōji YusaDoug Erholtz
Mayuri KurotsuchiRyusei NakaoTerrence Stone
Genryūsai Shigekuni YamamotoMasaaki TsukadaNeil Kaplan
Ulquiorra CiferDaisuke NamikawaTony Oliver
Isshin KurosakiToshiyuki MorikawaPatrick Seitz
Karin KurosakiRyūsei NakaoKate Higgins
Yuzu KurosakiAyumi Sena [ja]Janice Kawaye
Kūgo GinjōHiroki TōchiTravis Willingham
Sousuke AizenShow HayamiKyle Hebert

Casting

[edit]

Japanese

[edit]

Ichigo's voice actor,Masakazu Morita, tried to re-create the mood that he felt when he read the manga and imagined hearing the dialogue. In an interview with Elicia O'Reilly of the Japan Foundation, Morita said that to get into character, he would say a line that epitomizes that character.[3]

English

[edit]

Studio City, Los Angeles-basedStudiopolis was hired to dub the anime. The English-language cast was assembled from experienced industry actors that have dozens of roles in other anime series, films and video games. Originally,Johnny Yong Bosch, Ichigo's English voice actor, found pronouncing the names of the characters to be difficult and tried to emulate the deep gruff voice of Ichigo.[4] Bosch acknowledges that the directorial control was loosened as the work progressed; stating around episode 10, as he was guided into the role of Ichigo and the growth of the character.[4] Bosch noted that the long scenes of screaming and panting—in particular, the scene in episode 18—have nearly made him pass out.[4]Stephanie Sheh noticed the difference in the tone of her Orihime voice in the English adaptation and described it as being higher-pitched and "innocent-sounding".[4] The English dub producers wanted to make Orihime sound tough and comedic, but not "ditzy". She relates to her character's unusual creations for food.[4]Derek Stephen Prince likes to play Uryu because he is theblack sheep of the cast and he is a complex character.[4] Throughout the production, Prince acknowledges his role as the English voice actor of Shino Aburame fromNaruto and sets them apart by taking aClint Eastwood tone for Uryu.[4]

For the voicework, one of the challenges was stating Japanese phrases while maintaining pronunciation and inflection.[4] The duality of the story was hard to keep up with, and the cast had to juggle the challenges of performing under the different lifestyles of the characters.[4] The voice actors often made suggestions for the scenes that differ from the approved script and results in rewriting and additional takes that were put into the dub.[4]

Production

[edit]

Noriyuki Abe was chosen as director of the series whileMasashi Sogo [ja] acted as head writer for episodes 1–212. Tsuyoshi Kida was the head writer for episodes 230–265. Kento Shimoyama held the title of head writer for episodes 17–366.Masashi Kudō provided the character designs, occasionally providing key animation or acting as an animation supervisor himself.

The music ofBleach was composed byShirō Sagisu. His musical score for the television series was released in four-CD sets. Four additional CDs were released for the music composed for the fourBleach animated films.

During the production and broadcast of the first 167 episodes, the screen size was in 4:3; episodes 168 through 366 were produced and broadcast in 16:9 widescreen.

In a 2009 interview, Kubo and Kudō discussed the original story for the anime adaptation,Zanpakutō: The Alternate Tale, with Kubo expressing that he desired to borrow events and concepts within it for the manga. Kubo also revealed that his art style varied in the production of the work and only became cemented after the airing of the anime. He acknowledged that his art style has changed as a result of his work and gave an example that he no longer draws hair growing from behind the ears of characters.[5]

On October 5, 2024,Aniplex released an animated video to celebrate the anime series' 20th anniversary. The video features climactic scenes from the series, animated in the newBleach: Thousand-Year Blood War anime style.[6][7]

Music

[edit]
Main article:List ofBleach soundtracks

The soundtrack ofBleach, composed byShirō Sagisu, was released in four volumes and an anniversary box set. A series of character song albums, the "Bleach Beat Collection" albums, and best-of albums composed of the theme songs were released, all bySony Music Entertainment Japan.[8]

Five volumes of Bleach Soundtracks have been released.Bleach Original Soundtrack 1 has twenty five songs, released on May 18, 2005.[9]Bleach Original Soundtrack 2 has twenty three songs covering up to episode 64 of the Bount Arc and was released on August 8, 2006.[10]Bleach Original Soundtrack 3 has twenty seven songs and was released on November 5, 2008.[11]Bleach Original Soundtrack 4 was the fourth and final album that has thirty songs, and was released on December 16, 2009.[12] The fifth anniversary box set was released on July 29, 2009, with a CD including 21 previously unreleased songs.[13]

The Bleach Beat Collections is a set of CDs published by Sony Music featuring recordings by the original Japanese voice actors that provide a look at the personalities of the characters they play, as well as the voice actors themselves. The first CD was released on June 22, 2005, twenty-one volumes followed across four named sets calledSessions.[14]

A number of additional collections have been released. Two volumes were released as "The Best", with each volume containing twenty four songs each on two discs; the first volume released March 21, 2007, and the second one on March 18, 2009.[15][16] The "Bleach Breathless Collection" contains six releases featuring five tracks of the individual Soul Reaper. The six volumes feature Ichigo, Rukia, Renji, Toshiro, Shuhei and Byakuya, respectively. ThreeRadio DJCD Bleach 'B' Station season CD sets, each containing six volumes, have been released in Japan.[17]

Release

[edit]
Main article:List ofBleach episodes

Bleach premiered in Japan onTV Tokyo on October 5, 2004.[18] The series was directed byNoriyuki Abe, and produced by TV Tokyo,Dentsu andstudio Pierrot.[19] It ran for 366 episodes, finishing on March 27, 2012.[20] 88 DVD compilations were released byAniplex in Japan from February 2, 2005, to January 23, 2013.[h]

Viz Media obtained the foreign television, home video and merchandising rights to theBleach anime from TV Tokyo Corporation, andShueisha on March 15, 2006.[37] Viz Media had later licensed its individualBleach merchandising rights to several different companies.[38] In North America, the series first premiered on Canada'sYTV channel in theBionix programming block on September 9, 2006.[39]Cartoon Network'sAdult Swim began airingBleach in the United States on September 10, 2006.[40][41] Adult Swim stopped broadcasting episodes of the English adaptation on October 13, 2007, after airing the first 52 episodes of the series. It was replaced with another Viz Media series,Death Note, to provide Studiopolis more time to dub additional episodes ofBleach.[42] The series resumed airing on March 2, 2008,[43] but went back on hiatus on November 21, 2009, after the 167th episode. The series returned to the block with new episodes on August 28, 2010, replacingFullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood.[44] The anime joined the relaunchedToonami anime block, when it returned to Adult Swim on May 27, 2012.[45] The series ended on November 2, 2014,[46] and continued airing reruns on Adult Swim until February 1, 2015.[47]

Viz Media had released the first 135 episodes on 32 DVD compilations of the English adaptation of the anime from November 28, 2006, to September 21, 2010,[48][49] and released the entire series on 26 box sets from October 6, 2008, to September 29, 2015.[50][51] In July 2016, Viz Media announced the uncut Blu-ray box-set release of the series.[52] The 366 episodes were collected in thirteen sets, released from July 19, 2016,[53] to December 7, 2021.[54]

In the United Kingdom,Bleach premiered onAnimeCentral on September 13, 2007, with episodes airing weekly.[55] The English dubbed version ofBleach premiered onAnimax Asia on December 18, 2009,[56] with the first 52 episodes; the "season 2" premiered on March 18, 2011,[57] this time with the original Japanese audio with English subtitles.

Thousand-Year Blood War

[edit]
Main article:Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War

In March 2020,Weekly Shōnen Jump and "Bleach 20th Anniversary Project & Tite Kubo New Project Presentation" livestream announced that the manga's last story arc, "Thousand-Year Blood War", would receive an anime project.[58] In November 2021, it was announced that the anime project would be a television series,Bleach: Thousand-Year Blood War (BLEACH 千年血戦篇,Burīchi Sennen Kessen-hen). The trailer and visual for the series were revealed at theJump Festa '22 on December 18, 2021.[59][60]Tomohisa Taguchi replaced Noriyuki Abe as the series director at studio Pierrot. Taguchi is also overseeing the series scripts alongside Masaki Hiramatsu;Masashi Kudo returned as the character designer andShirō Sagisu returned to compose the music.[61][62] An advanced screening of the first two episodes was held in Tokyo on September 11, 2022.[63] The series will run for fourcours with breaks in between.[64][65] It premiered onTV Tokyo on October 11, 2022,[64][65][i] and the first 13-episodes cours, subtitledThe Blood Warfare, finished on December 27 of the same year.[66][j] The second 13-episode cours,The Separation, was broadcast from July 8 to September 30, 2023.[67][68][k] The third 14-episode cours,The Conflict, produced by Pierrot's second studio Pierrot Films,[70] was broadcast from October 5 to December 28, 2024.[71][l] The fourth and final cours,The Calamity, is set to premiere in 2026.[73]

Viz Media held the North American premiere at theNew York Comic Con on October 8, 2022, ahead of thesimulcast of the anime.[74] The series is streamed onHulu in the United States and onDisney+ internationally (excluding Asian territories, in whichMedialink retained the rights and airs the series on Ani-One Asia YouTube channel with the Ultra membership scheme).[75][76] The series premiered in the US on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block on May 18, 2025.[77]

Other media

[edit]

All four films based on the manga series were directed byNoriyuki Abe. They feature an original plotline along with original characters designed by Tite Kubo, which is contrary to the normal practice for anime-based films, as the original author usually has little creative involvement.[78] The first film,Bleach: Memories of Nobody, was released in Japan on December 16, 2006, and had a limited release in North America in June 2008.[79][80] The second film,Bleach: The DiamondDust Rebellion, was released on December 22, 2007.[81] The third film,Bleach: Fade to Black, was released on December 13, 2008. The fourth and final film,Bleach: Hell Verse, was released on December 4, 2010.[82]

In March 2010,Warner Bros. (outside Japan) confirmed that it was in talks to create alive action film adaptation of the series.Peter Segal and Michael Ewing had been lined up to produce the film.[83] In 2012,Dan Mazeau was added as a screenwriter for the project, andMasi Oka joined as producer.[84]

Alive action film adaptationof the same name produced byWarner Bros.[85] directed byShinsuke Sato and starringSota Fukushi was released in Japan on July 20, 2018.[86]

Aniplex released thirteendrama CDs featuring the original voice actors from the series; these drama CDs have only been included as part of the DVD releases.[87]

The popularity of the anime series[88] resulted in the series of rock musicals, jointly produced bystudio Pierrot and Nelke Planning. There have been five musicals produced which covered portions of theSubstitute andSoul Society arcs, as well as three additional performances known as "Live Bankai Shows" which did not follow theBleach plotline. The initial performance run of theBleach musical was from August 17–28, 2005 at the Space Zero Tokyo center inShinjuku.[89][90][91] The musicals are directed by Takuya Hiramitsu, with a script adaptation by Naoshi Okumura and music composed by playwright Shoichi Tama. The songs are completely original and not taken from the anime soundtrack. Key actors in the series includeTatsuya Isaka asIchigo Kurosaki,Miki Satō asRukia Kuchiki andEiji Moriyama asRenji Abarai.[92]

Reception

[edit]

Sales and ratings

[edit]

TheBleach anime has been featured various times in the top ten from the Japanese TV Ranking.[93][94][95] DVDs have also had good sales having commonly appeared in the Japanese DVD Ranking.[96][97] In a 2005 Internet poll byTV Asahi, the anime was ranked as Japan's 27th favorite anime program.[98] In the following year, it was ranked as the seventh favorite program.[99] In February 2009, it ranked as the ninth most viewed animated show fromHulu.[100]

Critical response

[edit]

Anime News Network's Carlo Santos praised the anime adaptation, describing it as "...one incredibly entertaining anime that will grab you and refuse to let go."[101]Animefringe's Maria Lin liked the varied and distinct characters, and how well they handle the responsibilities increasing powers give them. She also complimented the series for its attention to details, well paced script, and balance of seriousness and comedy. In summary, she notes "Bleach the anime deserves its popularity. It has something for everyone: the supernatural, comedy, action and a little bit of romance, all tied together with excellent animation and a very enthusiastic sounding bunch of voice actors."[102] Adam Arseneau of DVD Verdict, feltBleach was a "show that only gets better with age" and was "surprisingly well-rounded and appealing" with well-developed characters and pacing.[103]

Active Anime's Holly Ellingwood praising the anime for perfectly capturing "the excitement, the caustic humour and supernatural intrigue" of the original manga.[104] She felt that the series "does a wonderful job of building on its continuity to provide increasingly tense and layered episodes involving not only Ichigo and Rukia, but the secondary characters as well".[105] She also praised the series for its striking visual effects, intriguing plot and its "brilliant blend of action, off the wall comedy."[106][107] In reviewing the series forDVD Talk, Don Houston felt the characters surpassed the usual anime typicals and liked "the mixture of darker material with the comedic".[108] Another fellow reviewer John Sinnott felt series starts out as a boring "monster-of-the-week program" that becomes more epic as the stories build and the characters are fleshed out.[109]

Otaku USA's Joseph Luster wrote that "the storylines are consistently dramatic without hammering it home too heavily, the characters manage comic relief that's not as eye rolling as one would expect, and the action (in classic fighting series form) has only gotten more ridiculous over the years; in a good way, of course".[110] Mania.com's Chris Beveridge describes the series as "Bleach is a solid entry into theShōnen Jump line up, this is a very easy recommendation to make if you're looking for something in this genre".[111] Bryce Coulter from the same website praised the series for its plot twists and "the quirky and amusing characters".[112][113]

Von Feigenblatt notes that "in terms of demographics,Bleach appeals to a narrower international audience thanNaruto due to the higher complexity of its plot as well as due to the religious aspects of the story."[114] Louis Kemner ofCBR said that the anime has "one of the most interesting and flexible combat systems" in anime and says this makes for some "stunning action scenes."[115] Kemner also said that the series had "a wide and colorful cast of characters."[116]

Accolades

[edit]

TheBleach anime was nominated in the 2007 America Anime Awards in the fields of "best manga", "best actor", "best DVD package design", and "best theme", but failed to win any awards.[117][118] The anime'sThousand-Year Blood War – The Separation was nominated forBest Action, whileJohnny Yong Bosch was nominated in theBest Voice Artist Performance (English) for his work asIchigo Kurosaki at the8th Crunchyroll Anime Awards in 2024;[119]The Conflict was nominated for three categories:Best Continuing Series, Best Action, andBest Score (Shirō Sagisu) at theninth edition in 2025.[120]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Viz Media holds the worldwide license for the series outside of Asia since 2022.Crunchyroll had previously held the license in the United Kingdom and Australia before they were allowed to expire.
  2. ^Originally aired on Adult Swim under its Action/AcTN branding,Bleach joined the newly relaunched Toonami programming block at episode 255 on the broadcast night of May 26, 2012.[2]
  3. ^
    • Subtitles for each part are as follows:
    • Part 1:The Blood Warfare (#1–13)
    • Part 2:The Separation (#14–26)
    • Part 3:The Conflict (#27–40)
    • Part 4:The Calamity (#41–)
  4. ^Director (監督) for parts 1–2 and Chief Director (総監督) for part 3
  5. ^Chief Episode Director (チーフ演出) for parts 1–2, Director (監督) for part 3
  6. ^abChief Episode Director (チーフ演出)
  7. ^Animated by its sub-studio Pierrot Films for part 3
  8. ^
    • The Substitute; 5 volumes[21]
    • The Entry; 5 volumes[22]
    • Soul Society: The Rescue; 5 volumes[23]
    • The Bount; 7 volumes[24]
    • The Assault; 4 volumes[25]
    • The Arrancar; 5 volumes[26]
    • The Arrancar Part 2: The Hueco Mundo Sneak Entry; 5 volumes[27]
    • The Arrancar Part 3: The Fierce Fight; 4 volumes[28]
    • The New Captain Shūsuke Amagai; 5 volumes[29]
    • The Arrancar Part 4: Arrancar vs Soul Reaper; 4 volumes[30]
    • The Past; 2 volumes[31]
    • The Arrancar Part 5: Battle in Karakura; 4 volumes[32]
    • Zanpakutō: The Alternate Tale; 9 volumes[33]
    • The Arrancar Part 6: Fall of the Arrancar; 12 volumes[34]
    • Gotei 13 Invading Army; 6 volumes[35]
    • The Lost Agent; 6 volumes[36]
  9. ^TV Tokyo lists the air dates for the series on Monday at 24:00, which is effectively Tuesday at 0:00 a.m.JST.[64]
  10. ^The first cours' finale was a one-hour special that aired the 12th and 13th episodes back-to-back.[66]
  11. ^The second cours' finale was a one-hour special airing the 25th and 26th episodes back-to-back.[69]
  12. ^The third cours' finale was a one-hour special airing the 39th and 40th episodes back-to-back.[72]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abc"The Official Website for Bleach".Viz Media.Archived from the original on June 16, 2023. RetrievedJune 18, 2023.
  2. ^Hodgkins, Crystalyn (May 16, 2012)."Adult Swim Brings Back Toonami Block Starting on May 26 (Update 2)".Anime News Network.Archived from the original on June 14, 2019. RetrievedNovember 25, 2019.
  3. ^"Voice actor Masakazu Morita x The Japan Foundation, Sydney (Interview)". The Japan Foundation (Youtube). September 30, 2013.Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2014.
  4. ^abcdefghijBleach: The Substitute Season One box – Disc Five – Behind the scenes of Bleach. Viz Media.
  5. ^BLEACH 新シリーズ展望 TOP 対談.Akamaru Jump (in Japanese). No. Spring 2009.Shueisha. May 1, 2009. pp. 14–16.
  6. ^アニメ「BLEACH」20周年記念PVを公開、ルキアらの視点で"黒崎一護の姿"を描く.Comic Natalie (in Japanese). Natasha, Inc. October 5, 2024.Archived from the original on October 5, 2024. RetrievedOctober 5, 2024.
  7. ^Tai, Anita (October 5, 2024)."Bleach Anime Gets 20th Anniversary Video With New Animation".Anime News Network.Archived from the original on October 5, 2024. RetrievedOctober 5, 2024.
  8. ^ディスコグラフィ (in Japanese). Sony Music.Archived from the original on November 11, 2013. RetrievedNovember 4, 2013.
  9. ^"TV Animation BLEACH Original Soundtrack 1 日本語タイトル: TV Animation BLEACH Original Soundtrack 1/ アニメサントラ". CD Japan.Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  10. ^"TV Animation BLEACH Original Soundtrack 2 日本語タイトル: TV Animation BLEACH Original Soundtrack 2/ アニメサントラ". CD Japan.Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  11. ^"TV Animation Bleach Original Soundtrack 3 日本語タイトル: TV Animation BLEACH Original Soundtrack 3/ アニメサントラ". CD Japan.Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  12. ^"TV Animation Bleach Original Soundtrack 4 (Japan Version) Japan Animation Soundtrack". YesAsia.Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  13. ^"TV Animation Bleach 5th Anniversary Box (DVD) (First Press Limited Edition) (Japan Version)". YesAsia.Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  14. ^"BLEACH : ディスコグラフィ" (in Japanese).Sony Music.Archived from the original on March 6, 2009. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2009.
  15. ^"Bleach: Beat Collection the Best V.1 [Import, Soundtrack]". Amazon.Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  16. ^"BLEACH BEAT COLLECTION THE BEST 2(2CD)". Amazon.Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. RetrievedNovember 2, 2013.
  17. ^"RADIO DJCD BLEACH"B"STATION Second Season6" (in Japanese).Archived from the original on June 28, 2011. RetrievedJuly 20, 2009.
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