Ippatsu Kanta-kun

Ippatsu Kanta-kun

Cover art from the first box of the DVD release of Ippatsu Kanta-kun
一発貫太くん
Genre Sports, Comedy, Family
Anime television series
Directed by Hiroshi Sasagawa
Produced by Akira Inoue
Studio Tatsunoko Production
Network Fuji TV
Original run September 18, 1977 September 24, 1978
Episodes 53

Ippatsu Kanta-kun is an anime created by Tatsunoko Production.[1] Along with Temple the Balloonist, it was one of the last works for which Tatsunoko co-founder Tatsuo Yoshida was credited as a creator; Yoshida died before the series began airing. The series was released in two DVD box sets in January 2010.[2][3]

Plot

Kanta Tobase (Japanese: 戸馳貫太) lives in the downtown with his mother, seven brothers and sisters, and the house dog. He is very enthusiastic about baseball. However, his mother never allows her children even to talk about baseball, not to speak of playing it since she believes that her husband died accidentally on account of baseball. As for Kanta, however, he continues play baseball secretly from early morning. One day he is asked by his friend to play as a substitute on a team. As Kanta completes a big play, he sees his mother standing there with a grim look. She tells Kanta not to play baseball ever again. But Kanta does not give up. As usual, he goes out to the field early next morning for practice. When his mother who is moved by Kanta's eagerness she decides to help Kanta and even proposes to organize a baseball team of their own.

Never released in English, the anime was a success on television in Italy (as Il fichissimo del baseball) and in Poland (as Baseballista). It is also noteworthy for marking the directorial debut of then-Tatsunoko staffer and future Ghost in the Shell and Urusei Yatsura director Mamoru Oshii, as an episode director.

Cast

References

  1. "Tatsunoko Production". Tatsunoko Production. Retrieved July 28, 2010.
  2. "一発貫太くん DVD-BOX 1" [Ippatsu Kanta-kun DVD Box 1] (in Japanese). Allcinema.net. Retrieved July 10, 2012.
  3. "一発貫太くん DVD-BOX 2" [Ippatsu Kanta-kun DVD Box 2] (in Japanese). Allcinema.net. Retrieved July 10, 2012.

External links