English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

its an anime show my momo used to watch it when she was little and i saw it its cool

2007-08-13 12:58:27 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Television Drama

2 answers

Me watch that when I was little. It's pretty sad when Anthony Brown died. I did not like the ending. She discovery that Albert is the Great Uncle William. She runs away with him instead of me :)

Yes. I did see Candy Candy school bag for $200 this past weekend! It is sale it at Jungle in Little Tokyo:

www.animejungle.net

I am sure I can buy 10 more plastic school bag with that kind of money.

You know why Candy Candy disappear for a while :)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_Candy

In the early 1990s, the Candy Candy franchise became a subject of controversy.

Igarashi allegedly tried to take complete ownership of Candy Candy to collect all royalties related to the character and its products. She began to produce Candy Candy material without the consent of her former friend and partner Mizuki, as well as Toei, the film making company in charge of Candy Candy's recorded productions. This infuriated both Mizuki and the Toei company.

In 1998, Mizuki, one of the better known female manga and anime writers in Japan, filed a suit on a Tokyo district court. Mizuki did not ask for full copyright ownership of the character; she just asked the court to recognize that she and Igarashi have the same rights of ownership over the copyrights of Candy Candy for future Candy Candy anime, film, and toy sales. Due to this and other lawsuits, the series has not been broadcast in any country since early 1998.

In 1999, the court ruled in favor of Mizuki. The ruling made history, because it is believed that it was the first time in Japanese justice that two people were given the same amount of copyright percentage over a Japanese product.

The ruling was supported by Tokyo's High Court in 2000 and the Supreme Court in 2001. Igarashi then sued Toei, the studio behind the anime adaptation, and Toei immediately stopped showing the series on Japanese national television, but the case fell through.

On May 31, Mizuki was awarded 29,500,000 yen by a court. That money was given as compensation for the emotional stress she allegedly went through while all these cases were dissolved in the Japanese courts.

In 2003, a company in Saitama Prefecture that had been producing Candy Candy toys for a large number of years won a case against two Tokyo companies that had been illegally producing Candy Candy jigsaw puzzles. The Saitama Prefecture-based company earned 7.8 million yen and a ban on the publication of further jigsaw puzzles with Candy Candy as a central character.

2007-08-15 11:27:23 · answer #1 · answered by naekuo 7 · 0 0

oftentimes, i do no longer shield something, candy, yet, - regarding candy FLOSS, - i'm going to constantly make an exception. i like the stuff, - inspite of the fact, that I, oftentimes, finally end up, as STICKY as heck!

2016-10-02 06:44:00 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers