Digimon Adventure | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジzモンアドベンチャーz |
Hepburn | Dejimon Adobenchā |
Directed by | Mamoru Hosoda |
Written by | Reiko Yoshida |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
March 6, 1999 |
Running time
|
20 minutes |
Digimon Adventure: Our War Game! | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジモンアドベンチャー ぼくらのウォーゲーム |
Hepburn | Dejimon Adobenchā: Bokura no Wō Gēmu! |
Directed by | Mamoru Hosoda |
Written by | Reiko Yoshida |
Release date
|
March 4, 2000 |
Running time
|
41 minutes |
Digimon Adventure 02: Digimon Hurricane Touchdown!! / Supreme Evolution!! The Golden Digimentals | |
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Japanese | デジモンアドベンチャー02: デジモンハリケーン上陸 / 超絶進化!! 黄金のデジメンタル |
Hepburn | DeDejimon Adobenchā Zero Tsū: Dejimon Harikēn Jouriku!! / Chouzetsu Shinka!! Ougon no Digimentaru |
Directed by | Shigeyasu Yamauchi |
Produced by | Makoto Toriyama Makoto Yamashina Hiromi Seki |
Written by | Reiko Yoshida (screenplay) |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
July 8, 2000 |
Running time
|
65 minutes |
Digimon: The Movie | |
---|---|
Directed by |
Mamoru Hosoda Shigeyasu Yamauchi |
Produced by | Terri-Lei O'Malley |
Written by |
Bob Buchholz Jeff Nimoy |
Music by | Udi Harpaz Amotz Plessner |
Cinematography | Shigeru Ando |
Edited by |
Gary Friedman Douglas Purgason |
Release date
|
October 6, 2000 |
Running time
|
88 minutes |
Budget | $5 Million |
Box office | $16.6 Million |
Digimon Adventure 02: Revenge of Diaboromon | |
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Japanese | デジモンアドベンチャー02: ディアボロモンの逆襲 |
Hepburn | Dejimon Adobenchā Zero Tsū: Diablomon no Gyakushuu |
Directed by | Takahiro Imamura |
Produced by | Hideki Yamashita Makoto Shibazaki Masaki Miyauchi Tan Takaiwa Tsutomu Tomari Hiroyuki Sakurada |
Written by | Reiko Yoshida |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
March 3, 2001 |
Running time
|
29 minutes |
Box office | 3,000,000,000 yen |
Digimon Grandprix! | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジモンアドベンチャー3D デジモングランプリ! |
Hepburn | Dejimon Adobenchā Gurandopuri! |
Directed by | Mamoru Hosoda |
Written by | Maekawa Atsushi |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
October 3, 2009 |
Running time
|
7 minutes |
Digimon Tamers: Battle of Adventurers | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジモンテイマーズ 冒険者たちの戦い |
Hepburn | Dejimon Teimāzu: Bōkensha-tachi no Tatakai |
Directed by | Tetsuo Imazawa |
Written by | Yasuko Kobayashi |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
July 14, 2001 |
Running time
|
50 minutes |
Digimon Tamers: Runaway Locomon | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジモンテイマーズ 暴走デジモン特急 |
Hepburn | Dejimon Teimāzu: Bōsō no Dejimon Tokkyū |
Directed by | Tetsuji Nakamura |
Written by | Hiro Masaki |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Release date
|
March 2, 2002 |
Running time
|
30 minutes |
Digimon Frontier: Island of Lost Digimon/Digimon Frontier: Revival of the Ancient Digimon | |
---|---|
Japanese | デジモンフロンティア: 古代デジモン復活!! |
Hepburn | Dejimon Furontia: Kodai Dejimon Fukkatsu!! |
Directed by | Takahiro Imamura |
Written by | Yoshihiro Tomita |
Music by | Takanori Arisawa |
Edited by | Shigeru Nishiyama |
Production
company |
|
Distributed by |
Toei Company (Japan) The Walt Disney Company (International) |
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
40 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese, English |
Digimon Savers: Ultimate Power! Activate Burst Mode!! | |
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Japanese | デジモンセイバーズ: 究極パワー! バーストモード発動!! |
Hepburn | Dejimon Seibāzu: Kyūkyoku Pawā! Bāsuto Mōdo Hatsudō!! |
Directed by | Tatsuya Nagamine |
Written by | Ryota Yamaguchi |
Music by | Keiichi Oku |
Release date
|
|
Running time
|
22 minutes |
To date, a total of fifteen original Japanese films (eleven theatrical, two OVA) and six American films (Including the compilation film Digimon: The Movie) have been released in the Digimon franchise, one of which (Digital Monster X-Evolution) was first broadcast on television, animated completely in CGI, and was not related to any other season of the television series.
The eleven other original films are short and primarily hand-drawn. The two short films (OVAs) animated completely in CGI have never been screened outside Japan. The Fifteenth film, Loss was released in February 2017. Creator Jayster Alendug, Jhamaicah Baltista and Abois Alingdeg
Digimon Adventure is the first Digimon Adventure film. It was released in Japan on March 6, 1999. It was released in the United States on October 6, 2000 as the first part of Digimon: The Movie.
This film acts as a pilot episode for Digimon Adventure. The first story focused on Tai and Kari Kamiya four years before their adventure in the Digital World. It shows their first encounter with Digimon and what happened to them (as well as the other children that saw it became the other DigiDestined) when they participated in their first Digimon battle after raising a quickly growing Botamon. In the story, that Digimon hatches from a Digi-egg and eventually evolved into Greymon to fight a Parrotmon who appeared in the city. The movie was used in episodes of Digimon Adventure to explain why Tai and company became DigiDestined.
Digimon Adventure: Our War Game! is the second Digimon film. It was released in Japan on March 4, 2000. It was released in the United States on October 6, 2000 as the second part of Digimon: The Movie.
The second story occurs a few months after the battle against Apocalymon. It shows many of the DigiDestined, but primarily focuses on Tai, Matt, Izzy, and TK, as they end up saving the day when a computer virus Digimon raises havoc all over the world through the Internet. The kids must stop the evil Digimon quickly before he provokes the launching of a nuclear ICBM aimed at Japan (where the kids live). Tai and Matt end up getting so worried about their Digimon (in the form of WarGreymon and MetalGarurumon) badly losing to the evil Digimon Diaboromon that they actually phase into the Internet and miraculously give them the power to destroy him in time. Both Digimon merge, evolving into the powerful Omnimon. However, Diaboromon is still too fast, until Izzy comes up with the idea to redirect e-mails that they are receiving from children watching the battle all over the world via the internet to slow Diaboromon down, allowing Omnimon to finish him off just before the missiles hit. In the end, the deactivated ICBM lands harmlessly in Tokyo Bay. Our War Game! appears to be inspired by the 1983 film, WarGames. This movie is considered canon due to Izzy's analysis of ExVeemon and Stingmon's DNA Digivolution in Adventure 02, because Izzy compares it to WarGreymon and MetalGarurumon's own DNA Digivolution and how 02 character Yolei Inoue became a Digidestined. Ryo, who appears briefly in 02 and has an expanded role in Tamers, also uses his computer to help the DigiDestined.