CAST (ENGLISH VERSION): Johnny Yong Bosch, Joshua Seth, Wendee Lee, Jamieson Price, Bob Buchholz, Simon Prescott, Cody MacKenzie, Sandy Fox, Travis Weaver, Michelle Ruff, Michael Lindsay, Anthony Pulcini, Mike Reynolds, Steve Blum, Michael McConnohie, Robert Axelrod, Michael Frost, Eddie Frierson, Skip Stellrecht, Ted Rae, Julie Ann Taylor, Patricia Ja Lee, Dyanne DiRosario, William Frederick Knight, Steve Staley, Tony Oliver
CAST (JAPANESE VERSION): Mitsuo Iwata, Nozomu Sasaki, Mami Koyama, Tarō Ishida, Tesshō Genda, Mizuho Suzuki, Tatsuhiko Nakamura, Fukue Itō, Kazuhiro Shindō, Yuriko Fuchizaki, Masaaki Ōkura, Takeshi Kusao, Hiroshi Ōtake, Masato Hirano, Yukimasa Kishino, Kōichi Kitamura, Tarō Arakawa, Yukimasa Kishino, Masato Hirano, Kayoko Fujii, Masami Toyoshima, Yuka Ōno, Kōichi Kitamura, Michihiro Ikemizu, Kazumi Tanaka
CREW: Katsuhiro Ôtomo (director, writer), Izô Hashimoto (writer), Shunzô Katô and Ryôhei Suzuki (producers), Shôji Yamashiro (composer), Katsuji Misawa (cinematographer), Takeshi Seyama (editor)
PLOT: In the futuristic city of Neo-Tokyo, motorcycle gang leader Shōtarō Kanesa (Bosch/Iwata) finds himself going up against childhood friend Tetsuo Shima (Seth/Sasaki) after he acquires powerful telekinetic powers that threaten to consume the entire metropolitan area…
FIVE REASONS TO BE EXCITED:
- Regarded as one of the most influential anime films of all time, this jaw-dropping sci-fi epic is back on the big screen with a full 4K restoration
- Filmmaker Katsuhiro Ôtomo adapted his own dystopian manga into a sprawling feature that expanded upon the characters and this unique universe
- Its huge box office success and widespread critical acclaim not only made it a cult favourite among avid filmgoers, but also helped pioneer the Japanese cyberpunk subgenre that would later include Ghost in the Shell and Cowboy Bebop
- Sensitive audiences should be warned, however, that this film goes to certain extremes in terms of mass destruction that frankly make the climax to Man of Steel look relatively harmless by comparison!
- Whether you’re seeing it for the first or fifteenth time, you can’t afford to miss one of the best anime movies ever made on the biggest screen possible
Akira is showing in cinemas from Friday 17 April 2026
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