Digimon: The Movie
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Digimon: The Movie
Summary
Digimon: The Movie is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,148 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Digimon: The Movie's instance of is recorded as The Movie — instance of (P31): film[3].
- Digimon: The Movie was directed by The Movie — director (P57): Mamoru Hosoda[4].
- Digimon: The Movie was directed by The Movie — director (P57): Shigeyasu Yamauchi[5].
- The Movie — screenwriter (P58): Reiko Yoshida wrote the screenplay for Digimon: The Movie[6].
- Digimon: The Movie's genre is The Movie — genre (P136): action film[7].
- A cast member of Digimon: The Movie was The Movie — cast member (P161): Lara Jill Miller[8].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): 20th Century Studios[9].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): Jetix[10].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): Toei Company[11].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): Fox Kids[12].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): Toei Animation[13].
- Digimon: The Movie's production company is recorded as The Movie — production company (P272): BVS Entertainment[14].
- Digimon: The Movie's director of photography is recorded as The Movie — director of photography (P344): Shigeru Ando[15].
- The original language of Digimon: The Movie was The Movie — original language of film or TV show (P364): English[16].
- Digimon: The Movie was distributed by The Movie — distribution format (P437): video on demand[17].
- Digimon: The Movie was distributed by The Movie — distribution format (P437): direct-to-video[18].
- Digimon: The Movie's review score is recorded as 24%[19].
- Digimon: The Movie's review score is recorded as 4.1/10[20].
- Digimon: The Movie's color is recorded as The Movie — color (P462): color[21].
- Digimon: The Movie's country of origin is recorded as The Movie — country of origin (P495): United States[22].
- Digimon: The Movie's country of origin is recorded as The Movie — country of origin (P495): Japan[23].
- Digimon: The Movie was released on October 6, 2000[24].
- Digimon: The Movie's distributed by is recorded as The Movie — distributed by (P750): 20th Century Studios[25].
- Digimon: The Movie's distributed by is recorded as The Movie — distributed by (P750): 01 Distribution[26].
- Digimon: The Movie's distributed by is recorded as The Movie — distributed by (P750): Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures International[27].
Product Details
The following facts are restated verbatim from public-domain and CC0 open-data sources — every line is independently verifiable against the named source's catalog.
MusicBrainz — CC0 open music encyclopedia
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Release type: Album[28]
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Secondary type(s): Soundtrack[29]
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First release date: 2000-09-19[30]
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Genre(s): alternative rock, rock[31]
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Community tags: alternative rock, related-digimon, rock, soundtrack[32]
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MusicBrainz ID: 761127f6-172e-3d53-bf42-3a297658fac8[33]
Body
Authorship and Creation
Directors include The Movie — director (P57): Mamoru Hosoda[4] and The Movie — director (P57): Shigeyasu Yamauchi[5]. The Movie — screenwriter (P58): Reiko Yoshida wrote the screenplay for Digimon: The Movie[6]. A cast member of it was The Movie — cast member (P161): Lara Jill Miller[8].
Publication
Digimon: The Movie was published on October 6, 2000[24]. The original language of it was The Movie — original language of film or TV show (P364): English[16]. Its genre is The Movie — genre (P136): action film[7]. Recorded distribution format include The Movie — distribution format (P437): video on demand[17] and The Movie — distribution format (P437): direct-to-video[18].
Reception
Reviews include 24%[19] and 4.1/10[20].
Why It Matters
Digimon: The Movie ranks in the top 3% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (1,148 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 12 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[34] It is known by 9 alternative names across languages and contexts.[35]