Madlax
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Madlax
Summary
Madlax is an anime television series[1]. Madlax draws 112 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #341 of 1,237).[2]
Key Facts
- Madlax's instance of is recorded as anime television series[3].
- Madlax was directed by Kōichi Mashimo[4].
- Madlax's composer is recorded as Yuki Kajiura[5].
- Madlax's genre is action anime and manga[6].
- Madlax's genre is mystery anime and manga[7].
- Madlax's genre is drama anime and manga[8].
- Madlax's genre is thriller anime[9].
- Among the performers on Madlax was FictionJunction[10].
- Madlax's record label is recorded as Victor Entertainment[11].
- Madlax's production company is recorded as Bee Train[12].
- The original language of Madlax was Japanese[13].
- Madlax's country of origin is recorded as Japan[14].
- Madlax was released on +2004-01-01T00:00:00Z[15].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Sanae Kobayashi[16].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Satsuki Yukino[17].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Kelly Manison[18].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Nancy Novotny[19].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Jay Hickman[20].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Houko Kuwashima[21].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Ai Uchikawa[22].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Masashi Ebara[23].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Luci Christian[24].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Kira Vincent-Davis[25].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Mike Kleinhenz[26].
- Madlax's voice actor is recorded as Jin Urayama[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Madlax was performed by FictionJunction[10]. Madlax was directed by Kōichi Mashimo[4].
Publication
Madlax was published on +2004-01-01T00:00:00Z[15]. The original language of Madlax was Japanese[13]. Genres include action anime and manga[6], mystery anime and manga[7], drama anime and manga[8], and thriller anime[9].
Why It Matters
Madlax draws 112 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #341 of 1,237).[2] Madlax has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] Madlax is known by 7 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]