Tokyo Ghoul
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Tokyo Ghoul
Summary
Tokyo Ghoul is a film[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (318 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Tokyo Ghoul authored Sui Ishida[3].
- Tokyo Ghoul's instance of is recorded as film[4].
- Tokyo Ghoul was directed by Kentarō Hagiwara[5].
- Tokyo Ghoul was directed by Shuhei Morita[6].
- Ichirō Kusuno wrote the screenplay for Tokyo Ghoul[7].
- Tokyo Ghoul's composer is recorded as Don Davis[8].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is dark fantasy[9].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is action film[10].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is horror film[11].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is thriller film[12].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is drama film[13].
- Tokyo Ghoul's based on is recorded as Tokyo Ghoul[14].
- A cast member of Tokyo Ghoul was Masataka Kubota[15].
- The original language of Tokyo Ghoul was Japanese[16].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by theatrical release[17].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by Blu-ray Disc[18].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by video on demand[19].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by DVD[20].
- Tokyo Ghoul's review score is recorded as 81%[21].
- Tokyo Ghoul's review score is recorded as 6.4/10[22].
- Tokyo Ghoul's color is recorded as color[23].
- Tokyo Ghoul's country of origin is recorded as Japan[24].
- Tokyo Ghoul was released on July 29, 2017[25].
- Tokyo Ghoul's voice actor is recorded as Austin Tindle[26].
- Tokyo Ghoul's distributed by is recorded as Shochiku[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Tokyo Ghoul authored Sui Ishida[3]. Directors include Kentarō Hagiwara[5] and Shuhei Morita[6]. Ichirō Kusuno wrote the screenplay for it[7]. A cast member of it was Masataka Kubota[15].
Publication
Tokyo Ghoul was published on July 29, 2017[25]. The original language of it was Japanese[16]. Genres include dark fantasy[9], action film[10], horror film[11], thriller film[12], and drama film[13]. Recorded distribution format include theatrical release[17], Blu-ray Disc[18], video on demand[19], and DVD[20].
Subject and Themes
Tokyo Ghoul's main subject is cannibalism[28].
Reception
Reviews include 81%[21] and 6.4/10[22].
Why It Matters
Tokyo Ghoul ranks in the top 4% of film entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (318 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[29] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[30]