Tokyo Ghoul
0 sources
Tokyo Ghoul
Summary
Tokyo Ghoul is an anime television series[1]. It draws 178 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #290 of 1,237).[2]
Key Facts
- Tokyo Ghoul authored Sui Ishida[3].
- Tokyo Ghoul's instance of is recorded as anime television series[4].
- Tokyo Ghoul was directed by Shuhei Morita[5].
- Chūji Mikasano wrote the screenplay for Tokyo Ghoul[6].
- Tokyo Ghoul's composer is recorded as Yutaka Yamada[7].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is horror anime and manga[8].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is thriller anime[9].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is dark fantasy anime and manga[10].
- Tokyo Ghoul's genre is supernatural thriller[11].
- Tokyo Ghoul's based on is recorded as Tokyo Ghoul[12].
- Tokyo Ghoul was followed by Tokyo Ghoul:re[13].
- Tokyo Ghoul's production company is recorded as Studio Pierrot[14].
- The original language of Tokyo Ghoul was Japanese[15].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by Blu-ray Disc[16].
- Tokyo Ghoul was distributed by DVD[17].
- Tokyo Ghoul's original broadcaster is recorded as Tokyo Metropolitan Television[18].
- Tokyo Ghoul's color is recorded as color[19].
- Tokyo Ghoul's country of origin is recorded as Japan[20].
- Tokyo Ghoul comprises Tokyo Ghoul √A[21].
- Tokyo Ghoul began on +2014-07-04T00:00:00Z[22].
- Tokyo Ghoul ended on +2014-09-19T00:00:00Z[23].
- Tokyo Ghoul's voice actor is recorded as Natsuki Hanae[24].
- Tokyo Ghoul's voice actor is recorded as Sora Amamiya[25].
- Tokyo Ghoul's distributed by is recorded as Madman Entertainment[26].
- Tokyo Ghoul's distributed by is recorded as Funimation[27].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Tokyo Ghoul authored Sui Ishida[3]. It was directed by Shuhei Morita[5]. Chūji Mikasano wrote the screenplay for it[6].
Publication
The original language of Tokyo Ghoul was Japanese[15]. Genres include horror anime and manga[8], thriller anime[9], dark fantasy anime and manga[10], and supernatural thriller[11]. Recorded distribution format include Blu-ray Disc[16] and DVD[17].
Subject and Themes
Tokyo Ghoul's main subject is cannibalism[28].
Adaptations and Inspiration
Tokyo Ghoul was followed by it:re[13].
Why It Matters
Tokyo Ghoul draws 178 Wikipedia views per month (anime_television_series category, ranking #290 of 1,237).[2]