The month of April brought us closer to the July premiere of Chapter 1 with a new trailer, bolstered by the debut of the new 1/350 model from Hachette, various live events, and more. Here’s everything April had to offer in Yamato‘s 50th year…
April 2: 4K movie box
The reports spanning late ’23 and early ’24 gave a lot of attention to the 4K remastered release of the first Yamato movie and Farewell, both in theaters and then on Blu-ray. An extra dimension of the Blu-rays was revealed on April 2 when those who preordered each film from Amazon.co.jp received their incentive bonus item: a slipcase to contain them both.
Photos posted on Twitter by elfriede
April 3: 1/350 Diecast Gimmick Model Vol. 251
Hachette’s inaugural volume for the all-new EDF Patrol ship delivered the most iconic segment, the conning tower. More accurately, one half of the conning tower. But this was already enough to conduct the first lighting test and get builders primed for more.
See Hachette’s instruction video here
See a modeler’s blog here
Visit Hachette’s home page for the Patrol Ship here
April 4: Yamato 2205 on TV
This juxtaposition of images is no accident. On this day, Yamato 2205 made its broadcast debut on local station Tokyo MX and satellite station BS11 in Japan. To mark the occasion and invite new viewers, the first episode of Yamato 2199 was also broadcast. It was the first of four “legacy” shows to air in April. Keep reading for the others.
April 7: Family Concert ~ Addicted to Brass, Kobe City
It’s going to be a big year for Yamato music with live performances everywhere you turn. The first one for April was sponsored by the Kobe City PTA Council featuring Akira Miyagawa conducting the Osaka Shion Wind Orchestra at Kobe Bunka Hall. And wherever Akira goes, he brings Yamato along for the ride. The set for this performance added the 4-part Yamato Suite to a host of other Miyagawa favorites.
April 7: Shinya Takahashi on Yahoo Japan Auctions
Sasha’s character designer debuted five new original paintings for auction on this day. Since they’re slightly more risque than some of his previous works, the full images can be seen in a gallery here.
Photos posted on Twitter by elfriede
April 10: 1/350 Diecast Gimmick Model Vol. 252
The second EDF Patrol Ship volume gave everyone the other half of the conning tower and a chance to light it up. The urge to piece them together must have been irresistible, but that step was still a week away.
See Hachette’s instruction video here
See a modeler’s blog here
April 11: Yamato 2199 Episode 2 on TV
A week after showing Episode 1, Tokyo MX and BS11 gave viewers a new chance to see Episode 2. What would everyone get to see a week later? The answer may surprise you…
Photo posted on Twittery by khara_inc2
April 13: Hideaki Anno exhibit in Aichi
An exhibition devoted to the life and career of anime/film auteur Hideaki Anno made its original debut in 2023, and reopened in Aichi’s Kanayama Minami Museum where it would stay through June 23. As one of Yamato‘s most vocal first-gen fans, Anno amassed an impressive archive of rarities that form a small part of a very wide-ranging collection.
See a photo gallery of the Yamato display here.
See more photos here: Gamepress article | Exhibition website | Comprehensive Twitter thread | Video clip
April 14: Yamaket 23
You know all those fan artists whose amazing work we see in the galleries here month after month? A lot of them gather twice a year for Yamaket, a one-day mini-con within a larger fan event named Torilozi in Tokyo. In the first Yamaket of the 50th anniversary year, a record number of fans set up shop to sell art, doujinshis, and craft items in an entire day dedicated to Yamato.
See a huge photo gallery here
April 16: News from Tsuruga
What connection does Yamato have to the port city of Tsuruga? It’s the home of the Leiji Matsumoto Symbol Road, which was the site of a Yamatour pilgrimage back in 2009. In April, it was the subject of a Nippon TV news report which can be seen here.
The accompanying transcript reads as follows:
Monetary offering to a monument? A rare phenomenon with Space Battleship Yamato‘s “Sakezo Sado” in Tsuruga Station shopping district
Tsuruga Station, the immediate terminus of the Hokuriku Shinkansen line extension, is bustling with tourists. Amidst this bustle, a strange phenomenon has been occurring at the familiar monuments lining the shopping street in front of the station. They are Maetel from Galaxy Express 999 and Susumu Kodai, the main character of Space Battleship Yamato. Twenty-eight such monuments line the sidewalk between Tsuruga Station and Kibi Jingu Shrine.
They were installed in 1999 to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the opening of Tsuruga Port, and their colors were repainted when the sidewalk was widened to accommodate the opening of the Shinkansen bullet train. They have also become a photo spot, but one of the monuments is said to be experiencing a strange phenomenon.
Reporter Momoka Fujiwara: That’s the monument, isn’t it? At first glance, there seems to be nothing unusual about it, but there are coins in the bowl. Sakezo Sado is a character from Space Battleship Yamato. He is a doctor with an unparalleled love of sake, holding a bottle in his left hand and a bowl in his right. It is said that people put coins into this bowl. I waited nearby with my camera ready, and saw tourists taking pictures and patting him on the head. I waited a little longer, and then an elementary school student began to put coins in. I asked him why…
Elementary school student: “I thought it was like a god. Everyone else was putting money in the bowl, so I thought I’d put some in too.”
Student’s mother: “I hope something good will come out of it.”
Some people who did not put coins in the bowl peered into them curiously.
Tourist from Kyoto: I thought they were praying for Leiji Matsumoto, who passed away.
The coins are managed by a store in front of the station. They have been put in for several years, and the number has increased dramatically over time.
Store owner: “The age of the customers varies from elementary school children to the elderly. We’ve done things like refurbish the statues and cleaned them up. We also put flower pots there, so if we could use the money to maintain the flowers and clean up the space and the streets, that would be great.”
Holding a bottle of sake, the monument has a somewhat lovable expression on its face. It seems to have become a new landmark in Tsuruga, a city that has been enlivened by the opening of the Shinkansen bullet train.
April 17: Yamato 2202 Episode 1 on TV
Were you thinking 2199 Episode 3 was the next one to air on Tokyo MX and BS11? Nope! They jumped right to 2202 in a whirlwind tour of the remake era. There was one more episode still to come before the month was over.
April 17: REBEL 3199 Chapter 1 commercial
It’s always nice to have some REBEL 3199 news in a REBEL 3199 news report, and April gave us some more in the form of a 30-second TV commercial for Chapter 1: Dark Invasion.
Watch it on Youtube here, then click here for a full rundown with translated lines and color commentary.
Photos posted on Twitter by elfriede
April 17: 1/350 Diecast Gimmick Model Vol. 253
With volume 3 of the new series, builders got the remaining parts needed to complete the conning tower for the EDF Patrol Ship. Traditionally, the bridge towers have been the most challenging part of the Hachette models, but this one came together right away. Still, it’s only the beginning…
See Hachette’s instruction video here
See a modeler’s blog here
April 20-21: HAL-Con 2024
A western SF convention in Japan? It’s about time. HAL-con originally took place in the late 70s, then was revived by an organization in Nova Scotia (Canada) in 2008. This year, the international version of HAL-con took place at the Kawasaki International Center. The bi-lingual program book gives us a tiny bit of insight into their Yamato 2024 panel featuring Animator Kia Asamiya and Director Nobuyoshi Habara with the following description:
We explosively talk about Space Battleship Yamato and so on with our GoH [Guest of Honor] Kia Asamiya and a director of anime series of Yamato, Nobuyoshi Habara. From fans to anime staff. Pursues which two of them have followed. What kind of stories do you expect to hear? Don’t miss it!
Visit the English-language HAL-Con 2024 website here
Visit the Canadian home page here
April 24: Yamato 2202 Episode 4 on TV
One week ago, Tokyo MX and BS11 aired the first episode of 2202. This week, to close out their month of revisits, they jumped to Episode 4 for the high-tension launch into mutiny.
April 24: 1/350 Diecast Gimmick Model Vol. 254
The fourth volume featured the forward gun turret for the EDF Patrol Ship, the first of the two on the upper hull. Construction was just like the major turrets on previous models, scaled down with internal lighting. That’s four volumes down, 46 to go.
See Hachette’s instruction video here
See a modeler’s blog here
April 29: Isao Sasaki on TV
In case you were wondering, this is Isao Sasaki’s 65th year as a professional singer, and he still hasn’t retired yet. The month ended with Sasaki appearing on the 553rd episode of Premium Songs and performing the Yamato theme, Galaxy Express 999, an Elvis medley, and more.
Also spotted in April
Fan art
Output from the fans was enormous; if it continues at this pace, 2024 will break all previous records.
See the character gallery here and the mecha gallery here.
Fan models
Variety was the keyword in April with classics and mods alike. See the latest gallery here.
Coser si Oscar
You’re a 52 year old father of a girl who goes to anime conventions in Manila. What’s the perfect character for you to cosplay? Get to know Oscar Santos Jr. and find out just how big his heart is in this 20-minute documentary by Layag Production.
See it on Youtube here
Fan Artist Profile
Time to meet another of the talented and dedicated Yamato fans who delivers some of the amazing artwork we see here in the character galleries month after month. (Hot tip: enter the words “character fan art” or “mecha fan art” in the search bar to bring all the galleries to the top.)
MIO 2202
1. What was your first Yamato experience?
When I was a child, I saw a rebroadcast of the 1974 TV series. At that time, we didn’t have any recording equipment at home, so I couldn’t watch on the days that coincided with my grandfather’s live sumo broadcasts. But no matter what episode I watched, I was drawn in, and I was eager for the next rebroadcast, saying, “I want to watch all the episodes as soon as possible!” It is said that it became popular through reruns, and I remember that it was on once every six months…I think I finished watching all the episodes by the third time.
2. What is your favorite aspect of Yamato?
The worlds, stories, characters, designs of Yamato and Cosmo Zero, the voices, and music of the 1974 TV series and Farewell Space Battleship Yamato have become part of my mother tongue. The age at which you find something has a big influence. The subsequent TV series, movies, and remake series are in the same language, so they can be understood. However, as the years go by, I feel that I can’t get the immersive feeling of “I love everything!” The filter of “I like this!” is becoming finer, and I enjoy what gets through that filter.
One of my earliest memories of “Wow!” is the music from the 1974 TV series, The Infinite Universe and Yamato Leaving the Earth. The first music collection I bought was Symphonic Suite Space Battleship Yamato, thinking that these two songs were included, but I was shocked when I learned that they weren’t! My own favorites! That’s one of the memories of my filter being activated.
3. Are you a Yamato collector?
I collect in my mind the things I felt and thought when I came into contact with Yamato movies and TV series I watched in the past. Magazines and mooks, and now information from social media that flows in real time. For about ten years after we met, I had a lot of things. Leiji Matsumoto’s manga, anime, roman albums, movie pamphlets, music collections, etc.
However, when the house was being rebuilt, the collection that had been temporarily stored in a warehouse was not returned. I was shocked, but at the same time decided, “I love drawing (especially characters), so I’ll narrow it down to the things I need as materials for drawing.”
4. What is your most treasured Yamato item?
Due to the circumstances I described above, it’s Nobuteru Yuuki’s book for the remake series, Retouch Picture Collection. After Final Yamato, I left the world of Yamato due to drastic changes in my life and lack of opportunities to access information, but I love the character designs in the remake series. That led me to come back.
5. What are your favorite drawing tools?
A mechanical pencil (often colored without inking) for drafting and line drawing, Copic multiliner for pen work, Akashiya watercolor brushes, Nouvelle Curry Pastels, Maruman Vifuar watercolor paper, and a Holbein watercolor sketchbook.
6. Where can your work be seen?
You can see it on Twitter here.
7. Does your family share your hobby?
No, they don’t.
8. Please tell us something about your life outside your art.
Currently, I am focusing more on supporting my elderly parents than work. I have a regular lifestyle and have enough time for private life, and I am living the healthiest life I have ever lived. I will continue to put my health first in order to enjoy life with Yamato.
9. Are you involved in Yamato activities with other fans?
When I meet people, I enjoy chatting with them over tea or lunch. I don’t do any doujinshi activities.
10. What do you hope to see in a future Yamato anime?
I want to see Kodai-kun and Yuki-chan happy in the remake series. I wonder what kind of works young creators will create, such as spin-offs or a next-generation series? I’m interested.
11. What is your favorite anime after Yamato?
There are many works that I think are great, interesting, have amazing visuals (beauty, action, etc.), and have cool BGM. However, when I hear the term “after Yamato,” the difference in the amount of passion and time spent on it is so great that I wonder if there can ever be an equivalent.
12. What would you like to say to Yamato fans around the world?
Let’s enjoy our 50th anniversary year and future voyages together! When I had the opportunity to answer these questions, the process of thinking carefully about them and putting it into words was frustrating and difficult. But at the same time, I felt rediscovery and joy. I struggle with “drawing” every time, but I realized once again that I want to draw more. Thank you.
13. What should everyone know about Japan and its people?
I often visit shrines at the change of seasons, both locally and when traveling. I do it simply because it feels so good. In addition to the famous shrines that appear in guidebooks and are introduced by influencers, there are many other ancient shrines. When you come to Japan, if you have time, please look at the map and ask the person at your hotel about important local shrines and visit them.
Yamatunes for April
Click here
(Japan Popular Classics Orchestra)
Click here
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I hope we get an Advert with some Galman-Gamilon Ships! I’m a big fan of Gamilon ships and I hope we have some stuff with the Bolar Federation.
They Launched a new trailer! I hope to see some Galman ships, as their appears to be new lighting in whatever software they used. Anyway Ima shut up because I’ll be rambling about all sorts of software and lighting stuff if I don’t shut it.
I await the Arizona with bated breath.