In Memorium, Part III Movie In Italian Dubbed Download
Download > https://geags.com/2sVlJY
Some of the dialogue scenes, especially in the beginning, sound vaguely awkward; the answers do not fit the questions, and conversations seem to have been rewritten in the editing room. Other shots - long shots, into the light, so we cannot see the characters' lips -- look suspiciously like scenes that were filmed first and dubbed later. The whole ambitious final movement of the film - in which two separate intrigues are intercut with the progress of an opera being sung by Anthony -- is intended to be suspenseful but is so confusing, we are not even sure which place (Sicily, Rome, London?) one of the intrigues is occurring. The final scene of the movie, which is intended to echo Marlon Brando's famous death scene, is perfunctory and awkward.
This section contains information on legit English language releases of the first part of "Megazone 23". A complete listing of English language video releases of all three parts of "Megazone 23" can be found here. Video releases of "Robotech the movie" can be found here. In November 2003, ADV Films UK announced on it's website that it had acquired all three parts of "Megazone 23", but the series was never released there. ADV Films has since discontinued operation in the UK as well as the US. Note: Please do not ask me where bootleg or downloads of this movie can be found. If you email me regarding bootlegs or downloads, don't expect any response.
Produced via Kickstarter and only avalible to people living in the US, Canada, the UK and all of Europe with the exception of Italy. Contains all three parts of "Megazone 23" on two blu-ray discs, with all parts being a new 4K telecine scan from the original negatives. The English dubs include the 2004 ADV Films versions as well as the 1995 Streamline Pictures dub for the first OVA and the 1987 Harmony Gold English dub of "Megazone 23 Part II" with the 10 minute ending of "Robotech the movie" as a separate feature as per the Japanese blu-ray box release. Unlike those releases, the footage does not come with "burnt in" Japanese subtitles. Other extras included the commentary track from the 2004 ADV Films release of the first OVA (with Matt Greenfield, director of the English dub and two other ADV staff, David Williams and Janice Williams) and a new second commentary track for the first OVA with Gaku Miyao (sub mecha designer and key animator) and Hiroki Sato (animator), a new 10 minute "Secret History" documentary on the OVA, setting material and colour artwork galleries and an assortment of "Megazone 23" trailers which play subtitled within the menu itself. Physical extras include a foldout poster of the Haruhiko Mikimoto art used on the Japanese blu-ray box set and the list if all the backers on the reverse with a promotional artwork piece from 1985, a small sheet of stickers and a 22 page liner notes booklet with bonus colour manga by Gaku Miyao which features background characters of backers who funded higher tiers.
Produced via Kickstarter and only avalible to people living in the US, Canada, the UK and all of Europe with the exception of Italy. Contains all three parts of "Megazone 23" on two blu-ray discs, with all parts being a new 4K telecine scan from the original negatives. The English dubs include the 2004 ADV Films versions as well as the 1995 Streamline Pictures dub for the first OVA and the 1987 Harmony Gold English dub of "Megazone 23 Part II" with the 10 minute ending of "Robotech the movie" as a separate feature as per the Japanese blu-ray box release. Unlike those releases, the footage does not come with "burnt in" Japanese subtitles. Other extras included the commentary track from the 2004 ADV Films release of the first OVA (with Matt Greenfield, director of the English dub and two other ADV staff, David Williams and Janice Williams) and a new second commentary track for the first OVA with Gaku Miyao (sub mecha designer and key animator) and Hiroki Sato (animator), a new 10 minute "Secret History" documentary on the OVA, setting material and colour artwork galleries and an assortment of "Megazone 23" trailers which play subtitled within the menu itself. Physical extras include a foldout poster of the Haruhiko Mikimoto "Eve" art used on the Japanese blu-ray box set and the list if all the backers on the reverse with a promotional artwork piece from 1985, a small sheet of stickers and a 22 page liner notes booklet with bonus colour manga by Gaku Miyao which features background characters of backers who funded higher tiers. The premium set also comes housed in a chipboard box using the same Haruhiko Mikimoto "Eve" art used on the Japanese blu-ray box set and a second booklet 172 pages in length featuring messages from Haruhiko Mikimoto, Gaku Miyao, Shinji Aramaki and Hiroki Sato, as well as colour artwork and extensive setting materials from all three parts of the franchise.
Re-authored single disc retail version of previously issued "Megazone 23" Kickstarter sets. Contains all three parts of "Megazone 23" with all parts being a new 4K telecine scan from the original negatives. The English dubs include the 2004 ADV Films versions as well as the 1995 Streamline Pictures dub for the first OVA and the 1987 Harmony Gold English dub of "Megazone 23 Part II" with the 10 minute ending of "Robotech the movie" as a separate feature as per the Japanese blu-ray box release. Unlike those releases, the footage does not come with "burnt in" Japanese subtitles. Other extras included the commentary track from the 2004 ADV Films release of the first OVA (with Matt Greenfield, director of the English dub and two other ADV staff, David Williams and Janice Williams) and a new second commentary track for the first OVA with Gaku Miyao (sub mecha designer and key animator) and Hiroki Sato (animator), setting material and colour artwork galleries and an assortment of "Megazone 23" trailers which play subtitled within the menu itself. 2b1af7f3a8