This is a list of anime industry companies involved in the production or distribution of anime.
Animation studios
There are over 500 animation studios in Japan.[1] Below are those notable enough to have an article.
Distributors
North America and other regions
Africa
- Misr International Films (MIF) (Egypt)
Southeast Asia, South Asia, and East Asia
Defunct
- ADV Films (U.S., U.K.) (shut down in 2009, selling off its assets and intellectual properties to four other Houston-based companies, such as Section23 Films)
- AN Entertainment (U.S., division of AnimeNation, no new releases since 2007. Retail operations of parent company ceased in 2014.[9])
- Bandai Entertainment (U.S., owned by Bandai Namco Entertainment[10])
- Bandai Visual USA (U.S., previously a subsidiary of Bandai Visual Japan and not affiliated with Bandai Entertainment, now folded into Bandai Entertainment[11])
- Beez Entertainment (EU, owned by Bandai)
- Central Park Media (de facto defunct since mid-2007 when new DVD releases ceased; although they continued to license their titles for TV and VOD, they entered a state of limbo.[12] Officially declared bankruptcy and assets liquidated in mid-2009.[13] Several of their titles have been acquired by other anime distributing companies prior to and following Central Park Media's bankruptcy and liquidation, such as ADV Films, Bandai Entertainment, Funimation Entertainment, Media Blasters, Nozomi Entertainment, etc.)
- Family Home Entertainment (U.S., renamed Artisan Entertainment) in the 1990s, then acquired by Lions Gate Entertainment in 2003)
- Funimation (U.S.) (still exists but remains active and continues to distribute titles that were originally licensed by the Funimation company before the merger as of 2023)
- Frontier Enterprises (Japan)
- Geneon Entertainment (U.S. branch "Geneon USA" (formerly "Pioneer Entertainment"), defunct September 2007. Parent Japanese company ceased in-house distribution of its own titles, many of which have been re-licensed by Funimation[14][15] and Sentai Filmworks. Parent company "Geneon Entertainment" then sold off its own ownership to NBCUniversal subsidiary UPI, which then merged Geneon with its own "Universal Pictures Japan" division on February 1, 2009, renaming the new company "Geneon Universal Entertainment Japan").[16][17]
- Go Fish Pictures (U.S. subsidiary of DreamWorks)
- Illumitoon Entertainment (U.S., de facto defunct since late-2007 when new DVD releases were cancelled[18])
- Kadokawa Pictures USA (U.S., American subsidiary of Kadokawa Pictures)
- Kazé (Europe acquired by Crunchyroll)
- Magna Home Entertainment (Australia)
- Manga Entertainment (UK, U.S.: Established as L.A. Hero in 1990, brought by Island World Communications in late 1994 and renamed Manga Entertainment in 1995, bought by Anchor Bay Entertainment in 2005, later bought by Lionsgate in 2016)
- Manga Entertainment UK (the main branch of "Manga Entertainment")
- Miramax (U.S., previously owned by Disney until 2010 when it was acquired by Filmyard Holdings[19])
- NuTech Digital (U.S.)
- Ponimu (Indonesia)
- Right Stuf Inc.
- Saban Brands (U.S., shuttered in 2018 after selling entertainment properties to Hasbro)
- Saban Entertainment (U.S., acquisitions either went to The Walt Disney Company or just expired, succeeded by Saban Brands)
- Shinca Entertainment (U.S.)
- Siren Visual (Australia)
- Streamline Pictures (U.S., Canada; stopped producing new anime releases in 1996, folding into Orion Pictures, which in turn folded into Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer one year later, in 1997. The Streamline brand name officially went defunct in 2002.)
- Synch-Point (U.S., a subsidiary of Broccoli, defunct when parent company Broccoli International USA shut down their operations in 2007)
- Tokyopop (U.S.) (still exists but no longer produces, distributes or licenses anime)
- U.S. Renditions (U.S., a subsidiary of Books Nippan, defunct mid-1990s)
- Urban Vision (U.S.)
"Form 10-Q". .brand.edgar-online.com. August 14, 2012. p. 9. Archived from the original on October 4, 2016. Retrieved August 28, 2016.