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Black Clover season 1

Season of television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Black Clover season 1
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The first season of the Black Clover anime television series was directed by Tatsuya Yoshihara and produced by Pierrot.[1] The season adapts the first nine volumes (chapters 1–75) of Yūki Tabata's manga series of the same name, with the exception of episodes 3 and 13 (which feature anime original storylines) and episode 29 (recap). It follows the first adventures of Asta and the Black Bulls in the Clover Kingdom. After Asta receives a grimoire and joins the Black Bulls to become the new Wizard King, he explores a dungeon and meets Mars, a magic knight from the Diamond Kingdom. Shortly afterwards, Asta is captured during a zombie invasion of the capital by a group of rogue mages who are working for the Eye of the Midnight Sun squad (also known as the Midnight Sun). After Asta is rescued, he teams up with a fellow Black Bull and later on his captain to battle some child kidnappers. Later on, the Black Bulls travel to the Underwater Temple and meet a series of challenges to find a magic stone (which the Eyes is also searching for).

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The season initially ran from October 3, 2017, to September 25, 2018, on TV Tokyo in Japan;[2][3] Avex Pictures released it on DVD and Blu-ray in five compilations (each containing nine to 11 episodes) between February 23, 2018, and January 25, 2019.[4][5] Crunchyroll and Funimation licensed the series for an English-language release, with Crunchyroll simulcasting the series worldwide[3] and Funimation producing a North American Simuldub.[6][7] Funimation's adaptation aired from December 2, 2017, through January 6, 2019, on Adult Swim's Toonami programming block,[8] and they released the first DVD and Blu-ray compilations on August 7, 2018.[9]

The first season uses eight pieces of theme music: four opening and four closing themes. The first opening and closing themes, which are used for the first 13 episodes, are "Distant Future" (ハルカミライ, Haruka Mirai) performed by Kankaku Piero, and "Blue Flame" (蒼い炎, Aoi Honō) performed by Itowokashi.[10][11] From episodes 14 to 27, the opening and closing themes are "Paint It Black" performed by Bish, and "Amazing Dreams" performed by Swanky Dank.[12][13] From episodes 28 to 39, the opening and closing themes are "Black Rover" performed by Vickeblanka, and "Black to the Dreamlight" performed by Empire (now known as ExWhyZ).[14][15] For the remainder of the season, the opening and closing themes are "Guess Who Is Back" performed by Koda Kumi, and "Four" performed by Faky.[16][17] Megumi Han sang "Four" as her character, Kahono, in episode 50.[18][19]

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Episodes

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Home media release

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Japanese

In Japan, Avex Pictures released the season on DVD and Blu-ray in five "chapter" volumes. The first volume was released on February 23, 2018,[4] and the fifth was released on January 29, 2019.[5]

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English

In North America, Crunchyroll and Funimation released the season in five volumes. The first volume was released on August 7, 2018,[9] and the fifth volume was released on July 2, 2019.[32] The volumes are available in standard Blu-ray and DVD combination sets, and volumes three and five are also available in limited edition sets.[33] In the United Kingdom and Ireland, Sony Pictures UK released the first volume in DVD and Blu-ray combination sets on August 20, 2018;[34] Manga Entertainment is handling subsequent releases.[35] In Australasia, Universal Sony released the first part of the series on DVD on August 15, 2018,[36] and Madman Entertainment released the rest of the season, with part two released on April 3, 2019.[37]

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Notes

  1. English translated titles with notes next to them denote alternative titles used by Funimation before its merger into Crunchyroll in April 2024
  2. Production staff information is taken from the ending credits of each episode
  3. Labelled as "scenario" in credits
  4. Funimation's English translation for episode 2 was "A Young Man's Vow"
  5. Funimation's English translation for episode 3 was "To the Royal Capital!"
  6. Adult Swim showed a Cowboy Bebop marathon on December 23–24, 2017[21] and a Dragon Ball Super marathon on December 30–31, 2017[22]
  7. Funimation's English translation for episode 5 was "The Road to the Wizard King"
  8. Funimation's English translation for episode 7 was "Another New Member"
  9. Funimation's English translation for episode 8 was "Go! Go! My First Mission"
  10. Funimation's English translation for episode 10 was "Guardians"
  11. Funimation's English translation for episode 11 was "What Happened One Day in the Castle Town"
  12. Due to special scheduling, Black Clover moved down to 1:00 a.m. EDT/PDT beginning on the night of April 7–8, 2018, which is effectively Sunday[23]
  13. Black Clover moved a half-hour (to 1:30 a.m. EDT/PDT, switching time slots with Hunter × Hunter) on the night of May 5–6, 2018[24]
  14. Funimation's English translation for episode 23 was "The King of the Crimson Lions"
  15. Adult Swim showed a FLCL marathon on May 26–27, 2018[25]
  16. Adult Swim showed a My Hero Academia marathon on September 1–2, 2018[26]
  17. Adult Swim showed an Attack on Titan marathon on November 17–18, 2018[27]
  18. Adult Swim showed a Dragon Ball Super marathon on December 22–23, 2018 and a Boruto: Naruto Next Generations marathon on December 29–30, 2018[28]

References

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