. . . "Escaflowne(\u30A8\u30B9\u30AB\u30D5\u30ED\u30FC\u30CDEsukafur\u014Dne) is an anime film produced by Sunrise and animated by Studio BONES. Directed by Kazuki Akane, the film is a re-telling of the twenty-six episode anime television series The Vision of Escaflowne. While the plot of the film has some similar elements to the original television series, the characters differ in varying degrees from the television counterparts, with many completely redesigned and bearing little resemblance to their original counterparts. The world of Gaea has a more Asian design than the heavily European influenced television series."@en . . . . . . . "Japanese"@en . . . "94060.0"^^ . . "2000-06-24"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "Escaflowne"@en . . "Japan"@en . "Escaflowne (film)"@en . . . . "5880.0"^^ . . . . . "--04-25"^^ . . "Escaflowne(\u30A8\u30B9\u30AB\u30D5\u30ED\u30FC\u30CDEsukafur\u014Dne) is an anime film produced by Sunrise and animated by Studio BONES. Directed by Kazuki Akane, the film is a re-telling of the twenty-six episode anime television series The Vision of Escaflowne. While the plot of the film has some similar elements to the original television series, the characters differ in varying degrees from the television counterparts, with many completely redesigned and bearing little resemblance to their original counterparts. The world of Gaea has a more Asian design than the heavily European influenced television series. The film is licensed for Region 1 release by Bandai Entertainment, which gave the film a theatrical release on January 25, 2002. A CD soundtrack and two drama CDs have also been released in Japan by Victor Entertainment in relation to the series."@en . "Escaflowne"@en . "270933"^^ . . .