Difference between revisions of "BlueArc Animation Studios"
(Created page with "{{Company Infobox |image = BlueArc.png |company name = Guangzhou BlueArc Culture Media Co., Ltd. ({{lang-zh|广州蓝弧文化传播有限公司}}) |aka = BlueArc Animation St...") |
(→Lawsuits) |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | {{Welcome participation}} | ||
{{Company Infobox | {{Company Infobox | ||
|image = BlueArc.png | |image = BlueArc.png | ||
Line 10: | Line 11: | ||
|related = [[Winsing Animation]] | |related = [[Winsing Animation]] | ||
|website = [http://www.bluearc.com.cn/ http://www.bluearc.com.cn/] | |website = [http://www.bluearc.com.cn/ http://www.bluearc.com.cn/] | ||
+ | |title-color = #0081FF | ||
+ | |left-column-color = #0096FF | ||
+ | |text-color = #FFF | ||
+ | |left-text-color = #FFF | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''BlueArc Animation Studios''' is a Chinese animation production company. | '''BlueArc Animation Studios''' is a Chinese animation production company. | ||
Line 17: | Line 22: | ||
*On June 4, 2007, Guangzhou Blue Arc Culture Communication Co., Ltd. was established, with "BlueArc" as its official abbreviation. | *On June 4, 2007, Guangzhou Blue Arc Culture Communication Co., Ltd. was established, with "BlueArc" as its official abbreviation. | ||
*In 2009, BlueArc and Xingjie Toys released ''[[RoboWarriors: Adventures of Lolo]]'', which became a famous work for BlueArc, but due to the competition between BlueArc and Xingjie for the dominance of the ''RoboWarriors'' series, the cooperation between the two parties broke down, and the dominance of the ''RoboWarriors'' series belonged to Xingjie Toys. | *In 2009, BlueArc and Xingjie Toys released ''[[RoboWarriors: Adventures of Lolo]]'', which became a famous work for BlueArc, but due to the competition between BlueArc and Xingjie for the dominance of the ''RoboWarriors'' series, the cooperation between the two parties broke down, and the dominance of the ''RoboWarriors'' series belonged to Xingjie Toys. | ||
− | *In 2010, BlueArc accepted the investment of HiWay Capital, and cooperated with Alpha Animation to launch the ''[[Fruity Robo]]'' series, which became a new series after ''RoboWarriors'' | + | *In 2010, BlueArc accepted the investment of HiWay Capital, and cooperated with Alpha Animation to launch the ''[[Fruity Robo]]'' series, which became a new series after ''RoboWarriors''. |
− | *In 2012, [[ | + | *In 2012, [[Alpha Animation]] bought BlueArc, during which the series ''[[RevEvolution]]'' was released, which was the peak period of BlueArc. |
*On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media bought BlueArc. | *On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media bought BlueArc. | ||
− | *On December 14, 2016, Enlight Media transferred all the shares held by Blue Arc Culture, and Tommy Wang became the largest shareholder again. | + | *On December 14, 2016, Enlight Media transferred all the shares held by Blue Arc Culture, and Tommy Wang became the largest shareholder again. |
== Lawsuits == | == Lawsuits == | ||
;Enlight Media | ;Enlight Media | ||
* On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media announced that it planned to acquire a 50.8% stake in BlueArc for about 200 million yuan. Due to BlueArc's continuous losses at this time, fans and investors were worried. | * On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media announced that it planned to acquire a 50.8% stake in BlueArc for about 200 million yuan. Due to BlueArc's continuous losses at this time, fans and investors were worried. | ||
− | * On December 14, 2016, Enlight transferred all the shares of BlueArc | + | * On December 14, 2016, Enlight transferred all the shares of BlueArc held by it for 240 million yuan. The founder Tommy Wang became the largest shareholder with 40% of the shares. Many people suspect that this is related to the box office disaster of the film "Fruit Escape" produced in 2016, so that Tommy Wang finally spent a lot of money to buy back the shares from Enlight. |
− | ;BlueArc Ultraman | + | ;BlueArc Ultraman copyright controversy |
{{main|BlueArc Ultraman copyright controversy}} | {{main|BlueArc Ultraman copyright controversy}} | ||
− | * From 2017 to 2019, | + | * From 2017 to 2019, BlueArc has produced a number of works that combine the worldview of its own ''Dragon Force'' franchise and Tsuburaya's ''Ultraman'' series (collectively referred to as ''Dragon Force: Ultraman''). The OOC of the original work was greatly controversial, and it was also protested from Tsuburaya. On July 8, 2020, Tsuburaya won the case. |
;Xingjie and Alpha lawsuit | ;Xingjie and Alpha lawsuit |
Latest revision as of 20:01, 9 March 2022
Moegirlpedia would welcome your assistance in improving this article☆Kira~
As you read this article, you're welcome to participate in editing this page. Before editing, please read the wiki quickstart, editing guidelines and retrieve relevant information. We wish you a good time on Moegirlpedia. |
BlueArc Animation Studios | |
Company name | Guangzhou BlueArc Culture Media Co., Ltd. (Chinese: 广州蓝弧文化传播有限公司) |
Type | Media production company |
Headquarters | 19th Floor, No. 128, Fengyuan Road, Liwan District, Guangzhou |
Parent | |
Main works | RevEvolution series Fruity Robo Dragon Force series |
Key people | Tommy Wang |
Related Companies | Winsing Animation |
Website | http://www.bluearc.com.cn/ |
BlueArc Animation Studios is a Chinese animation production company.
History
- It was founded in 2003 by Tommy Wang.
- On June 4, 2007, Guangzhou Blue Arc Culture Communication Co., Ltd. was established, with "BlueArc" as its official abbreviation.
- In 2009, BlueArc and Xingjie Toys released RoboWarriors: Adventures of Lolo, which became a famous work for BlueArc, but due to the competition between BlueArc and Xingjie for the dominance of the RoboWarriors series, the cooperation between the two parties broke down, and the dominance of the RoboWarriors series belonged to Xingjie Toys.
- In 2010, BlueArc accepted the investment of HiWay Capital, and cooperated with Alpha Animation to launch the Fruity Robo series, which became a new series after RoboWarriors.
- In 2012, Alpha Animation bought BlueArc, during which the series RevEvolution was released, which was the peak period of BlueArc.
- On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media bought BlueArc.
- On December 14, 2016, Enlight Media transferred all the shares held by Blue Arc Culture, and Tommy Wang became the largest shareholder again.
Lawsuits
- Enlight Media
- On June 17, 2014, Enlight Media announced that it planned to acquire a 50.8% stake in BlueArc for about 200 million yuan. Due to BlueArc's continuous losses at this time, fans and investors were worried.
- On December 14, 2016, Enlight transferred all the shares of BlueArc held by it for 240 million yuan. The founder Tommy Wang became the largest shareholder with 40% of the shares. Many people suspect that this is related to the box office disaster of the film "Fruit Escape" produced in 2016, so that Tommy Wang finally spent a lot of money to buy back the shares from Enlight.
- BlueArc Ultraman copyright controversy
- Main article: BlueArc Ultraman copyright controversy
- From 2017 to 2019, BlueArc has produced a number of works that combine the worldview of its own Dragon Force franchise and Tsuburaya's Ultraman series (collectively referred to as Dragon Force: Ultraman). The OOC of the original work was greatly controversial, and it was also protested from Tsuburaya. On July 8, 2020, Tsuburaya won the case.
- Xingjie and Alpha lawsuit
- On April 20, 2018, Xingjie Toys sued BlueArc for copyright infringement of the remake of RoboWarriors' on the animation Martial Mecha Saga and Xingjie Toys won the lawsuit.
- On May 12, 2018, Alpha Entertainment sued BlueArc for violating the cooperation agreement and cooperating with a third party in the fourth part of Fruity Robo, and Alpha won the lawsuit.
Works
TV series
- GG Bond seasons 1 to 4 (2004-2009)
- RoboWarriors: Adventures of Lolo (2009)
- Fruity Robo series (2009-2017)
- The Dibidogs (2010)
- RevEvolution series (2010-2011)
- Dragon Force (2012)
- Kibaoh Klashers (2012)
- Martial Mecha Saga (2013)
Films
- Dragon Force Japanese film (2013)
- Fantasy Westward Journey (2017)
- Dragon Force: So Long Ultraman (2017)
- Dragon Force: Rise of Ultraman (2019)
Tokusatsu
- Happy Q-Bot (2012-2018)
- Super Orcs (2021)
|