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History Trivia / FutureBoyConan

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*AnimeFirst: In April 1978, Creator/NoboruSakaoka published a short manga of the series in the 小学三年生 magazine.
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* DisownedAdaptation: Back when the compilation film was being made, some staff sent a VHS tape with some early animation to Alexander Key, the writer for the book the series is based on, and his family, as a courtesy. However, Key hated the show and the changes Miyazaki and the other staff made so much that he told his estate to never allow the anime to come over in America, threatening to sue anyone who ever attempted to do so. Key would later die shortly afterward. Several decades later, Creator/{{GKids}} and Anime Limited managed to license the show in North American and the UK with the Key estate's permission (the dub credits include the copyright statement for ''The Incredible Tide'', which their opening credits state as the series' inspiration.)

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* DisownedAdaptation: Back when the compilation film was being made, some staff sent a VHS tape with some early animation to Alexander Key, the writer for the book the series is based on, and his family, as a courtesy. However, Key hated the show and the changes Miyazaki and the other staff made so much that he told his estate to never allow the anime to come over in America, the UsefulNotes/UnitedStates, threatening to sue anyone who ever attempted to do so. Key would later die died shortly afterward. Several decades later, Creator/{{GKids}} and Anime Limited managed to license the show in North American UsefulNotes/NorthAmerica and the UK UsefulNotes/UnitedKingdom with the Key estate's permission (the dub credits include the copyright statement for ''The Incredible Tide'', which their opening credits state as the series' inspiration.)
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* CelebrityVoiceActor: In the Latin American Spanish dub, Dongoroth was voiced by the Peru-born American actor Luis Accinelli, who, besides having done Spanish dubs, had also worked in live-action TV, both in Spanish and English, including Univision's TV series ''Pepe Plata'' as Alfonso, and ''Film/TheHeartbreakKid'' as Manuel, and having done English voice acting in ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' as Quetzalcoatl. This dub aired on Univision in the U.S.
* DisownedAdaptation: Back when the compilation film was being made, some staff sent a VHS tape with some early animation to Alexander Key, the writer for the book the series is based on, and his family, as a courtesy. However, Key hated the show and the changes Miyazaki and the other staff made so much that he told his estate to never allow the anime to come over in America, threatening to sue anyone who ever attempted to do so. Key would later die shortly afterward. Several decades later, Creator/{{GKids}} and Anime Limited managed to license the show in North American and the UK with the Key estate's permission (The dub credits include the copyright statement for ''The Incredible Tide'', which their opening credits state as the series' inspiration.)

to:

* CelebrityVoiceActor: In the Latin American Spanish dub, Dongoroth was voiced by the Peru-born American actor Luis Accinelli, who, besides having done Spanish dubs, had also worked in live-action TV, both in Spanish and English, including Univision's TV series ''Pepe Plata'' as Alfonso, and ''Film/TheHeartbreakKid'' ''Film/{{The Heartbreak Kid|1972}}'' as Manuel, and having done English voice acting in ''WesternAnimation/TheRealGhostbusters'' as Quetzalcoatl. This dub aired on Univision in the U.S.
* DisownedAdaptation: Back when the compilation film was being made, some staff sent a VHS tape with some early animation to Alexander Key, the writer for the book the series is based on, and his family, as a courtesy. However, Key hated the show and the changes Miyazaki and the other staff made so much that he told his estate to never allow the anime to come over in America, threatening to sue anyone who ever attempted to do so. Key would later die shortly afterward. Several decades later, Creator/{{GKids}} and Anime Limited managed to license the show in North American and the UK with the Key estate's permission (The (the dub credits include the copyright statement for ''The Incredible Tide'', which their opening credits state as the series' inspiration.)

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