![]() Whoa, the last thing I was expecting and the thing I've been most looking forward to for years now. Tokyopop released CLAMP's original manga series in two editions and Dark Horse Comics released the series in omnibus format. Geneon had also licensed the franchise's second movie, Cardcaptor Sakura: The Sealed Card, which received a new dub from Bang Zoom! Entertainment. Discotek licensed Cardcaptor Sakura: The Movie, which was previously owned by Geneon, last year and plans to release it on home video this year. ![]() A sub-license allowed Geneon Entertainment (formerly Pioneer Entertainment) to release the series on subtitle-only DVD and VHS beginning in 2000, though the company halted DVD distribution in 2007. In the monumental task of collecting all the cards, Sakura must rely on her friends and family, and decide what she finds most important in life. The series was previously licensed by Nelvana and released in English as the heavily-edited Cardcaptors. After opening the book and releasing the cards within, Sakura is tasked with collecting each of these magical cards, while trying to live the life of a normal fourth grader. At least she did, until the day she returned home from school to discover a glowing book in her father's study. Ten-year-old Sakura lives a pretty normal life with her older brother, Toya, and widowed father, Fujitaka. ![]()
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