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My Life in 24 Frames per Second

A Manga Autobiography of a Japanese Animation Pioneer RintarΓ΄
By Rintaro
Brief Description
An autobiography penned in manga form from legendary anime director Rintaro, spanning his postwar childhood, his directorial debut, and the subsequent hit series and films, up to the present day. The unsung legend of Japanese anime, Rintaro. Born in 1941 in Tokyo, Rintaro joined the Japanese... Read More
Format: Hardback
$5499
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My Life in 24 Frames per Second

Book Hero Magic formatted this description to make it easier to read. While it's new and still learning, it may not be perfect - your feedback is welcome! Description

An autobiography penned in manga form from legendary anime director Rintaro, spanning his postwar childhood, his directorial debut, and the subsequent hit series and films, up to the present day.

The unsung legend of Japanese anime, Rintaro.

Born in 1941 in Tokyo, Rintaro joined the Japanese animated film company Toei Animation in 1958 at the young age of 17. Even in his humble beginnings, when he was involved in putting the finishing touches on the animated film Legend of the White Serpent, Rintaro made unfathomable waves for anime as we know it, with Hayao Miyazaki citing it as a core inspiration in becoming an animator and director rather than a manga artist.

In 1960, Rintaro transferred to Mushi Production, an animation studio established and overseen by the β€œgod of manga” Osamu Tezuka himself. He made his directorial debut with the TV anime Astro Boy (1963–66) and served as the chief director for the first-ever full-colour TV anime in Japan, Kimba the White Lion, which aired from 1965 and made peerless contributions to the development of technical Japanese anime culture during its early years.

Rintaro returned to Toei in 1977 and began work on Jetter Mars. In 1978, his directorial work on Space Pirate Captain Harlock caught the attention of the then-president of Toei Animation, leading to his appointment as the director of the theatrical version of Galaxy Express 999. Released in 1979, this film became a record-breaking hit.

After being chosen by Haruki Kadokawa to direct Genma Wars in 1983, Rintaro shifted his main activities to studio Madhouse, directing major films such as The Dagger of Kamui, Yona Yona Penguin, and the critically acclaimed Metropolis.

A unique journey that will take us from postwar Japan to the release of the film Metropolis in 2001, My Life in 24 Frames per Second is a journey filled with encounters, opportunities, endless nights, jazz, cigarettes, but above all, cinema. Follow Rintaro’s memoir as key milestones in the history of Japanese animation are unearthed in insightful clarity.

Book Details

INFORMATION

ISBN: 9781419784040

Publisher: Abrams

Format: Hardback

Date Published: 06 November 2025

Country: United States

Imprint: Kana

Illustration: Black-and-white illustrations throughout

Contributors:

  • Translated by Montana Kane
  • Illustrated by Rintaro

Audience: General / adult

DIMENSIONS

Spine width: 30.0mm

Width: 203.0mm

Height: 260.0mm

Weight: 0g

Pages: 256

About the Author

Rintaro is the pseudonym of Shigeyuki Hayashi, a distinguished anime director and one of the medium’s most formative pioneers. As a director, he oversaw Astro Boy and the first-ever full-color TV anime Kimba the White Lion. Prolific, richly layered, and continuing into the modern day, Rintaro’s directorial portfolio in anime TV and cinema is comparable to the history of anime itself. His most recent feature length film, Metropolis, was one of the first anime films to be submitted for consideration for Best Animated Film at the Academy Awards, and the late film critic Roger Ebert, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times, gave Metropolis four out of four stars, calling it β€œone of the best animated films I have ever seen.” In 2023, Rintaro directed a short film for the smaller film festival circuit, β€œManga Movie dedicated to Sadao Yamanaka of β€˜Nezumikozō Jirokichi’” about a film director who died at 28 in 1938, and who spurred the Japanese film industry’s transition from silent films to talkies.

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