Crystal Triangle

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Crystal Triangle
禁断の黙示録クリスタル・トライアングル
(Kindan no Mokushiroku Kurisutaru Toraianguru)
GenreAdventure
Original video animation
Directed bySeiji Okuda
Produced byNageteru Kato
Yasuhisa Kazama
Yukio Nagasaki
Written byJunki Takegami
Music byOsamu Totsuka
Takeshi Ike
StudioStudio Live
ReleasedJuly 1, 1987
Runtime86 minutes

Crystal Triangle (Japanese: 禁断の黙示録クリスタル・トライアングル, Hepburn: Kindan no Mokushiroku Kurisutaru Toraianguru, literally "Forbidden Apocalypse Crystal Triangle") is a 1987 Japanese OVA.[1]

Plot

Koichiro Kamishiro is an assistant professor at a university who is highly regarded in the field of archaeology and travels around the world to find various antiquities as well as the "Message of God" which relates to the mysterious Hih Tribe. One day while investigating the ruins in the Middle East, he finds a strange cube-shaped stone despite running into several problems. While investigating the mysterious stone, he receives a visit from Miyabi Koto, the daughter of his former teacher. Initially, Kamishiro is not too keen on the idea, but after listening to Miyabi's story, he decides that it is well worth investigating and decides to get involved. However, he was unaware that this would lead to a major revelation involving the "Ten Commandments", a book of divine prophecy. As he along with Isao, Mina, Ginji, and Miyabi travel across Japan repeatedly running into the Japanese government, CIA, KGB, and even messengers of the Ten Commandments who will stop at no cost to get the Crystal Triangle back, he comes to a realization that the Crystal Triangle may contain the Message of God he was looking for, which is the potential 11th commandment that will prevent the Earth's destruction.

Cast

Production

Crystal Triangle was released in Japan on

character designers
in the OVA. The OVA was released in the U.S. on VHS and LaserDisc by Central Park Media under their U.S. Manga Corps label in 1993. The U.S. release has since gone out of print following Central Park Media's bankruptcy in 2009.

Note: The English dubbed version was dubbed by the Japanese voice actors.

References

  1. ^ 禁断の黙示録 クリスタル・トライアングル(1987) (in Japanese). allcinema.net. Retrieved 2013-11-17.

External links