News Reporting

“Double Decker! Doug & Kirill” is the New Tiger & Bunny Anime Project


I’m a simple person. If there’s a pun, I immediately love it.

Earlier today, Sunrise opened an official websiteย and Twitter account for their new Tiger & Bunny anime project. The site include the main cast and crew, as well as a key visual for series, which is titled Double Decker! Doug & Kirill.

We break the details down below.

Key Visual

The visual features Doug and Kirill posing in front of a background emblazoned with the duo’s names and various weapon-themed iconography.

Staff

Joji Furuta (The Seven Deadly Sins: Revival of The Commandments, ฤ“lDLIVE) was tapped to direct the project at Sunrise, with Norihiro Itagaki providing character designs. Tomohiro Suzuki (ACCA: 13-Territory Inspection Dept., One-Punch Man) is in charge of series composition.

Other confirmed crew members include:

  • Music: Yuki Hayashi
  • Original Character Design: Masakazu Katsura
  • Producer:ย Ryo Ando

Cast

The series will star the following:

  • Doug Billingam: Satoshi Mikami
  • Kirill Vlueberry: Kลhei Amasaki

Visuals for the main characters were also revealed, which you can check out below.

Left: Doug Billingam
Right: Kirill Vlueberry

Premiere

Double Decker! Doug & Kirill will air later this year.

The project was officially unveiled on January 4.

Tiger & Bunny is a 2011 anime series by Sunrise. The show was directed by Keiichi Satou (Rage of Bahamut: Genesis), and featured character designs by the team of Kenji Hayama and Masaki Yamada.

The series spawned three manga adaptations, as well as two films: Tiger & Bunny the Movie: The Beginning and Tiger & Bunny The Movie -The Rising-. Viz Media currently holds the rights to the Tiger & Bunny anime titles in North America.

Viz describes the title as:

Stern Bild City is a thriving metropolis where superheroes called “NEXTs” protect the streets, sponsors pull the strings, and a hugely popular show called Hero TV captures all of it. Veteran hero Kotetsu Kaburagi (a.k.a. Wild Tiger) and hotheaded new hero Barnaby Brooks, Jr. (nicknamed Bunny by his friends) are forced to team up not only to protect Stern Bild City, but to earn as many points on Hero TV as possible.

Joined by a diverse cast of heroes, all with different powers and answering to their own corporate sponsors, Tiger and Bunny must find a way to work together, uncover the secret of the “Ouroboros,” and earn enough points to become this year’s King of Heroes.

A live-action film adaptation of Tiger & Bunny is also in the works. All Nippon Entertainment Works (ANEW) isย co-producingย the feature with Ron Howard and Brian Grazer’s Imagine Entertainment. Howard and Grazer, as well as ANEW CEO Sandy Climan, ANEW’s Annmarie Bailey, and Bandai Namco Pictures’s Masayuki Ozaki are attached to the project as producers.

Ellen Shanman was tapped to write the feature’s script.

Source: Comic Natalie

About the author

Samantha Ferreira

Samantha Ferreira is Anime Heraldโ€™s founder and editor-in-chief. A Rhode Island native, Samantha has been an anime fan since 1992, and an active member of the anime press since 2002, when she began working as a reviewer for Anime Dream. She launched Anime Herald in 2010, and continues to oversee its operations to this day. Outside of journalism, Samantha actively studies the history of the North American anime fandom and industry, with a particular focus on the 2000s anime boom and bust. Sheโ€™s a huge fan of all things Sakura Wars, and maintains series fansite Combat Revue Review when she has free time available. When not in the Anime Herald Discord, Samantha can typically be found on Bluesky.

Anime Herald

Support Anime Herald

Anime Herald is brought to you through our Patrons and Ko-fi supporters. Consider backing us for as little as $1 a month to help us keep the site ad-free and pay a fair rate to our writers.

Patrons and backers can access several benefits, including Early Article Access, our members-only Discord, and the ability to suggest articles for our team to write on your behalf.



Latest Posts

Niche

Fan Subs that Fan Stuck: How Anime Fans Embraced Fansub Terminology

As many longtime One Piece fans will tell you, the English language release of the money-printing, global megahit series had a bumpy start. By the time Funimation got the English language rights to One Piece in 2007, the anime had been airing in Japan for nearly eight years and had recently surpassed 300 episodes. It was the […]

By Kennedy (Red Bard)