Category Archives: Manga Anime

We Are Aliens Anime Film Lands Singapore Release via Shaw Organisation

Singapore is getting an unusually special theatrical anime release this year. We Are Aliens (ワレワレハウチュウジン) — a Japanese-French co-production that made its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival’s Directors’ Fortnight in May 2026 — has confirmed Shaw Organisation as its Singapore distributor, bringing one of the animation festival circuit’s most talked-about titles of the year to local screens.

We Are Aliens – Anime Film Video | open in 2026 — via LPE on YouTube

What Is We Are Aliens?

Directed by Kōhei Kadowaki and co-produced by Japanese indie label NOTHING NEW and Paris-based Miyu Productions, We Are Aliens is a quietly intimate coming-of-age drama spanning nearly three decades. The story follows two boys — Tsubasa and Gyotaro — in a small Japanese town whose childhood friendship is fractured by a single act of jealousy and misunderstanding. The film then jumps forward in time, tracking them as adults reckoning with what that break cost them.

A scene from We Are Aliens showing the two childhood friends
Image courtesy of NOTHING NEW / Miyu Productions

Kadowaki — whose animation credits include YOASOBI’s acclaimed “A Gentle Comet” music video — serves as writer, director, storyboarder, and editor on the film, giving it a genuinely singular authorial voice. The animation style blends rotoscoped movement with hand-drawn expressiveness, aiming for a grounded, lived-in quality rather than the visual bombast of mainstream releases. Composer Yaffle, closely associated with YOASOBI’s sound, provides the score, with Ryōta Bandō and Amane Okayama leading the adult voice cast.

From Cannes to Annecy: The Festival Run

The film’s world premiere was at Cannes’ Directors’ Fortnight — historically one of the most director-focused sidebars of the festival, with a track record of championing unconventional debuts. From there it moved to the Annecy International Animation Film Festival in competition, one of the most prestigious animation showcases in the world. Both selections are unusual for a debut feature built on crowdfunding and indie production, and they put We Are Aliens firmly on the path that tends to produce quiet word-of-mouth favourites.

We Are Aliens - film still showing an emotional scene between the two leads
Image courtesy of NOTHING NEW / Miyu Productions

The project was funded via MotionGallery, Japan’s creative crowdfunding platform, where it surpassed its 8 million yen goal to raise 9.6 million yen — real community investment in a project that came almost entirely from outside the mainstream anime production system. International sales are handled by Charades, a Paris-based sales agent with a recent track record of arthouse breakouts from Asia.

Singapore and the Southeast Asia Release

The regional distribution announcement, confirmed on 23 June 2026, covers multiple Asian markets at once: Shaw Organisation holds Singapore, Hooray Films has Taiwan, Intercontinental Film Distributors covers Hong Kong, Sahamongkol Film has Thailand, and Green Narae Media handles South Korea. France is covered domestically by Dulac Distribution.

We Are Aliens - film still from the anime feature
Image courtesy of NOTHING NEW / Miyu Productions

A specific Singapore theatrical release date has not yet been confirmed — Shaw Organisation holds the rights, but the calendar slot is still to be announced. Given the film’s arthouse profile, expect a limited-screen release rather than a wide multiplex run; keep an eye on Shaw Theatres’ upcoming schedule once the Japan run concludes. We’ll update when a Singapore date is locked in.

If you follow Cannes, love character-driven anime that puts story over spectacle, or simply want to catch something genuinely unusual on a local screen before the word-of-mouth catches up with it, this is a date to keep open. For more anime films and series we’re tracking for Singapore audiences, check our Manga Anime section.

One Piece: Heroines Anime Special — New Trailer Out Now

Toei Animation has dropped a brand-new trailer for One Piece: Heroines, the upcoming TV anime special spotlighting the women of the One Piece world. The special airs on Fuji TV on 5 July 2026, and the trailer is out now — watch it below.

What Is One Piece: Heroines?

One Piece: Heroines is a standalone single-episode TV special based on the source novel by Jun Esaka, with Nami taking centre stage as the protagonist. The special follows the Straw Hat navigator on an original adventure, with Nico Robin also making an appearance.

One Piece Heroines promotional visual featuring Nami and Robin

Guest Cast and Theme Song

The special brings in two high-profile guest voice actors:

  • Maaya Sakamoto as Miucha
  • Takehito Koyasu as Lubun

The theme song is “Blue Shining Star”, performed by AiNA THE END.

One Piece Heroines teaser visual

Can Singapore Fans Watch It?

International streaming details are yet to be announced. The special will premiere on Fuji TV in Japan on 5 July 2026. Fans outside Japan should watch for official announcements from Toei’s international distribution partners.

If you want to catch up on the manga in the meantime, Viz Media has English volumes available now.

We’ll update this post if a streaming platform is confirmed for Southeast Asia. Keep an eye on our other anime news for the latest.

Persona Turns 30 — Global Anniversary Site Live and Lawson Collab Kicks Off 30 June in Japan

The Persona series turns 30 this September — and Atlus is celebrating with a global anniversary site and a Japan-exclusive Lawson convenience store collaboration that kicks off on 30 June 2026. For Singapore fans of the franchise, this is the milestone year to watch.

Celebrating 30 years of Persona | Creators Answer — via SEGA on YouTube

Thirty Years of Shadows and Masks

The original Revelations: Persona (女神異聞録ペルソナ) launched in Japan on 30 September 1996 on the original PlayStation. Three decades on, the franchise has grown into one of JRPG’s most beloved series, spanning six mainline titles, arena fighters, dancing games, tactical spin-offs, and anime adaptations. Persona 5 Royal remains a perennial bestseller in Singapore, and the series enjoys one of the most devoted fanbases in the region.

Atlus has opened the global 30th anniversary hub at asia.sega.com/p30th/en/, fully localised in Japanese, English, Simplified and Traditional Chinese, Korean, and Thai — a clear signal that the celebration is aimed squarely at Persona’s massive Southeast Asian audience. The site chronicles the series’ history and will be updated as new anniversary content is confirmed.

Lawson Collab — Eight Protagonists, One Convenience Store

The freshest piece of news: a Japan-wide collaboration with Lawson convenience stores launches 30 June 2026. Eight iconic protagonists, from the silent P1 hero all the way through to Ren Amamiya (Joker) of Persona 5, are being spotlighted with dedicated artwork. Exclusive merchandise — including Karaage-kun mini plush keychains themed after the games’ characters — will be on sale in Lawson branches nationwide.

In a distinctly Japanese touch, Lawson stores will also run in-store announcements voiced by Miyuki Sawashiro, the actress behind the beloved Velvet Room attendant Elizabeth since Persona 3. Even buying a convenience store rice ball is going to feel a little special for fans this summer.

Persona series 30th anniversary key art featuring all protagonists
Image courtesy of Atlus

What’s Coming Next?

The anniversary site has been carefully worded, with Video Games Chronicle noting that it “quietly mentions the next chapter for the series.” Atlus has not announced anything specific yet, but the franchise’s history of building anticipation slowly ahead of major reveals has fans watching every update closely.

What is confirmed: Persona 4 Revival is in development, bringing a modern reimagining of the beloved Inaba mystery to current-generation hardware. Atlus has a habit of timing big reveals around anniversary milestones — September 30, 2026 would be a very on-brand moment for a surprise.

For Singapore Fans: What You Can Actually Get

The Lawson collaboration is Japan-only, meaning the merch won’t appear on local shelves. That said, proxy shipping services and Japan-based forwarding agents (popular among Singapore collectors for limited JP goods) make it accessible for the motivated fan. The global anniversary site is open to everyone, and any digital announcements Atlus makes will land worldwide simultaneously.

If you have been sitting on the fence about the Persona series, the 30th anniversary is as good an entry point as any — check out our gaming news section for the latest on the franchise.

Last words

Whether you have been with Persona since the PS1 days or discovered it through Persona 5 Royal, this September marks something genuinely special. Atlus has earned its anniversary. Keep an eye on GameTrader for when the next shoe drops — and it will drop soon.

Hunter x Hunter Is Back — Chapter 411 Arrives 29 June on Manga Plus

After one of manga’s most famous hiatuses, Yoshihiro Togashi’s Hunter x Hunter is officially returning this Sunday. Chapter 411 arrives in Weekly Shonen Jump Issue #31 on 29 June, with simultaneous free access on Manga Plus for Singapore and international readers. The Succession War is about to get a lot more complicated.

Hunter x Hunter manga promotional artwork
Image courtesy of Yoshihiro Togashi / Shueisha

Where the Story Left Off

The Succession War has been unravelling in spectacular fashion aboard the Black Whale cruise ship. Prince Benjamin is desperately fighting to survive after being poisoned, while the declaration of martial law on Tier 1 has completely changed the power dynamics among the royal families. In the lower tiers of the ship, the Phantom Troupe is hunting Hisoka, while the growing influence of Morena and the Heil-Ly Family has introduced one of the arc’s most unpredictable factions. Borksen’s shocking decision to join the Heil-Ly as a double agent only added another layer of tension to an already chaotic situation.

With so many plot threads running at once, Screen Rant’s coverage of the return puts it well: this comeback could not be arriving at a better time.

Why This Hiatus Return Feels Different

Togashi’s hiatuses are legendary — his chronic back problems have disrupted Hunter x Hunter’s publication more times than most fans care to count. But this time around, there is genuine reason for optimism. Over the past several months, Togashi has been sharing regular progress updates, and according to those posts, he has already finished inking through Chapter 431 — giving the series a healthy buffer of 20-plus completed chapters before serialisation even resumes. That kind of stockpile is unprecedented for this series.

His health also appears to be improving. A recent Instagram post featuring him alongside his wife, manga legend Naoko Takeuchi (creator of Sailor Moon), showed Togashi looking well and relaxed. Combined with the growing backlog of finished chapters, this comeback feels more structurally stable than anything Hunter x Hunter fans have seen in years.

Volume 39: Negotiation — Out 3 July

Alongside the serialisation return, Shueisha is releasing Volume 39, collecting Chapters 401 to 410 under the title Negotiation. It arrives in Japan on 3 July 2026 — the first new physical volume of Hunter x Hunter in 22 months. International readers who prefer print editions will need to wait for their regional releases, but it is a significant milestone regardless.

How to Read in Singapore This Sunday

Singapore fans have a clean, legal, free option right at their fingertips. Manga Plus by Shueisha makes the three most recent chapters of Hunter x Hunter available at no charge, with a premium subscription option for the full archive. Chapter 411 will appear on Manga Plus the moment it goes live on 29 June. The app is available on iOS and Android, or via browser — no VPN required.

If you want to catch up first, Chapters 409 and 410 are already sitting there waiting for you on the platform right now.

Last Words

For Singapore manga readers, the message is simple: bookmark Manga Plus, catch up on the last two chapters before Sunday, and settle in for what could finally be a sustained run of new Hunter x Hunter. The Succession War has been building towards something monumental, and with a 20-chapter buffer already in the bank, there’s reason to believe Togashi is going to see it through. We’ll be watching closely — check our manga and anime coverage for updates as the arc develops.

THE ONE PIECE Gets First Episode Artwork — WIT Studio’s Remake Arrives on Netflix in February 2027

The One Piece anime remake just revealed its first episode artwork at the world’s biggest animation festival — and it has Singapore fans counting down to February 2027 on Netflix.

THE ONE PIECE | Special Announcement — via Netflix Anime on YouTube

Romance Dawn — The First Episode Gets Its Official Artwork

At the Annecy International Animation Film Festival this week, Netflix unveiled the first episode artwork for THE ONE PIECE — the anime remake produced by WIT Studio. The art covers Episode 1, which shares its title with the manga’s legendary opening chapter: “Romance Dawn.”

Formatted like a wanted poster, the image shows a grinning Monkey D. Luffy triumphantly setting sail for the very first time. It’s both a nod to the wanted-poster culture woven throughout the One Piece world and a clean visual statement of intent: this remake honours the spirit of the original, as covered by Anime News Network.

THE ONE PIECE WIT Studio official production artwork featuring characters from the East Blue Saga
Image courtesy of Netflix / WIT Studio

What Is THE ONE PIECE, and Why Does It Matter?

THE ONE PIECE is not a sequel or a spin-off — it is a complete retelling of Eiichiro Oda’s iconic manga, starting from Chapter 1, produced by WIT Studio. If that name rings a bell, it should: WIT Studio delivered Attack on Titan Seasons 1 through 3 and co-produced Spy x Family. Now the studio is bringing that same level of craft to the East Blue Saga.

Season 1 adapts the first 50 chapters of the manga, taking Luffy from his childhood in Foosha Village all the way to his encounter with the sharp-tongued sous-chef Sanji at the floating restaurant Baratie. That’s seven episodes — all dropping simultaneously on Netflix — with a combined runtime of around 300 minutes.

For Singapore fans who have followed the original Toei Animation series for years or decades, this is a chance to revisit one of fiction’s most beloved opening arcs with production values that match a contemporary streaming blockbuster. Netflix is available here, so no workarounds needed when the series launches in February 2027.

The Creative Team

Masashi Koizuka directs, with Taku Kishimoto on series composition. Character design and chief animation director duties are shared by Kyoji Asano and Takatoshi Honda — and the team has been open about how seriously they approached capturing Oda’s unmistakable style.

“We repeatedly traced Oda-sensei’s art,” Asano told CBR. “After two full months of thoroughly studying his style, we finally achieved a level of quality that even the director was very satisfied with.”

The production is a collaboration between WIT Studio, Shueisha, Fuji Television Network, and Toei Animation — a consortium that suggests Oda has had a close hand in overseeing the adaptation, as he has with other One Piece projects.

Last words

Singapore’s One Piece fandom is one of the most passionate in the region, and a WIT Studio remake that has spent months tracing Oda-sensei’s linework is a genuinely exciting prospect. February 2027 is still several months away, but the Annecy first-episode artwork is a clear signal that this ship is on course — and when it sails, it looks set to be unmissable. Mark your Netflix calendar now, and catch up on our other anime coverage in the meantime.

Fool Night Anime Revealed — Sunrise × SHAFT’s First Collab Streams on Netflix in 2026

The wait is over. At the Annecy International Animation Film Festival 2026, the Sunrise × SHAFT anime project that has had the fandom buzzing for a week finally has a name: Fool Night. The dark sci-fi thriller will stream exclusively worldwide on Netflix later this year — yes, including Singapore.

「Fool Night」 Teaser PV — via Bandai Namco Film Works on YouTube

What Is Fool Night?

Based on the award-winning manga by Kasumi Yasuda, Fool Night is set in a bleak future where thick clouds permanently block the sun, plunging Earth into endless darkness. With plant life wiped out and oxygen depleting, humanity devised a drastic solution: transfloration, a process that converts dying humans into plant-like organisms to restore the oxygen supply.

At the centre of the story is Toshiro Kamiya, a young man who undergoes transfloration and discovers an unexpected side effect — he can hear plants. That ability sets him on a path to bridge the silence between humans and those who have transformed, a drama of identity, grief, and survival sitting somewhere between hard science fiction and quiet horror.

Fool Night anime key visual — Sunrise × SHAFT
Image courtesy of Fool Night Anime Production Committee / Bandai Namco Film Works

Two Studios. One Historic First.

This announcement caps a genuine historic milestone: Sunrise and SHAFT have never collaborated on an anime before. Sunrise’s legacy spans Cowboy Bebop, Code Geass, and the entire Gundam franchise; SHAFT built its reputation on the kinetic, visually daring style of Puella Magi Madoka Magica and the Monogatari series. Pairing them on a single dark, atmospheric sci-fi property is a bold creative bet — and the kind that tends to pay off.

Meet the Team Behind It

The production staff is full of names anime fans will recognise:

  • Director: Atsuyuki Yukawa — previously an episode director on Suzume no Tojimari; Fool Night marks his debut as a chief series director
  • Series Composition: Jin Tanaka — the writer behind Oshi no Ko
  • Character Design: Robert Sato
  • Sound Director: Yota Tsuruoka — credits include A Silent Voice (Koe no Katachi)
  • Music: Tatsuya Kato — the composer behind the acclaimed Dr. STONE score
Fool Night anime — Toshiro Kamiya and Yomiko Horai character visual
Image courtesy of Fool Night Anime Production Committee / Bandai Namco Film Works

The lead voice cast is equally well-matched. Koki Uchiyama — known to many as Tomura Shigaraki in My Hero Academia — voices protagonist Toshiro Kamiya. Minako Kotobuki (Tsumugi in K-On!) plays Yomiko Horai, Toshiro’s childhood friend.

An Award-Winning Manga with a Global Following

Yasuda’s manga is no newcomer to acclaim. Serialised in Shogakukan’s Big Comic Superior since November 2020, it currently runs to 12 volumes. It ranked in Kono Manga ga Sugoi! 2023 — Japan’s reader-voted best manga guide — and took home the Japan Expo DARUMA Award 2023 for Best Suspense in France, signalling international appetite long before any anime was confirmed. Singapore and SEA readers can pick up the English-language volumes through Shogakukan Asia.

Netflix Streams Worldwide — Singapore Included

Netflix confirmed a worldwide exclusive for Fool Night in 2026. No specific episode count or premiere date beyond “2026” was given at Annecy, so keep an eye on the Netflix Singapore page for updates. Given how quickly Netflix rolls out its anime titles globally, expect close-to-simultaneous access for Singapore fans when the series premieres.

Last Words

Midnight in Singapore, and the anime news cycle just woke up. Fool Night checks every box for a prestige Netflix anime: an acclaimed manga source, a career-defining staff roster, and two studios whose visual signatures are so distinct that their collision alone is worth watching. Singapore fans who want to get ahead of the curve can dive into the English manga through Shogakukan Asia now. We will be covering this one closely as a premiere date firms up. For more anime news, check out our Manga Anime coverage.

Higurashi: When They Cry Is Getting a New TV Anime — Studio DEEN and Full Cast Return

Twenty years after it first made audiences afraid of the sound of cicadas, Higurashi: When They Cry is getting a brand-new TV anime — with the same studio and every principal voice actor from the original run.

Kadokawa made the announcement on 21 June 2026 during a live-streamed special commemorating the 20th anniversary of the franchise’s first anime adaptation. The tagline landed with appropriate weight: “Okaeri, minna” — welcome back, everyone.

Higurashi: When They Cry – New | Official Trailer — via Crunchyroll Dubs on YouTube

What Was Announced

The green-lit production is a new television anime based on Ryukishi07 and 07th Expansion’s original sound novel franchise. Studio DEEN — which animated both the 2006 and 2007 anime seasons, as well as the GOU (2020) and SOTSU (2021) sequels — returns to handle animation. No premiere date has been confirmed, and details on episode count or cour length have not been disclosed.

A New Story — Not a Remake

This is not a retelling of Onikakushi or any existing arc. According to coverage from Gematsu and Final Weapon, the new series will tell an entirely original story centred on Keiichi Maebara and the club members confronting a new tragedy in Hinamizawa. For fans who have worked through the full original arcs and the GOU/SOTSU chapters, this positions the new entry as fresh ground rather than another lap around familiar material.

The Full Cast Is Back

Higurashi When They Cry New TV Anime 2026 Key Visual with the main cast
Image courtesy of Kadokawa / Studio DEEN

All five principal voice actors are confirmed to reprise their roles:

  • Soichiro Hoshi as Keiichi Maebara
  • Mai Nakahara as Rena Ryugu
  • Satsuki Yukino as Mion and Shion Sonozaki
  • Mika Kanai as Satoko Hojo
  • Yukari Tamura as Rika Furude

The teaser PV already features newly recorded dialogue from the cast, which signals the production is more than a holding announcement.

Why Singapore Anime Fans Should Pay Attention

Higurashi carries genuine cult status in Singapore — the visual novel era built a dedicated community, and the anime adaptations have streamed here via Crunchyroll, which holds the full catalogue including GOU and SOTSU. The previous modern entries (GOU debuted October 2020, SOTSU in July 2021) both streamed with same-week subtitles, and Singapore fans had full timely access. When a premiere window for this new series is announced, the same access is expected. In the meantime, the Crunchyroll library is worth revisiting if you have not seen the full run — GOU and SOTSU in particular recontextualise the original arcs in ways that make re-watching them very worthwhile before the new chapter arrives.

Last Words

The specifics — director, composer, episode count, premiere season — are all still to come. But the bones are right: a trusted studio, the complete original cast, and a story that is not constrained by having to adapt pre-existing material. For fans of horror, mystery, and the slow-burn dread Higurashi does better than almost anything else in the genre, the wait just got a lot more interesting. Stay tuned to the Manga Anime section for updates as production details drop.

Liar Game Part 2 Drops 6 July — New Cast, New Theme Songs

The psychological mind-game thriller is back. Liar Game — MADHOUSE’s long-awaited anime adaptation of Shinobu Kaitani’s acclaimed manga — kicks off its second cour (Part 2) on 6 July 2026, picking up directly from the tense finale of Part 1. And it’s arriving with a sizeable new cast, a fresh key visual, and two brand-new theme songs to mark the escalation.

LIAR GAME – Official Trailer 2 | July 2026 (SUB) — via It’s Anime powered by REMOW on YouTube

What Is Liar Game?

Based on Shinobu Kaitani’s manga that ran in Weekly Young Jump from 2005 to 2015, Liar Game is a psychological thriller built around high-stakes deception. Nao Kanzaki (voiced by Saya Hitomi) is an honest, almost pathologically trustworthy college student who receives 100 million yen out of nowhere and a letter inducting her into the “Liar Game” — a secret competition where players are expected to cheat, steal, and psychologically destroy each other to come out on top. The loser walks away in crushing debt.

Out of her depth, Nao enlists the help of Shinichi Akiyama (Takeo Otsuka), a genius ex-con artist who sees through every opponent’s strategy. Together they try to play a game built for liars without becoming liars themselves. Part 1 launched in April 2026 and has been simulcasting on Crunchyroll worldwide, including Singapore, under the creative direction of chief director Yuzo Sato and director Asami Kawano at MADHOUSE.

What’s New in Liar Game Part 2

The announcement, which landed on 22 June, reveals a substantial cast expansion for Part 2. Headlining the new additions is Natsuki Hanae — known to Singapore fans as the voice of Tanjiro in Demon Slayer — who joins as Norihiko Yokoyan. Readers of the original manga will know exactly why this casting matters: the Yokoya arc is a turning point in the competition where the games get considerably crueller.

Liar Game anime Part 2 new character visuals
Image courtesy of MADHOUSE / Liar Game Production Committee

The full new cast confirmed for Part 2 also includes Junya Hirano as Kota Akagi, Tomohiro Yamaguchi as Kenji Ikezoe, Kengo Tsujii as Yusuke Shibayama, Reigo Yamaguchi as Tajimakaru, Ryumaru Tachibana as Akira Tsumura, Seiyu Fujiwara as Hiroshi Hasegawa, Kikunosuke Toya as Makoto Muratama, and Shinya Takahashi as Tatsuji Wada — a full table of new opponents for Nao and Akiyama to navigate.

New Theme Songs

Part 2 swaps in an entirely new pair of theme songs. The opening theme is “All in” by Kroi, a five-piece Japanese rock band whose tightly wound, high-tension sound suits a show about bluffing your way through impossible odds. The ending theme is “Tarinai” by muque, a three-piece act whose introspective style provides a counterweight to the relentless psychological pressure of the episodes. Part 1 had set a high bar with “Bubble” by Yorushika and “Asahi” by Lucky Kilimanjaro — Part 2 is clearly not taking the music lightly either.

Where to Watch in Singapore

Liar Game Part 2 continues the same simulcast arrangement as Part 1: Crunchyroll is streaming the series globally, Singapore included. New episodes drop in line with the Japanese broadcast schedule from 6 July. If you haven’t started yet, all of Part 1 is available on Crunchyroll now — plenty of time to binge before Part 2 arrives.

Liar Game is produced by MADHOUSE, the studio behind Death Note, No Game No Life, and Hunter x Hunter (2011), so the pedigree for adapting high-stakes psychological material is very much there.

Last words

If Kakegurui’s casino mind games or Kaiji’s nerve-shredding gambles are your thing, Liar Game should absolutely be on your watchlist. Part 2 looks set to deliver the confrontations manga fans have been waiting years for an anime to animate properly. Singapore fans on Crunchyroll, you’re sorted — 6 July, don’t miss it.

Catch more anime news and season updates on GameTrader.

We Are Aliens Anime Film Lands Singapore Distributor — Shaw Organisation to Bring Cannes Premiere Here

An independent anime film that turned heads at Cannes and Annecy this year is heading to Singapore: We Are Aliens, directed by first-time feature filmmaker Kohei Kadowaki, has been picked up by Shaw Organisation for a local theatrical release.

We Are Aliens anime film key visual
Image courtesy of Nothing New
We Are Aliens — Official Teaser — via NOTHING NEW on YouTube

A 30-Year Friendship, Told Through Rotoscoped Animation

We Are Aliens (Japanese title: Ware Ware wa Uchūjin) follows two boys — Tsubasa and Kyotaro — who become inseparable friends in elementary school, only for a moment of jealousy and misunderstanding to drive them apart. The story spans more than thirty years, slowly revisiting the distance that grew between them and the long shadow it cast into adulthood.

The film runs 102 minutes and uses a distinctive hybrid approach: hand-drawn 2D animation blended with rotoscoping — a technique that traces over live-action footage to capture the tiny, spontaneous gestures of children that are notoriously hard to animate purely by hand. Director Kadowaki, known in Japan for his work on animated music videos (including Yoasobi’s “Comet”), makes his feature directorial debut here, also handling writing, storyboarding, and editing himself.

The film is a Japan–France co-production between Nothing New (Japan) and Miyu Productions (France), with Paris-based Charades managing international sales.

A Rare Double: Cannes Directors’ Fortnight and Annecy Competition

Very few anime films land at Cannes. We Are Aliens had its world premiere in the Directors’ Fortnight (Quinzaine des Cinéastes) sidebar at the 2026 Cannes Film Festival — one of the most prestigious slots in world cinema for independent work. It was also selected for the Feature Film Competition at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival 2026, the world’s leading animation festival. That is a rare double-header, and it put the film on every serious animation buyer’s radar.

A scene from We Are Aliens anime film showing the two main characters
Image courtesy of Nothing New

On the film’s approach, director Kadowaki has said: “Designing an experience that would allow audiences to genuinely empathize with the characters after watching the film was absolutely essential,” as relayed in Variety.

Singapore: Shaw Organisation Confirmed as Local Distributor

The distribution news broke today: Shaw Organisation has acquired Singapore rights for We Are Aliens, confirmed via Variety along with a wider regional sweep. The full Asian slate is: Green Narae Media in South Korea, Hooray Films in Taiwan, Intercontinental Film Distributors in Hong Kong, and Sahamongkol Film in Thailand.

Japan theatrical release is slated for fall 2026, with international screenings — including Singapore — planned from 2027. Shaw has not yet confirmed a specific Singapore date.

We Are Aliens anime film scene
Image courtesy of Nothing New

Last Words

Singapore does not see many films of this festival pedigree hit local cinema screens through a proper theatrical release — a Cannes Directors’ Fortnight premiere and Annecy Competition slot from an independent Japanese animation studio is genuinely unusual. Shaw’s acquisition signals more than a quiet streaming deal. Keep an eye out: a Singapore release date will most likely surface in late 2026 or early 2027. We’ll update when it’s confirmed. Until then, the teaser above is well worth a watch.

Check out more anime news and coverage on GameTrader.