Kill La Kill Soundtrack Download

Kill la Kill
International promotional artwork of Kill la Kill with Ryuko Matoi (foreground, wearing Senketsu) and Satsuki Kiryuin (background, wearing Junketsu).
キルラキル
(Kiru Ra Kiru)
GenreAction, comedy, magical girl[1][2][3][4]
Anime television series
Directed byHiroyuki Imaishi
Written byKazuki Nakashima
Music byHiroyuki Sawano
StudioTrigger
Licensed by
Original networkMBS, TBS, CBC, BS-TBS
English network
Adult Swim (Toonami)
Original run October 4, 2013 March 28, 2014
Episodes24 (List of episodes)
Manga
Illustrated byRyō Akizuki
Published byKadokawa Shoten
English publisher
DemographicSeinen
MagazineYoung Ace
Original runOctober 4, 2013March 4, 2015
Volumes3
Original video animation
Goodbye Again
Directed byHiroyuki Imaishi
Written byKazuki Nakashima
Music byHiroyuki Sawano
StudioTrigger
Licensed by
Madman Entertainment
Aniplex of America
Anime Limited
ReleasedSeptember 3, 2014
Runtime25 minutes

Stream Kill la Kill Soundtrack, a playlist by Kill La Kill OST from desktop or your mobile device. 5 comments on KILL la KILL, ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK satsukikiryuin November 17, 2014. THANK YOU OMF. Download one of our free music apps for iOS, Android, Windows 8 or Blackberry. All posts and submissions must directly relate to Kill La Kill. Any post not directly related to Kill La Kill will be removed. Is there somewhere I can get the soundtrack as a legal download? The OST is so good that I've also wanted to find a simple, pay-for digital download of it. Wasn't able to find such a thing, and had to resort to.

Kill la Kill (Japanese: キルラキルHepburn: Kiru Ra Kiru) is a 2013 Japanese anime television series produced by Trigger. It follows vagrant schoolgirl Ryuko Matoi on her search for her father's killer, which brings her into violent conflict with Satsuki Kiryuin, the iron-willed student council president of Honnouji Academy, and her mother's fashion empire.

The series is Trigger's first original anime television project, directed by Hiroyuki Imaishi and written by Kazuki Nakashima, both of whom had previously worked together on Gurren Lagann. It aired in Japan between October 4, 2013 and March 28, 2014.

Aniplex of America licensed the anime for a simulcast with a home video release starting July 2014. The series premiered on Adult Swim's Toonami block on February 8, 2015.[5][6][a] A manga adaptation by Ryō Akizuki began serialization in Kadokawa Shoten's Young Ace magazine from October 4, 2013. An OVA was released as a 25th episode on September 3, 2014.

  • 3Release
    • 3.2Home media
  • 4Media

Plot[edit]

Honnouji Academy (本能字学園Honnōji Gakuen) is a fictional high school situated in Tokyo Bay, Japan on the island of Honnō City. The school is dominated by its fearsome student council led by their president Satsuki Kiryuin. Its students wear Goku Uniforms (極制服Gokuseifuku)[b] which give their wearers superhuman abilities because they are constructed with a special material known as Life Fibers (生命戦維Seimei Sen'i, lit. 'Life Battle-Fibers'). Vagrant transfer student Ryuko Matoi, who wields a scissor-shaped longsword that can cut Goku Uniforms, challenges the council as she searches for her father's killer. Although she is initially easily defeated by Takaharu Fukuroda, she finds a sentient sailor uniform that she names Senketsu, a Kamui (神衣, lit. 'Godrobe') which is completely made of Life Fibers and transforms her so that she can face Kiryuin and her trials and obstacles. She is befriended by her hyperactive classmate Mako Mankanshoku and lives with her family.

When Satsuki reorganizes the allocation of Goku Uniforms through a battle royal and king-of-the-hill event known as Naturals Election, Ryuko faces the members of Satsuki's Elite Four, who wear powerful Three-Star Goku Uniforms, in a series of duels. Her final fight is interrupted by Nui Harime, the wielder of the other Scissor Blade and the murderer of Ryuko's father. In the ensuing fight, Ryuko transforms into an uncontrollable monster.

With the Tri-City Schools Raid, Satsuki annexes the major schools in the other regions of Japan, and quashes Nudist Beach (ヌーディスト・ビーチNūdisuto Bīchi), a paramilitary organization led by Ryuko's homeroom teacher Aikuro Mikisugi. She arranges for a festival that will host her mother Ragyo, the academy's director and the CEO of REVOCS Corporation (REVOCSコーポレーションRibokkusu Kōporēshon), a clothing manufacturer that has dominated the worldwide market. Mikisugi reveals that the Life Fibers, which have been woven into all REVOCS clothing, are actually alien parasites that consume their wearers. When they devour the festival audience, Satsuki turns on her mother, revealing her end goal to have always been destroying Ragyo, but the rebellion is short-lived as Ragyo has fused with the Life Fibers to attain tremendous power. Ragyo recognizes Ryuko as her own daughter and Satsuki's younger sister, who survived the termination of a Life Fiber experiment and was raised in secrecy by Ragyo's missing husband, Isshin Matoi.

A month later, Ragyo and the Life Fibers have devastated Japan and have captured Satsuki, leaving the Elite Four without Goku Uniforms and forced to hide out with Ryuko and the others at Nudist Beach. When they rescue Satsuki, Ragyo captures and brainwashes Ryuko into fighting her. After Ryuko frees herself, she and Satsuki challenge Ragyo, who plans to use a space satellite to command all Life Fibers to consume their human hosts and detonate the Earth in order to propagate the Life Fibers throughout the universe. After taking down the satellite transmitter and blasting the cocoon that houses the Original Life Fiber, Ragyo absorbs Nui and flies in to space to manually activate the satellite, but Ryuko chases Ragyo and defeats her, causing the Life Fiber clothes to perish. Following the battle, Senketsu sacrifices himself and burns up on atmospheric re-entry to return Ryuko to Earth.

In a follow-up OVA episode, Ragyo's secretary Rei Hououmaru disrupts Honnouji Academy's graduation ceremony, using leftover Life Fibers to create doppelgängers of Satsuki and the Elite Four. However, they are defeated by Ryuko, the real Elite Four, and Nudist Beach, and Satsuki convinces Rei to abandon her struggle. Honnouji Academy is shut down during the sinking of Honnō City, and everyone leaves to live out normal lives.

Development[edit]

The anime television project, directed by Hiroyuki Imaishi at his animation studio, Trigger, was first teased in the March 2013 issue of Kadokawa Shoten's Newtype magazine released on February 7, 2013.[8]Kill la Kill was officially announced on May 8, 2013, with scripts written by Kazuki Nakashima and character designs by Sushio.[9]

According to director Imaishi, much of the plot is based on his observation that the Japanese manner of pronouncing 'fascio' (ファッショfassho) is nearly the same as the word 'fashion' (ファッションfasshon), his observation that the pronunciation of the Japanese words 'school uniform' (制服seifuku) and 'conquest' (征服seifuku) are identical, and that the titular kiru may mean 'kill' (キル), 'to cut' (切る), or 'to wear' (着る).[10]

Release[edit]

Broadcast[edit]

Kill la Kill aired in Japan on MBS' Animeism programming block between October 4, 2013 and March 28, 2014.[11] It also aired on TBS, CBC and BS-TBS.

The series is licensed in North America by Aniplex of America, who simulcast the series on Daisuki.net,[12] and streamed it on Crunchyroll, and Hulu.[13][14] The series aired on Adult Swim's Toonami block in the United States from February 8[6] to August 2, 2015.[15][a] It started airing on Viceland UK on October 16, 2017.[16]

Home media[edit]

Japanese[edit]

The video release on Blu-ray Disc and DVD began on January 8, 2014.[17] Soundtrack CDs are included with the first and fifth volumes, making-of documentary DVDs are included with the third, seventh, and ninth volumes, and drama CDs are included with the second, fourth, sixth, and eighth volumes. An original video animation episode was released as part of the ninth volume on September 3, 2014.[18]

Aniplex (Region 2)
VolumeEpisodesRelease dateRef.
Volume 11–2January 8, 2014[19]
Volume 23–5February 5, 2014[20]
Volume 36–8March 5, 2014[21]
Volume 49–11April 2, 2014[22]
Volume 512–14May 7, 2014[23]
Volume 615–17June 4, 2014[24]
Volume 718–20July 2, 2014[25]
Volume 821–23August 6, 2014[26]
Volume 924 + OVA (25)September 3, 2014[27]

English[edit]

The series was released in five BD/DVD volumes in North America. The first volume was released on July 15, 2014, in limited edition BD/DVD combo packs including soundtrack CDs, as well as standard Blu-ray Disc and DVD releases.[28] At Anime Expo 2014 held in Los Angeles, Aniplex premiered the first English dub episode, and hosted a performance by theme song singer Eir Aoi, and a panel with script writer Kazuki Nakashima, director Sushio, producer Yosuke Toba, and voice actresses Ami Koshimizu and Ryoka Yuzuki.[29]

Aniplex of America (Region A/1)
VolumeEpisodesRelease dateRef.
Volume 11–4July 15, 2014[28]
Volume 25–9October 21, 2014[30]
Volume 310–14December 23, 2014[31]
Volume 415–19February 24, 2015[32]
Volume 520–24 + OVA (25)April 28, 2015[33]

The series is licensed in the United Kingdom and France by Anime Limited, and was simulcast on Wakanim, later receiving a digital release on Netflix.[34] The series was released on Blu-ray and DVD in three Collector's Edition sets, the first part was originally slated for a December 8, 2014 release date[35] but was moved up to November 17, 2014.[36] Subsequently, the release was pushed forward a further two weeks to see the first release being available in the UK on November 3, 2014,[37] while the Blu-ray version was pushed back by a full month to December 1, 2014.[38]

Anime Limited (Region B/2)
VolumeEpisodesRelease dateRef.
Volume 11–9November 3, 2014 (DVD)
December 1, 2014 (Blu-ray)
[38]
Volume 210–19March 23, 2015[39]
Volume 320-24 + OVA (25)July 11, 2016

In Australia and New Zealand, the series is licensed by Madman Entertainment, who simulcasted the series on Madman Screening Room, and later released the series digitally on AnimeLab.[40][41] The series was released on Blu-ray and DVD, and mirrored the release pattern of the North American releases. The first volume was released on October 15, 2014.[42]

Madman Entertainment (Region B/4)
VolumeEpisodesRelease dateRef.
Volume 11–4October 15, 2014[42]
Volume 25–9December 10, 2014[43]
Volume 310–14March 11, 2014[44]
Volume 415–19April 15, 2015[45]
Volume 520–24 + OVA (25)June 10, 2015[46]

Media[edit]

Soundtrack[edit]

Kill la Kill Original Sound Track
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedDecember 25, 2013
Studio
  • Bunkamura Studio
  • ONKIO HAUS
  • Studio GreenBird
  • LAB recorders
GenreSoundtrack
Length1:17:22
Language
LabelAniplex
ProducerHiroyuki Sawano

Music for the series is composed by Hiroyuki Sawano.[47] For the first fifteen episodes, the opening theme is 'Sirius' (シリウスShiriusu) by Eir Aoi, while the ending theme is 'Gomen ne, Iiko ja Irarenai' (ごめんね、いいコじゃいられない。, 'Sorry, I'm Done Being a Good Kid') by Miku Sawai.[48] From episode 16 onwards, the opening theme is 'ambiguous' by Garnidelia, a duo consisting of vocalist Maria and composer Toku,[49] and the ending theme is 'Shin Sekai Kōkyōgaku' (新世界交響楽, 'New World Symphony') by Sayonara Ponytail [50], though an extended version of the original ending theme returns for the last portion of episode 24. Aoi's song 'Sanbika' was used as an insert song to accompany climactic events in episodes 3, 7, 11 and 23.

The first soundtrack album was published on December 25, 2013.[51] Aniplex USA also released the CD on January 17, 2014.[52] It features 18 tracks, including six vocal songs performed in English and German. The background music tracks feature titles that are typographical variants of 'Kill la Kill'.

The second soundtrack album was released in Japan as part of the fifth DVD/Blu-ray disc set on May 7, 2014.[53] It also features 'Kara-OK' (空OKkaraoke) versions of the vocal tracks from the first album, among other background music.

Track listing

All music composed by Hiroyuki Sawano.

Kill la Kill Original SoundTrack
No.TitleLyricsPerformer(s)Length
1.'Before my body is dry'
  • mpi
  • David Whitaker
Mika Kobayashi4:07
2.'goriLLA-Ja-L' (goriLLA蛇LGori Ra Jaru)4:16
3.'InuKA3L' (犬Kあ3LInu Ka Saru)4:34
4.'Blumenkranz'RieCyua4:19
5.'Ad la Lib' (AdラLibAdo Ra Ribu)3:24
6.'Kiryu ga KiLL' (鬼龍G@キLLKiryū ga Kiru)4:38
7.'KILL 7la Kill' (KILL7la切ルKiru Nara Kiru)4:46
8.'Suck your blood'mpi3:40
9.'Kik9=KELL' (Kiっ9=KELLKikku wa Keru)4:51
10.'k1ll wa iLL' (k1ll◎iLLKiru Wa Iru)3:08
11.'Light your heart up'cAnON.Aimee Blackschleger3:56
12.'Hiru ra lilL♪' (昼裸lilL♪Hiru Ra Riru)2:02
13.'KiLL La KiLL' (斬LLLア生LLKiru Ra Kiru)4:25
14.'Kiryu ha KiLL' (キ龍ha着LLKiryū Ha Kiru)4:15
15.'I want to know'
  • mpi
  • Benjamin Anderson
Benjamin Anderson4:07
16.'NeLL na Ki9' (寝LLna聴9Neru Na Kiku)7:08
17.'Kill a KiLL' (Kiる厭KiLLKiru A Kiru)5:06
18.'Till I Die'cAnON.CASG (Caramel Apple Sound Gadget)4:41
Total length:1:17:22
Kill la Kill Original Sound Track Vol. 2
No.TitleLength
1.'Gekiban Tokka-gata Hitotsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (劇伴特化型1☆極★服)3:24
2.'Rhythm Kyōka-gata Futatsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (リズム強化型2☆極★服)4:12
3.'Nichijō Gekijō-gata Mittsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (日常劇場型3☆極★服)3:35
4.'Fuku o Kita Buta-gata Yottsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (服着豚型4☆極★服)4:13
5.'Naming Sense 0-gata Itsutsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (名付扇子0型5☆極★服)5:10
6.'Tsuika Hatchū-gata Muttsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (追加発注型6☆極★服)4:14
7.'Haikei Keigu-gata Nanatsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (背景敬具型7☆極★服)4:21
8.'MT Hensō-gata Yattsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (MT変装型8☆極★服)4:51
9.'Tabun LASTBOSS-gata Kokonotsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (多分裸SBOSS-型9☆極★服)3:30
10.'Zenhan Saishūroku-gata Tōnohoshi Gokuseifuku' (前半再収録型10☆極★服)4:45
11.'Tsuika Saishūroku-gata Tōtohitotsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (追加再収録型11☆極★服)2:54
12.'Jūyoubutsu Hakkō Kyōchō-gata Tōtofutatsuboshi Gokuseifuku' (重要物発行強調型12☆極★服)4:09
13.'Before my body is dry <Kara-OK>' (Before my body is dry <空OK>)4:06
14.'Suck your blood <Kara-OK>' (Suck your blood <空OK>)3:41
15.'Blumenkranz <Kara-OK>' (Blumenkranz <空OK>)4:18
16.'Light your heart up <Kara-OK>' (Light your heart up <空OK>)3:55
17.'I want to know <Kara-OK>' (I want to know <空OK>)4:06
18.'Till I Die <Kara-OK>' (Till I Die <空OK>)4:41
Total length:1:14:05

Manga[edit]

A manga adaptation illustrated by Ryō Akizuki began serialization in Kadokawa Shoten's Young Ace magazine on October 4, 2013.[54] The series ended with the seventeenth chapter on February 4, 2015.[55]Udon Entertainment has licensed the manga adaptation.[56]

No.Japanese release dateJapanese ISBNEnglish release dateEnglish ISBN
1December 2, 2013[57]ISBN978-4041209080October 29, 2015[58]ISBN978-1927925492
2March 7, 2014[59]ISBN978-4041210482January 14, 2016[60]ISBN978-1927925546
3March 4, 2015[61]ISBN978-4041021071July 26, 2016[62]ISBN978-1927925843

Video game[edit]

A video game adaptation titled Kill la Kill the Game: IF (キルラキル ザ・ゲーム -異布-Kiru ra Kiru za Gēmu: Ifu)[c] was announced at the Anime Expo between July 5–8, 2018. The game will be published by Arc System Works and developed by A+ Games, who developed Little Witch Academia: Chamber of Time, also based on another anime by Trigger. [63] It is scheduled to be released on PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, and PC in Japan on July 25, 2019, and in North America and Europe the next day. In Europe, the game will be published by PQube. Kill la Kill the Game: IF will also receive an English dub. [64][65]

Kill La Kill Soundtrack Download

Reception[edit]

Kill la Kill was well received by critics. Eliot Gay of Japanator called the 'uniquely fun, even gripping' series 'a reminder of how fun and creative anime can be at its best', despite the readily apparent budget constraints.[66] Kat Bailey of IGN, describing the series as 'magical girl anime on speed', noted that its over-the-top absurdity was part of its charm.[3] Joseph Luster of Otaku USA described the series's concept as 'mostly straightforward setup for revenge and shonen-style 'stronger! STRONGER!' battle progression', but praised its execution.[67] Richard Eisenbeis of Kotaku appreciated the series for 'perfectly mixing comedy and action', its pacing, internal consistency and over-the-top straightforward adaptation of standard action anime tropes.[68]

The animation of fight scenes and character movements, as well as the 'keen selection of music', were particularly praised by Robert Frazer of UK Anime Network,[69] The site selected it as the 2013 UK Anime Network Awards winner in the 'Best streaming anime' category.[70] Carl Kimlinger of Anime News Network also appreciated the inventive and funny animation and the series's 'retro shonen action pushed to (...) loony, hyperactive extremes'.[71] Michael Logarta of GMA News Online likewise noted the 'superb pacing', to-the-point storytelling and well-realized characters in the series's 'whirlwind of gorgeous visuals, story, and unfettered insanity'.[72]

Kill la Kill won multiple prizes during the 4th Newtype Anime Awards, including Best Character Design (Sushio), Best Script (Kazuki Nakashima), Best Sound, and Best Picture (TV Broadcast). It placed second for Best Theme Song ('Sirius'), Best Director (Hiroyuki Imaishi) and Best Studio (Trigger). In the Best Mascot category, Senketsu placed third and Guts placed ninth. In Best Character (female), Ryuko placed second, and Mako placed third.[73]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abAdult Swim used an after midnight schedule for Toonami, so the show's programming guide lists the dates for its shows on the Saturday night, February 7, 2015, which is technically the same as Sunday morning, February 8, 2015. The English airdates shown in this list reflect the actual date.[7]
  2. ^Gokuseifuku is a portmanteau of gokusei(極製, 'finest quality') and seifuku(制服, 'school uniform')
  3. ^IF (異布ifu) roughly translates to 'Irregular Fashion.'

References[edit]

  1. ^Harding, Xavier (February 8, 2015). 'Kill La Kill English Dub Episode 1 Premiere: How Does Toonami's Attack On Titan Replacement Stack Up? [VIDEO]'. iDigitalTimes. IBT Media. Archived from the original on April 20, 2015.
  2. ^Romano, Aja (April 3, 2014). 'Kill La Kill: How the year's most polarizing anime became a smash hit'. The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on May 26, 2015. Retrieved April 20, 2015.
  3. ^ abBailey, Kat; Sliva, Marty (January 30, 2014). '9 Anime That Would Make Great Video Games'. IGN. Retrieved April 20, 2015. Article was updated from its originalBailey, Kat (January 30, 2015). '6 Animes [sic] That Would Make Great Video Games'. Archived from the original on February 16, 2014.
  4. ^Logarta, Michael (April 14, 2014). 'No-holds-barred insanity in 'Kill la Kill''. SciTech - GMA News Online. GMA Network.
  5. ^'Aniplex USA Adds Kill La Kill'. Anime News Network. August 10, 2013. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
  6. ^ ab'Kill la Kill to Run on Toonami Starting in February'. Anime News Network. January 16, 2015.
  7. ^'Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes'. Toonami Tumblr. January 27, 2015. Retrieved January 28, 2015.
  8. ^'Panty & Stocking Helmer Imaishi, Trigger Launch New Anime'. Anime News Network. February 7, 2013. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  9. ^'Kill La Kill Anime Reunites Gurren Lagann Director, Writer'. Anime News Network. May 8, 2013. Retrieved June 29, 2013.
  10. ^Chaisiri, Andy Lee. 'Kill la Kill: The Fashion of Fascism'. Art-Eater. Retrieved March 14, 2014.
  11. ^'Amazon Prime to Stream Animeism Shows Including Altair Worldwide'. Anime News Network. June 30, 2017. Retrieved November 30, 2018.
  12. ^'DAISUKI.NET ANNOUNCES SIMULCAST OF ANIPLEX'S KILL la KILL in 5 languages'. Daisuki.net. September 25, 2013. Archived from the original on October 4, 2013. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
  13. ^'Aniplex USA Streams Kill la Kill Ad With English Subtitles'. Anime News Network. August 11, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  14. ^'Aniplex USA to Stream Magi & Valvrave 2nd Seasons, Kill la Kill on 4 Sites'. Anime News Network. September 18, 2013. Retrieved October 18, 2013.
  15. ^Kill La Kill [@KillLaKillUSA] (July 30, 2015). 'Just a reminder, Episode 24 of Kill la Kill will be on Toonami, ending its run. Members of the English Cast...' (Tweet). Retrieved August 5, 2015 – via Twitter.
  16. ^'KILL LA KILL comes to VICELAND soon'. Twitter. September 22, 2017. Retrieved September 22, 2017.
  17. ^'Official website' (in Japanese). Aniplex. Retrieved December 20, 2013.
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  25. ^'Blu-ray&DVD | TVアニメ『キルラキル KILL la KILL』オフィシャルサイト'. Kill-la-kill.jp. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
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  28. ^ ab'Aniplex of America to Release Kill la Kill on Blu-ray and DVD'. Anime News Network. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
  29. ^'Kill la Kill English Dub to Premiere at Anime Expo – News'. Anime News Network. May 12, 2014. Retrieved June 22, 2014.
  30. ^'Blu-ray & DVD | Kill la Kill USA Official Website'. Killlakill.com. Retrieved August 15, 2014.
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  32. ^'Blu-ray & DVD | Kill la Kill USA Official Website'. Killlakill.com. Retrieved September 27, 2014.
  33. ^'Blu-ray & DVD | Kill la Kill USA Official Website'. Killlakill.com. Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  34. ^'New U.K. Anime Online Broadcaster Announced'. Anime News Network. October 3, 2013. Retrieved October 5, 2013.
  35. ^'Anime Limited Licenses Kill la Kill for Home Video in the UK'. All the Anime. Anime Limited. March 7, 2014. Archived from the original(Press release) on April 7, 2014. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  36. ^'All the Anime – KILL LA KILL – RELEASE TRAILER & NEW DATE'. All the Anime. Anime Limited.
  37. ^'Anime Limited - 'Well blow me over!' is what you're going... - Facebook'. facebook.com.
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  39. ^'Anime Limited Newswire #8 – 24th Feb. 2015'. All the Anime. Anime Limited. February 24, 2015.
  40. ^'Madman Entertainment Acquires Kill La Kill'. Anime News Network. September 20, 2013. Retrieved October 3, 2013.
  41. ^'Madman adds Kill La Kill to AnimeLab'. Anime News Network. September 9, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  42. ^ ab'Australian Release List - October 2014'. Anime News Network. October 1, 2014. Retrieved January 20, 2017.
  43. ^'Australian Release List - December 2014'. Anime News Network. December 2, 2014. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  44. ^'Australian Release List - Madman Entertainment Releases for March 2015'. Anime News Network. March 11, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  45. ^'Australian Release List - February 2015'. Anime News Network. February 3, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  46. ^'Australian Release List - June 2015'. Anime News Network. June 4, 2015. Retrieved November 3, 2017.
  47. ^'SVWC-7973 | KILL la KILL ORIGINAL SOUND TRACK - VGMdb'. vgmdb.net. Retrieved November 15, 2016.
  48. ^'Kill la Kill Anime's New Ad Previews Eir Aoi's Song'. Anime News Network. August 29, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  49. ^'GARNiDELiA Duo to Perform Kill La Kill Anime's New Opening'. Anime News Network. December 12, 2012. Retrieved March 4, 2014.
  50. ^'Sayonara Ponytail to Perform Kill la Kill's 2nd Ending Theme'. Anime News Network. January 2, 2014. Retrieved January 6, 2014.
  51. ^「キルラキル」オリジナルサウンドトラック (in Japanese). Trigger. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  52. ^'Aniplex USA to Release Kill la Kill Original Soundtrack CD'. Anime News Network. December 24, 2013. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  53. ^Green, Scott (December 20, 2013). ''Kill La Kill' Blu-rays to Feature Soundtrack and OVA'. Crunchyroll. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  54. ^'Gurren Lagann Staff's Kill la Kill Anime Gets Manga'. Anime News Network. September 4, 2013. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
  55. ^'Ryou Akizuki's Kill la Kill Manga to End in February'. Anime News Network. December 30, 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  56. ^'Udon Entertainment Licenses Kill La Kill Manga, More'. Anime News Network. July 27, 2014. Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  57. ^キルラキル (1) (カドカワコミックス・エース) (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. ISBN4041209080. Retrieved December 4, 2013.
  58. ^'Kill la Kill Volume 1 (Kill La Kill Gn)'. Amazon.com. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  59. ^キルラキル 2 (角川コミックス・エース) (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. ISBN4041210488. Retrieved March 8, 2014.
  60. ^'Kill la Kill Volume 2 (Kill La Kill Gn)'. Amazon.com. Retrieved December 4, 2015.
  61. ^キルラキル (3) (カドカワコミックス・エース) (in Japanese). Amazon.co.jp. ISBN978-4041021071. Retrieved March 30, 2015.
  62. ^'Kill la Kill Volume 3'. Amazon.com. Retrieved March 31, 2016.
  63. ^'Teaser trailer reveals Kill la Kill game, published by Arc System Works'. Destructoid. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  64. ^{{cite news | title= Kill la Kill – IF Appears To Be Releasing In Japan On July 25, 2019 Read more at https://www.siliconera.com/2019/03/14/kill-la-kill-if-appears-to-be-releasing-in-japan-on-july-25-2019/#xJoTTCavVDVaOK4V.99 | url=https://www.siliconera.com/2019/03/14/kill-la-kill-if-appears-to-be-releasing-in-japan-on-july-25-2019/
  65. ^Stevens, Colin (March 20, 2019). 'Kill la Kill: IF Release Date Announced'. IGN. Retrieved March 20, 2019.
  66. ^Gay, Eliot (October 8, 2013). 'Imaishi and crew hit it out of the park'. Japanator. Retrieved February 17, 2014.
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  68. ^Eisenbeis, Richard (April 4, 2014). 'Kill la Kill Is a Rare Breed of Anime'. Kotaku. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  69. ^Frazer, Robert (November 8, 2013). 'Kill la Kill – Eps. 1–5'. UK Anime Network. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  70. ^Hanley, Andy. 'The 2013 UK Anime Network Awards'. UK Anime Network. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
  71. ^Kimlinger, Carl (November 21, 2013). 'Kill la Kill Episodes 1–6 Streaming'. Anime News Network. Retrieved December 27, 2013.
  72. ^Logarta, Michael (April 14, 2014). 'No-holds-barred insanity in 'Kill la Kill''. GMA News Online. Retrieved April 15, 2014.
  73. ^'Kill la Kill, Idolm@ster Movie Win Top Prizes in Newtype Awards'. Anime News Network. Retrieved December 4, 2016.
Download

External links[edit]

Kill La Kill Rearrange & Remix Soundtrack Download

  • Kill la Kill (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
  • Kill la Kill on IMDb

Kill La Kill Youtube

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