1. Panda! Go, Panda!: Rainy Day Circus (movie) - Anime News Network
Plot Summary: The family consisting of two pandas and one girl lives happily when suddenly a little tiger appears at their home. It arrives that the circus ...
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2. Panda! Go, Panda! Rainy Day Circus (パンダ・コパンダ 雨降りサー スの ...
Missing: サーカス | Show results with:サーカス
The sequel to Panda! Go, Panda! (1972), Isao Takahata ’s Panda! Go, Panda! Rainy Day Circus (パンダ・コパンダ 雨降りサー スの巻, 1973) opens with the you...

3. Panda! Go, Panda! | Astro Boy Productions Wiki - Fandom
A success in Japanese theaters, its creators followed up with Panda Kopanda and the Rainy-Day Circus in 1973, which was also a success. In 1974, Takahata, ...
Panda Kopanda (パンダ・コパンダ, translated "Panda, Baby Panda") is a children's Japanese animated film, first released in 1972. It was created by the team of Isao Takahata (director), Hayao Miyazaki (writer, layout, scene design), Yoichi Kotabe (animation director) and Yasuo Otsuka (animation director, character design). This short movie was released in Japan at the height of the panda craze, initiated in September 1972, when the government announced the loan of a pair of giant pandas from China to the

4. Panda! Go, Panda!: The Rainy-Day Circus (パンダ・コパンダ 雨降り ...
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(If you missed it, check out my essay on the first Panda! Go, Panda! film!) In 1972, Isao Takahata and Hayao Miyazaki scored a pretty lucrative hit with the first Panda! Go, Panda! film. For Takaha…

5. Panda Go Panda: Rainy Day Circus - Toho Kingdom
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6. Panda! Go Panda! with Panda! Go Panda! The Rainy Day Circus and ...
Missing: (パンダ コパンダ 雨ふり サーカス 巻) script
An early collaboration with Hayao Miyazaki, Takahata’s two Panda! Go Panda! films were made at the height of Japan’s early 1970s panda craze. The first film follows free-spirited redhead Mimiko, whose resemblance to Pippi Longstocking is surely not accidental, as she discovers a baby panda asleep in the bamboo grove near her house. Soon Papa Panda shows up as well. The three quickly form an adorable family unit, but the local zookeeper may disrupt it. Foreshadows of My Neighbor Totoro are evident as Mimiko bonds with the sweetly towering Papa Panda and Baby Panda, his tiny double.

7. Panda! Go, Panda! - Ghibli Wiki - Fandom
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Panda! Go, Panda! (パンダ・コパンダ , Panda Kopanda lit. Panda, Baby Panda) is an animated film that premiered on December 17, 1972. It was written and created by Hayao Miyazaki and directed by Isao Takahata for TMS Entertainment (formerly Tokyo Movie), predating Studio Ghibli. It was followed by a sequel, Panda! Go, Panda! Rainy Day Circus (1973). This short movie hit Japan at the height of the panda craze, initiated in September 1972, when the government announced the loan of a pair of giant pandas fr

8. Panda! Go Panda!: Rainy Day Circus (1973) - Letterboxd
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The family consisting of two pandas and one girl lives happily when suddenly a little tiger appears at their home. It arrives that the circus had come to their town. All of a sudden starts the pouring rain but it can't stop them.

9. Panda! Go Panda! - GhibliWiki - Nausicaa.net
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Panda! Go Panda! (パンダコパンダ Panda Kopanda?) is a 30 minute movie made in 1972. Miyazaki created the original idea, the script and the layouts and did key animation and Takahata directed the film. The story is about a little girl, Mimiko, who was left alone while her Grandma was away. A 1973 sequel, Panda! Go Panda!: The Rainy-day Circus (パンダコパンダ 雨ふりサーカス Panda Kopanda: Amefuri Sākasu no Maki?), continues the story and was made by the same people who made the first movie. The literal translation of the title Panda Kopanda is "Panda, Baby Panda" but it's been released in North America, Australia and the UK and Ireland as Panda! Go Panda!.