CITY: The Animation Finale Caps a Once-in-a-Lifetime Production at Kyoto Animation
The production's deliberate rejection of digital shortcuts and its all-hands-on-deck staffing model made CITY a singular achievement that the studio itself considers unrepeatable, setting it apart from even Kyoto Animation's own acclaimed recent output.
Reporting from 1 sources: Sakuga Blog.
CITY: The Animation concluded its 13-episode run with a finale that doubles the usual cut count and ends with a fully original musical number. The series, directed by Taichi Ishidate and based on Keiichi Arawi's manga, was produced by Kyoto Animation over an extended period. The finale was directed by Ishidate and Takuya Yamamura, with three animation supervisors including Tamami Tokuyama, Kayo Hikiyama, and Nobuaki Maruki. The production's philosophy rejected digital effects in favor of hand-drawn animation, background art, and effects, aiming to retrain younger animators in skills that had become less common. Arawi wrote all production credits by hand and was deeply involved in the adaptation, including selecting classical music pieces for episode 12. The Sakuga Blog's analysis describes the series as a milestone for the studio, comparable to Liz and the Blue Bird, but notes that its resource-intensive approach is unlikely to be repeated. Kyoto Animation is expected to announce a new project at an upcoming event, with speculation pointing toward a long-promised adaptation of the novel 20th Century Electricity Catalog.
The finale of CITY: The Animation required two directors and three animation supervisors, a departure from the single-episode-director model used for the rest of the series. The Sakuga Blog reports that this was partly a matter of personnel management: with five key animator units rotating across 13 episodes, two units finished their assignments before the finale, and their supervisors-Kayo Hikiyama and Nobuaki Maruki-slid into the final episode alongside Tamami Tokuyama. Director Takuya Yamamura, the first to wrap his allocated episodes, joined series director Taichi Ishidate for the finale.
The musical segment alone contains twice as many cuts as a typical dense episode. Veteran animator Tatsuya Sato, who drew roughly half of the famously dense fifth episode, was deployed across the musical numbers. Ishidate himself animated the finale's climactic sequence, bookending the series with his own hand-drawn work. The production banned standard digital highlights on character art, a rule broken only for a delusional character's fantasy sequence that revamped the art direction entirely.
Kyoto Animation's upcoming event in 2025 will include a stage where new work is announced. The Sakuga Blog notes that two art department staffers-Mao Takayama and Momoka Hase-skipped both CITY and the Maidragon film, and that Hase has long been associated with the novel 20th Century Electricity Catalog, which has been teased for adaptation.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.