![]() The publication helped Business Jump skyrocket to nearly 700,000 copies a week, and anime studios were quick to capitalize. The company released the comic as a series of self-contained stories, which allowed businessmen riding the train to read it in spurts, but still come away with a complete chunk of narrative. Shueisha’s Business Jump first published the Battle Angel Alita manga, or Gunnm as it’s called in Japan, in 1990. The latter is somewhat infamous, having added new characters and brought Alita’s story to life, while being unceremoniously cut short before telling the entire story. James Cameron, who produced the 2019 version on a reported $200 million budget, became acquainted with that world over a decade ago, thanks to both the manga and single anime adaptation. ![]() Alita: Battle Angel is not the first time that creative minds adapted Yukito Kishiro’s manga for another medium.
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