So welcome to 1998, the year where late-night anime first truly exploded.
The year begins on "January 7 at 25:15" over at TV Tokyo with the show that replaced Next Senki Ehrgeiz, following a one-week break for New Year's Eve, El-Hazard: The Alternative World. On May 26, 1995 the first OVA episode of El-Hazard: The Magnificent World saw release in Japan, which was an isekai story, inspired by Edgar Rice Burroughs' novel A Princess of Mars, conceived of by director Hiroki Hayashi & writer Ryoe Tsukimura where a bunch of high school students find themselves teleported to the world of El-Hazard. Alongside Tenchi Muyo! & Battle Athletes, El-Hazard was part of Pioneer LDC & AIC's big push to make Laserdisc a big deal in the anime market during the 90s, & in turn El-Hazard would be a media mix project, as alongside the OVA was a three-volume manga adaptation & a 26-episode TV anime series (known abroad as El-Hazard: The Wanderers) from 1995 to 1996 in prime time (it aired between seasons of Slayers) that told its own alternate timeline story. Now, in 1998, there was a 13-episode TV anime that was a direct sequel to the two-part, 11-episode OVA that started it all, now with the characters finding themselves in yet another alternate world, the militant Creteria. While it sounds just a little bit confusing, the timing for The Alternative World actually made sense, since the final episode of The Magnificent World 2 came out in Japan the prior October, so fans of the original storyline didn't have to wait long for another sequel to come about. Also, if nothing else, The Alternative World truly shows just how much luster the OVA format had lost come the start of 1998, as instead of going with yet another straight-to-video release it was decided that a late-night TV time slot made more sense; to be fair, though, this show's later home video release included a bonus OVA in 1999.
Considering how big of a deal Pioneer & AIC wanted El-Hazard to be, it's no surprise that it would see release outside of Japan, as all of the anime versions & even the manga interpretation would see English release. The Alternative World, in particular, came out first via Geneon in 1999 & 2000 via both subbed & dubbed VHS as well as dual-audio DVD, with a DVD box set in 2003, followed by a re-release on dual-audio Blu-Ray by Nozomi Entertainment (alongside the rest of the anime productions) in 2022.




