Regardless of all of that, though, 1999 & 2000 are still notable when it comes to late-night anime for a few reasons. 1999 was (possibly) the first year to feature what's now known as a "split-cour" anime, as 2000 was home to the first true long-form anime to air in late-night. Also, while not as inundated as 1998, there were still some iconic classics that debuted in late-night during these two years, so let's see what 1999 & 2000 offered in their (comparatively) meager individual years.
We begin 1999 with WOWOW, the satellite network that first entered the late-night anime business in 1998 with Nessa no Haoh Gandalla &, more importantly, the first full run of Cowboy Bebop. In fact, by the start of 1999 Bebop was still running, with Episode 11 even airing on New Year's Day(... sort of), so WOWOW clearly wanted to continue that momentum by having a second late-night anime airing semi-alongside Bebop. So the very next night, "January 2 at 24:30", saw the debut of Crest of the Stars, a 13-episode TV anime adaptation of the 1996 space opera light novel series by Hiroyuki Morioka (story) & Toshihiro Ono (art) from Hayakawa Publishing. The series starred Lin Shu Rock Yalulug Dril Hydal Jinto, the son of ex-president of the Hyde Star System who had surrendered to the Abh Empire that had invaded. This resulted in Jinto's family becoming nobility, with Jinto being sent to military school where he meets Abriel Nei Debrusc Borl Paryun Lafiel, a pilot trainee who (unbeknowst to Jinto) is actually an Abh princess. However, the two become quick friends that balance each other out, Jinto being familiar with terrestrial things & Lafiel being familiar with space travel, before war eventually breaks out between the Abh Empire & the Four Nations Alliance of Humankind. In true space opera fashion Crest of the Stars did not tell the entire story of the war, instead only acting as the opening act, & its success (which was unexpected, as space operas were seen as mostly dead in Japan at the time) led to a sequel novel series shortly after in late 1996... but we'll get to that in the next overview. From what I can tell, the Crest of the Stars TV anime by Sunrise looks to adapt the entire three-book series across 13 episodes, & on April 7, 2000 a "Special Edition" film edit of the series came out, more than likely to help promote the TV anime adaptation of the sequel novels... which initially debuted in prime time but, again, we'll get to the sequel series next time.
TokyoPop actually released the Crest of the Stars novels in English back in the mid-00s, while J-Novel Club would re-release them together in hardcover omnibus form in 2020. As for the Crest of the Stars anime, Bandai Entertainment first released it in English in the first half of the 00s, both via dual-audio DVD singles & later DVD boxsets, while FUNimation would later re-release the anime via DVD boxset in 2018, alongside its anime sequel productions.




