Needless to say, Pokémon Red & Green were a massive success in Japan, revitalizing the life of the Game Boy single-handedly, & when it saw international release over two years later in 1998 (where Green was replaced with an updated Blue variant) the same happened around the world. Today, Pokémon is one of the biggest media franchises in the world, and one part of why the franchise became such an instant hit was because of the anime that followed, which debuted in Japan on April 1, 1997... and the movies that came later. Time to re-open the grindhouse!
Really, there's no need to go over the history of the Pokémon TV anime, which is still running to this very day with nearly 1,400 episodes in total across multiple series/seasons & is still beloved by many, both young kids of today as well as adults who first saw it as kids over the decades. Instead, I want to focus on the various theatrical films, which saw a yearly run of new productions between 1998 & 2020, as well as a Hollywood-produced live-action film spin-off. One thing about the Pokémon anime productions is that, as anime fans have gotten older, there has always been the occasional wish that the anime would one day see something beyond the dub-only releases they get outside of Japan. It's something that makes sense, as anime fandom has only grown over the decades since the first English-dubbed episode debuted on Kids' WB back on September 8, 1998, and other children's anime of the past have since received subbed and/or dual-audio releases, like Digimon, Monster Rancher/Farm, Mon Colle Knights, Medabots/Medarot, etc. Unfortunately, The Pokémon Company has been very staunch about never offering any sort of dual-audio release when it comes to Pokémon, even if only for the movies... except for that single year when they actually DID allow dual-audio releases of some Pokémon movies, even if only in Japan.
Yes, on June 23, 2000 Kadokawa Media Factory & Shogakukan teamed up to release the first Pokémon movie on DVD over in Japan, with the cover promoting that it included both the original Japanese audio & the English dub. However, instead of simply offering both versions as their own separate videos it instead only offered the original Japanese video, creating a true-blue dual-audio DVD release of the film where the dub was synced to Japanese footage. Then a few months later, on November 22, 2000, the two companies did the same exact thing for the second Pokémon movie, creating a second true-blue dual-audio DVD for a Pokémon movie. Finally, on July 7, 2001, Kadokawa Media Factory & Shogakukan performed a hat trick by giving the third Pokémon movie a true-blue dual-audio DVD release, though unfortunately this would be the last dual-audio DVD release ever for Pokémon, as all home video releases of later Pokémon movies in Japan wouldn't include the English dub. However, the most interesting thing about these three dual-audio DVD releases is that they not only include Japanese & English audio... but also Japanese & English subtitles... well, sort of. The way the DVDs are encoded mean that the subs are locked to their respective audio language when played on any standard DVD (or BD) player, i.e. you can't actually have English subs with the Japanese audio. Because of this the English "subs" aren't actually a translation of the original Japanese script, but rather are simply the English dub script in written form; they are proper subs, though, so they don't include closed captioning. However, one can bypass the "sub language must match audio language" restriction by playing these DVDs on a computer, using a program like VLC to force which subtitles are being used, which technically does mean that one can officially watch the first three Pokémon movies in Japanese with English subtitles, even if the subs themselves don't exactly match 100% to the Japanese audio; and, yes, this also means that you can watch the English dub with Japanese subs.
I've managed to get my hands on these three dual-audio DVDs, so let's begin a new April Fools' Day tradition by having me tackle something that's indisputably popular & iconic by covering the first three Pokémon movies in their original Japanese versions... but with (sort of) official English subs!




