'Bleach' Trailer Finally Reveals Urahara

The Bleach live-action film will be opening in Japanese theaters in a just a few weeks, so as the [...]

The Bleach live-action film will be opening in Japanese theaters in a just a few weeks, so as the days go back fans are getting to see more and more of how the film adapts the series' characters into live-action.

The newest trailer had much anticipate reveals of Orihime, Chad, and most importantly, Keisuke Urahara. As the trailer shows, Urahara's striking design makes the perfect jump to live-action and is definitely another reason to be exciting for this movie.

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(Photo: Warner Bros. Japan)

Keisuke Urahara will be portrayed in the film by Seiichi Tanabe, and he joins other new cast members Erina Mano as Orihime Inoue, Tomo Koyanagi as Chad Yasutora, Yosuke Egochi as Isshin Kurosaki, and Masami Nagasawa as Masaki Kurosaki. They join the already confirmed cast of Sota Fukushi as Ichigo Kurosaki and Hana Sugisaki as Rukia Kuchiki is MIYAVI, who will play Byakuya Kuchiki Ryou Yoshizawa, as Uryuu Ishida, and Taichi Saotome as Renji Abarai.

The live action Bleach adaptation is currently scheduled for a July 20 release in Japan. The live-action film has just released its first full trailer, along with two brand new ones released at the same time. The movie will adapt the first arc of the series, the "Substitute Shinigami" arc. Early reactions to the film have been positive overall, with there talk of even being a new trilogy of films adapting more of Bleach's material. If this is successful, then a sequel film with the Soul Society is definitely on the horizon.

For those unfamiliar with Tite Kubo's Bleach, the series follows the young delinquent Ichigo Kurosaki, who had the ability to see spirits. He soon obtains the power of a Soul Reaper - one meant to usher lost souls to the afterlife - and now has the duty to defend the living world from monstrous dark spirits known as Hollows.

The manga was serialized in Shueisha's Weekly Shonen Jump from 2001 to 2016, and was collected into 74 volumes. It has been adapted into English thanks to VIZ Media, and has sold over 900 million copies in Japan. The series was adapted into an anime by Studio Pierrot from 2004 to 2012, and has four feature-length animations, rock musicals, video games, and a ton of other merchandise. The English language broadcast premiered on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block in 2006, and you currently find the Japanese and English language versions now streaming on Hulu.

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