Anime The series was broadcast on
NHK General TV between April 13, 1990, and April 12, 1991, and consisted of 39 episodes. It was released in Japan on ten VHS volumes between April 26 and November 29, 1991. Two Laserdisc box sets were released between December 21, 1992, and April 21, 1993. Ten individual discs were released between November 25, 1994, and March 24, 1995.
Nadia was released on ten DVD discs between August 29 and December 29, 2001. A limited edition DVD box set was released on October 30, 2001, with the regular edition released in two box sets between June 1 and October 1, 2007. Ten individual discs were released between April 23 and May 21, 2008. A Blu-ray box set consisting of seven discs was released in Japan on November 23, 2011.
Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water – Nautilus Story, a compilation
director's cut by Hideaki Anno, was released in Japan on VHS and Laserdisc from June 21 to October 21, 1991.
Streamline Pictures licensed the series for North America and produced an English dub of the first eight episodes, which were released on individual tapes as
Nadia between March 1992 and August 1993. Streamline co-founder
Carl Macek pitched the episodes for a television broadcast, intending to use the network money to dub the rest of the series, but was unsuccessful.
Orion Home Video later distributed the episodes on two VHS tapes in January 1996 as
The Secret of Blue Water, each of which contained four episodes. Compilations for the remaining episodes were planned by Streamline, but Orion declined to have them produced. In June 1999,
ADV Films announced they had licensed the series for North America. It was announced in February 2000 that the series would be released on the new ADV Fansubs range of subtitled releases intended for direct sales via mail order and at conventions. The series was later released on ten DVDs and VHS between June 19, 2001, and July 16, 2002. The DVDs were later collected into two box sets, released on May 18 and July 6, 2004.
Sentai Filmworks announced that they will release the series through digital outlets as well as on DVD and Blu-ray in 2014. The Blu-ray was released March 4, 2014. The series was released in the UK on DVD and Blu-ray by
Animatsu Entertainment on June 22, 2015. A
Nadia feature film sequel premiered in Japanese theaters in 1991. The events take place three years after the defeat of Gargoyle and Neo-Atlantis. It was released as
Nadia: The Motion Picture on DVD in August 2002 by ADV Films.
Manga In 1992 a manga adaptation of the series was released under the name
The Secret of Blue Water Comic. Although the characters from the series appear in the manga, the stories are not related to the original story and are typically of a comedic nature.
Music Since the series' first airing in 1990,
Toshiba EMI's anime music label,
Futureland, released several CDs containing the music of the series; of note are three initial volumes of music, as well as an extended compilation,
Hooked on Nadia, which contained more cues than the three original CDs.
ADV Films released the three CD soundtracks of the series (the first time they were issued in North America) and a CD of the movie soundtrack in North America on November 25, 2003. On August 27, 2012,
Starchild released a complete box set of music from the series. The set consists of 11 CDs and a DVD-ROM. }} also known as
The Secret of Fuzzy, is a 1991 Japanese
animated fantasy adventure film written by Yasuo Tanami (as Kaoru Umeno) and Shigeru Morikawa and directed by Masaru Aono. It was produced by Hideki Higuchi, animated by
Group TAC, and distributed by
Toho. The film stars the voices of
Yoshino Takamori,
Noriko Hidaka, Kumiko Takizawa,
Ken'yû Horiuchi. The film was released in Toho theaters on June 29, 1991, alongside the live-action film adaptation of
Video Girl Ai. It depicts events three years after the ending of the TV series. Only Nadia, Jean, Grandis, Sanson, and Hanson return from the TV version. Marie, King, Ayrton, Electra, and the Nautilus crew appear only in Nadia’s flashbacks. These flashbacks occupy about 30 minutes at the beginning and reuse footage from the TV series. The child of Captain Nemo and Electra, revealed in the final episode of the TV series, does not appear. Originally, Gainax was supposed to produce the film, but director Hideaki Anno declined, saying he was “burned out” from the TV series. After producing only the plot and character designs, Gainax ran out of budget and could not complete the film. The remainder was finished by Group TAC. Gainax's contribution was limited to the plot, design work, and editing of the TV recap footage used in the film. According to Gainax co-founder Yasuhiro Takeda, about 50 million yen owed to Group TAC was only repaid after the success of
Neon Genesis Evangelion.
Plot Three years after the battle with Neo-Atlantis, Nadia works as a trainee journalist for The Planet Times in London, though her editor still treats her as a mere tea-serving assistant. Around this time, a series of bizarre incidents occur worldwide: in front of witnesses, prominent figures in government and the military suddenly emit smoke and vaporize, leaving only their clothes behind. Nadia has become a reporter for The Planet Times newspaper while Jean returns to his house in Le Havre where a girl ends up ashore. He picks her up and tends to her. She slowly recovers her memory and realizes her name is Fuzzy but the real Fuzzy is dead and she is a clone. Nadia does some research on the government and military leaders turning into dust and suggests someone named Dr. Albert Whola is behind it. Nadia gets captured by Gieger, the leader of the Neo-Atlantis remnant. Grandis, Hanson and Sanson capture Fuzzy and take her to Gieger's men near the harbour. Jean tries to rescue Fuzzy on a motorcycle but the two end up captured and thrown into the same cell as Nadia. All three are revealed to be in a submarine headed to Gieger's hideout. Gieger reveals that he intends to start a world war by capturing various world leaders and politicians and making their militaries attack each other. Gieger forces Jean to walk a plank and he is nearly thrown overboard before Grandis, Hanson and Sanson arrive and attack the submarine one a boat. Jean and Nadia jump off the boat after the latter is show by one of Gieger's men and they are rescued from a shark by Sanson. Gieger returns to his lair where he prepares for the war. Whola reveals to Fuzzy that she is a clone of the original Fuzzy, his late daughter. Whola reveals his disdain for her as Gieger threatens Whola if his experiments on synthetic humans aren't perfected. Grandis's boat is sunk by a cannon from Gieger's base but Nadia and Jean use a boat to make it to Gieger's island. Nadia and Jean sneak in but are discovered and run into Whola. Gieger arrives and tries to kill Whola for his incompetence along with the others. Fuzzy is shot by Gieger after she tries to protect Whola. Whola causes a fire and they escape. Gieger attempts to complete the robot clones by stealing life energy before Whola arrives and activates the self destruct sequence. Nadia, Jean, Hanson, Sanson and Grandis escape without taking the brains of the world leaders trapped in jars. The artificial humans placed around the world dissolve into liquid. Gieger attempts to follow the submarine Grandis and the others stole and fires a rocket at them but he himself is crushed by a falling rock in the tunnel. Fuzzy dissolves into sparkles and is mourned by the others on the submarine. Jean and Nadia stand over Fuzzy's memorial placed on a cliffside. Nadia reveals she'll go back to London while Jean will continue inventing before they share a kiss.
Voice cast The voice actors of the editor-in-chief of
The Planet Times as well as numerous military and political figures are not credited.
Music (pictured in 2004), the composer As with the series,
Shirō Sagisu composed the score for the motion picture.
Reception Critical response The film has generally received negatively. On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an audience approval rate of 25% from 2 reviews. The IMDB film score averages to 4.2/10 based on 243 reviews. Reviews cite the low quality animation of the film as well as the fact that a third of the runtime is recycled footage from the series displayed as memoires from Nadia along with the fact that the writing of the characters is inconsistent with their portrayals in the series like the Grandis Gang being hostile towards Jean when they weren't in the series.
Novelization A novelization written by Hirotoshi Kobayashi called
Nadia the movie: Fairy from the Sea was released on June 1, 1991.
Video games The first
Nadia video game was released in 1991 for the
Family Computer console. The player controls a cast of characters in a simplistic strategy battle game. Battles are carried out through an
RPG style
turn-based system. Since the first game's release, six additional games were made. These games include:
Fushigi no Umi no Nadia (March 19, 1991, published by
Namco),
Fushigi no Umi Nadia: The Secret of the Blue Water (March 27, 1992, developed and published by
Gainax),
Fushigi no Umi Nadia: The Secret of the Blue Water (October 23, 1992, developed and published by Gainax),
Fushigi no Umi Nadia: The Secret of the Blue Water (FM Towns),
Fushigi no Umi Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water (January 29, 1993, published by
Hudson Soft), and
Fushigi no Umi no Nadia: Inherit the Blue Water (September 22, 2005, published by Jinx).
Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water made its first
Super Robot Wars appearance in
Super Robot Wars X (released on March 29, 2018, in Japan, and on April 26 in Southeast Asia (Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Indonesia), published by
Bandai Namco). ==Reception==