J Balvin's 40th birthday bash featured a stunning surprise—an anime-inspired electric motorbike, crafted meticulously in secrecy, reflecting futuristic design themes.
In recent interviews, you've stressed that Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX isn't a parallel universe story, but an 'alternate-history war chronicle.' Why is it important that audiences understand that distinction? Kazuya Tsurumaki: When it comes to the Gundam series, it's often said there are two main pillars. One would be the Universal Century, and then the other would be the alternative [continuity]... that is what is extremely interesting in terms of the positioning of this project.
Though one is set a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away and the other in a fictionalized version of 15th century Poland, you could swap the Death Star plans in that one hallway scene in Rogue One for an even vaguer and more abstract concept - the theory of heliocentrism - and you get at the core of this poignant, emotionally devastating, thought-provoking, inspirational anime.