Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON! cover art

Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON!

Japanimation Station Season 6 - TOMINO-THON!

By: Jonathan Lack & Sean Chapman
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Summary

Japanimation Station is an anime podcast where hosts Jonathan Lack and Sean Chapman, creators of Weekly Suit Gundam, create deep dive conversations not just on individual shows, but on complete bodies of work, approaching these shows not just as fans, but with a fresh pair of critical eyes. We get deep into the stories, characters, and aesthetics, but also place the series and their creators into the proper contexts of history, backstory, and behind the scenes details that make these works so special. And, hopefully, we’ll have some fun along the way. Welcome to Japanimation Station.Jonathan Lack & Sean Chapman Art Science Fiction
Episodes
  • S6E8 - TOMINO-THON! Combat Mecha XABUNGLE Part 2 (Episodes 27-50) & XABUNGLE GRAFFITI Review
    May 4 2026

    The second half of Combat Mecha Xabungle – episodes 27 through 50 – plays like a second season, with the action moving to Planet Zola’s snowy tundra, a new group of characters arriving on the scene in the form of the freedom-fighting Salt crew, and the kidnapping of the Iron Gear’s captain, Elchi Cargo, leading to a new set of stakes for the series’ second half. It doesn’t all work, as Xabungle falls into some unfortunately repetitive patterns down the home stretch, blunting some of the great character work and world-building done in the first. But these episodes are not without their considerable high points, and if nothing else, the compilation movie – Xabungle Grafitti – is one of the weirder such films we’ve ever looked at. If the journey matters more than the destination, then Xabungle is definitely a journey we’re happy to have taken.

    Enjoy, and come back next week as we cross through the aura road and enter the world of Byston Well with the first 19 episodes of Aura Battler Dunbine!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    Xabungle Part 2 Review: 0:01:37 – 1:02:42

    Eyecatch Break: 1:02:42 – 1:02:23

    Xabungle Part 2 Review Continued: 1:02:23 – 2:10:37

    End Theme: 2:10:37 – 2:12:46

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPodhttps://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

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    2 hrs and 13 mins
  • S6E7 - TOMINO-THON! Combat Mecha XABUNGLE Part 1 (Episodes 1-26) History & Review
    Apr 27 2026

    Beginning an historic, uninterrupted run of 5 back-to-back 50-episode anime series airing from 1982 to 1987, Combat Mecha Xabungle marks an exciting turning point in Tomino Yoshiyuki’s career. After really giving his ‘Kill ‘em All’ ethos a workout on Space Runaway Ideon, Tomino set himself a very different challenge with Xabungle: What if this could be a ‘Nobody Dies’ show? The result is a vibrant mecha action comedy set in what is basically the wild west (albeit on the planet Zola), with a ragtag cast of vibrant characters battling their way through some of Tomino’s richest and most intriguing world-building. In this week’s conversation, we look at the history of the show and discuss the first 26 episodes, which we found to be absolutely delightful from top to bottom.

    Enjoy, and come back next week as we finish Xabungle with episodes 27-50 and the compilation movie, Xabungle Grafitti!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    Intro and History: 0:01:37 – 1:29:51

    Eyecatch Break: 1:29:51 – 1:30:33

    Xabungle Part 1 Review: 1:30:33 – 3:11:35

    End Theme: 3:11:35 – 3:13:50

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPodhttps://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

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    3 hrs and 14 mins
  • S6E6 - TOMINO-THON! THE IDEON Movies – A CONTACT & BE INVOKED (1982) History & Review
    Apr 20 2026

    Many years before Anno Hideaki remade the ending to his audacious but unfinished sci-fi TV series with an avant-garde theatrical tour-de-force in The End of Evangelion, Tomino Yoshiyuki blazed the trail with The Ideon: Be Invoked, providing the full ending Space Runaway Ideon never got on television in spectacular (and spectacularly violent) fashion. Alongside its companion film, A Contact – which recaps the story of the TV series – Be Invoked completes the Ideon experience in the most purely Tomino ways imaginable, with incredibly intense action, an absolutely astonishing amount of bloodletting, and, in the end, a transcendental vision of collective human consciousness breaking free from these shackles we call bodies. It is one of the darkest, strangest, and most spectacularly produced anime films of all time, a crucial step not just in the career of Tomino Yoshiyuki, but in the history of Japanese animation itself.

    Enjoy, and come back next week for something completely different: Tomino’s delightful Western mecha comedy Combat Mecha Xabungle!

    Time Chart:

    Theme Song: 0:00:00 – 0:01:37

    History and A Contact Review: 0:01:37 – 1:03:44

    Eyecatch Break: 1:03:44 – 1:04:28

    Be Invoked Review: 1:04:28 – 3:17:29

    End Theme: 3:17:29 – 3:19:43

    Subscribe to our YouTube channels!

    Japanimation Station: https://www.youtube.com/c/japanimationstation

    Purely Academic: https://www.youtube.com/@purelyacademicpodcast

    Read Jonathan Lack’s movie reviews and stay up to date with all our podcßast projects at https://www.jonathanlack.com

    Subscribe to PURELY ACADEMIC, our monthly variety podcast about movies, video games, TV, and more: https://purelyacademic.simplecast.com

    Follow Japanimation Station on Instagram and Threads @JapanimationStationPodhttps://www.instagram.com/japanimationstationpod/

    Read Jonathan’s book 200 Reviews in Paperback or on Kindle – https://a.co/d/bLx53vK

    “Tominoson-G Mk. V” – Music by Thomas Lack, Lyrics by Sean Chapman, featuring Hatsune Miku & KAITO. “The World You See” – Music & Lyrics by Thomas Lack, featuring Hatsune Miku. https://www.thomaslack.com

    Show More Show Less
    3 hrs and 20 mins
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