List of Code Geass season 2 episodes
Anime series
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The second season of the Code Geass anime series, titled Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 (Japanese: コードギアス 反逆のルルーシュ R2, Hepburn: Kōdo Giasu: Hangyaku no Rurūshu R2), is produced by Sunrise, Mainichi Broadcasting System, and Project Geass.[1] The series was directed by Gorō Taniguchi who has also worked with Ichirō Ōkouchi on the script. The characters were conceived by Clamp and designed by Takahiro Kimura.[1] R2 takes place a year after the events of the first series. The coup d'état by the Black Knights, led by the protagonist, Lelouch vi Britannia, ended in failure and resulted in Lelouch's capture and brainwashing. Since then, the coup has been referred to as the Black Rebellion.
| Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 | |
|---|---|
| Season 2 | |
![]() The cover of Code Geass: Lelouch of the Rebellion R2 Part 4 released by Bandai Entertainment | |
| No. of episodes | 25 |
| Release | |
| Original network | JNN (MBS, TBS) |
| Original release | April 6 – September 28, 2008 |
| Season chronology | |
R2 was first announced in the April 2007 edition of Newtype.[2] Early screening for the first episode was held in March 2008 in Tokyo Dome City and Osaka Mido Hall.[3] The series premiered on April 6, 2008, on MBS TV and Tokyo Broadcasting System Television; it was later broadcast on sixteen other stations.[4] The third episode was partly leaked four days before its intended air date due to human error.[5][6] The final episode aired on September 28, 2008.[7] Bandai Visual encapsulated the series into nine volumes in DVD, Blu-ray, and Universal Media Disc formats;[8][9][10] each volume contained a picture drama episode as a bonus. Bandai Visual later released a singular adaption of the series called Zero Requiem, and later released the series in a box collection.[11][12]
The first episode premiered on Adult Swim on November 2, 2008, a week after the final episode of the first series was aired.[13][14] Adult Swim restarted R2 in a new time slot by re-airing the first episode the week after and aired the final episode on June 7, 2009.[13][15] Bandai Entertainment released the series in four DVD volumes and a DVD box between August 2009 and February 2012.[16][17] During the 2013 Otakon, Funimation announced its acquisition of the series.[18] In the United Kingdom, Kazé released the series as a DVD and Blu-ray box collection.[19][20] In Australasia, Madman Entertainment released a single volume and a DVD and Blu-ray box collection.[21][22] In anticipation for the DVD volume release, Madman streamed the episodes on a weekly basis beginning on October 27, 2009.[23]
The episodes use four pieces of theme music: two opening and two ending themes.[24] The opening and ending themes for the first 12 episodes are "O2" (O2〜オー・ツー〜, Ō Tsū) and "Shiawase Neiro" (シアワセネイロ, lit. "Happy Timbre") respectively and were both performed by Orange Range. For the rest of the season, the opening theme is "World End" performed by Flow and the ending theme is "Waga Rōtashi Aku no Hana" (わが﨟たし悪の華, lit. "My Beautifully Elegant Flower of Evil") performed by Ali Project.[24]
For the 15th anniversary rebroadcast edition, the opening theme for the first twelve episodes is "Face2" by Lozareena and the ending theme is "Mushoku Tōmei" (無色透明, lit. "Colorless and Transparent") by Yūtarō Yamashita. For the rest of the season, the opening theme is "Daydream Believer" by Flow and Orange Range, and the ending theme is "Z.E.R.O." by Blue Encount.
Episode list
| No. overall | No. in season | Title | Storyboarded by | Directed by | Written by | Original release date [7] | English air date | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 26 | 1 | "The Day a Demon Awakens" Transliteration: "Majin ga Mezameru Hi" (Japanese: 魔神が目覚める日) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Noriaki Akitaya | Ichirō Ōkouchi | April 6, 2008 | November 2, 2008[13] | [25][26] |
| 27 | 2 | "Plan for Independent Japan" Transliteration: "Nippon Dokuritsu Keikaku" (Japanese: 日本独立計画) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Akira Toba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | April 13, 2008 | November 16, 2008[15] | [27][28] |
| 28 | 3 | "Imprisoned in Campus" Transliteration: "Toraware no Gakuen" (Japanese: 囚われの学園) | Kazuya Murata | Makoto Baba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | April 20, 2008 | November 23, 2008[29] | [30][31] |
| 29 | 4 | "Counterattack at the Gallows" Transliteration: "Gyakushū no Shokeidai" (Japanese: 逆襲の処刑台) | Kunihisa Sugishima | Kazuo Miyake | Ichirō Ōkouchi | April 27, 2008 | November 30, 2008[29] | [32][33] |
| 30 | 5 | "Knights of the Round" Transliteration: "Naito obu Raunzu" (Japanese: ナイトオブラウンズ) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Masato Miyoshi Noriaki Akitaya | Ichirō Ōkouchi | May 4, 2008 | December 7, 2008[34] | [35][36] |
| 31 | 6 | "Surprise Attack over the Pacific" Transliteration: "Taiheiyō Kishū Sakusen" (Japanese: 太平洋奇襲作戦) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Akira Toba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | May 11, 2008 | December 14, 2008[34] | [37][38] |
| 32 | 7 | "The Abandoned Mask" Transliteration: "Suterareta Kamen" (Japanese: 棄てられた仮面) | Kazuya Murata | Makoto Baba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | May 18, 2008 | January 11, 2009[39] | [40][41] |
| 33 | 8 | "One Million Miracles" Transliteration: "Hyakuman no Kiseki" (Japanese: 百万のキセキ) | Kunihisa Sugishima | Kazuo Miyake | Ichirō Ōkouchi | May 25, 2008 | January 18, 2009[42] | [43][44] |
| 34 | 9 | "A Bride in the Vermillion Forbidden City" Transliteration: "Shukinjō no Hanayome" (Japanese: 朱禁城の花嫁) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Kazuo Sakai | Ichirō Ōkouchi | June 8, 2008 | January 25, 2009[42] | [45][46] |
| 35 | 10 | "When Shen Hu Wins Glory" Transliteration: "Shenfū Kagayaku Toki" (Japanese: 神虎輝く刻) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Akira Toba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | June 15, 2008 | February 1, 2009[42] | [47][48] |
| 36 | 11 | "Power of Passion" Transliteration: "Omoi no Chikara" (Japanese: 想いの力) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Yū Nobuta | Ichirō Ōkouchi | June 22, 2008 | February 8, 2009[42] | [49][50] |
| 37 | 12 | "Love Attack!" Transliteration: "Rabu Atakku!" (Japanese: ラブアタック!) | Kunihiro Mori Tsukasa Sunaga | Noriaki Akitaya | Ichirō Ōkouchi | June 29, 2008 | February 15, 2009[42] | [51][52] |
| 38 | 13 | "Assassin from the Past" Transliteration: "Kako kara no Shikaku" (Japanese: 過去からの刺客) | Kazuya Murata | Kazuhiro Yoneda | Ichirō Ōkouchi | July 6, 2008 | February 22, 2009[42] | [53][54] |
| 39 | 14 | "Geass Hunt" Transliteration: "Giasu Gari" (Japanese: ギアス狩り) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Kazuo Miyake | Ichirō Ōkouchi | July 13, 2008 | March 1, 2009[15] | [55][56] |
| 40 | 15 | "The C's World" Transliteration: "Shī no Sekai" (Japanese: Cの世界) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Makoto Baba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | July 20, 2008 | March 8, 2009[15] | [57][58] |
| 41 | 16 | "United Federation of Nations Resolution Number One" Transliteration: "Chōgasshūkoku Ketsugi Daiichigō" (Japanese: 超合集国決議第壱號) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Tatsuya Abe | Ichirō Ōkouchi | July 27, 2008 | May 3, 2009[59] | [60][61] |
| 42 | 17 | "The Taste of Humiliation" Transliteration: "Tsuchi no Aji" (Japanese: 土の味) | Masamitsu Hidaka Tamayo Yamamoto | Hiroaki Kudō | Ichirō Ōkouchi | August 3, 2008 | May 10, 2009[15] | [62][63] |
| 43 | 18 | "Final Battle Tokyo II" Transliteration: "Dainiji Tōkyō Kessen" (Japanese: 第二次東京決戦) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Akira Toba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | August 10, 2008 | May 10, 2009[15] | [64][65] |
| 44 | 19 | "Betrayal" Transliteration: "Uragiri" (Japanese: 裏切り) | Kazuya Murata | Noriaki Akitaya | Ichirō Ōkouchi | August 17, 2008 | May 17, 2009[15] | [66][67] |
| 45 | 20 | "Emperor Dismissed" Transliteration: "Kōtei Shikkaku" (Japanese: 皇帝失格) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Kazuo Miyake | Ichirō Ōkouchi | August 24, 2008 | May 17, 2009[15] | [68][69] |
| 46 | 21 | "The Ragnarök Connection" Transliteration: "Ragunareku no Setsuzoku" (Japanese: ラグナレクの接続) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Makoto Baba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | August 31, 2008 | May 24, 2009[15] | [70][71] |
| 47 | 22 | "Emperor Lelouch" Transliteration: "Kōtei Rurūshu" (Japanese: 皇帝ルルーシュ) | Kazuya Murata | Yū Nobuta Masato Miyoshi | Ichirō Ōkouchi | September 7, 2008 | May 24, 2009[15] | [72][73] |
| 48 | 23 | "Schneizel's Guise" Transliteration: "Shunaizeru no Kamen" (Japanese: シュナイゼルの仮面) | Shishō Igarashi[a] | Shishō Igarashi | Ichirō Ōkouchi | September 14, 2008 | May 31, 2009[15] | [74][75] |
| 49 | 24 | "The Grip of Damocles" Transliteration: "Damokuresu no Sora" (Japanese: ダモクレスの空) | Tsukasa Sunaga | Akira Toba | Ichirō Ōkouchi | September 21, 2008 | May 31, 2009[15] | [76][77] |
| 50 | 25 | "Re;" | Tsukasa Sunaga Kazuya Murata | Kazuya Murata,[b] Noriaki Akitaya, Kazuo Miyake, Makoto Baba, Fumiya Kitajō | Ichirō Ōkouchi | September 28, 2008 | June 7, 2009[15] | [78][79] |
Home media release
Japanese
Bandai Visual released the episodes in nine volumes in DVD, Blu-ray, and Universal Media Disc media format.[8][9][10] The Zero Requiem release is a concentration of the series in one disc.[11] Eventually, the nine volumes were released in a DVD box collection with a slated Blu-ray edition to be released.[12][80]
| Volume | Episodes | DVD release date | Blu-ray release date | UMD release date | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volume 1 | 1 | August 22, 2008[81] | August 22, 2008[82] | March 26, 2010[83] | |
| Volume 2 | 2–4 | September 26, 2008[84] | September 26, 2008[85] | March 26, 2010[86] | |
| Volume 3 | 5–7 | October 24, 2008[87] | October 24, 2008[88] | March 26, 2010[89] | |
| Volume 4 | 8–10 | November 21, 2008[90] | November 21, 2008[91] | March 26, 2010[92] | |
| Volume 5 | 11–13 | December 19, 2008[93] | December 19, 2008[94] | March 26, 2010[95] | |
| Volume 6 | 14–16 | January 23, 2009[96] | January 23, 2009[97] | March 26, 2010[98] | |
| Volume 7 | 17–19 | February 20, 2009[99] | February 20, 2009[100] | March 26, 2010[101] | |
| Volume 8 | 20–22 | March 27, 2009[102] | March 27, 2009[103] | March 26, 2010[104] | |
| Volume 9 | 23–25 | April 24, 2009[8] | April 24, 2009[9] | March 26, 2010[10] | |
| Zero Requiem | Condensation of 1–25 | September 22, 2011[11] | July 24, 2009[105] | None | |
| Box collection | 1–25 | February 24, 2012[12] | March 26, 2014[80] | None | |
Picture drama
The picture drama (ピクチャードラマ, Pikuchā Dorama) episodes are still images and character voices used to tell a story. In Japan, a picture drama was added to every DVD or Blu-ray volume. In 2014, a Blu-ray box collection was released and contained a new picture drama episode.[106]
| Title | Packaged in Japan with | |
|---|---|---|
| "Turn 0.923" | Volume 1 | |
|
C.C. and Kallen discuss their current lives and the upcoming plan to retrieve Lelouch. | ||
| "Turn 0.56" | Volume 2 | |
|
Suzaku, Gino, and Anya find a girl among the rubble in the latest area they recently conquered. The girl blames Suzaku for the death of her family. | ||
| "Stage 7.19" | Volume 3 | |
|
Lelouch reminisces about his friends during the time they were preparing for a hand-made dress party. | ||
| "Turn 9.34" | Volume 4 | |
|
C.C., Kallen, and Lelouch sneak into a Chinese Federation party by dressing as belly dancers. There, Lelouch uses Geass on the men to prevent them from supplying Britannia with resources. | ||
| "Turn 12.59" | Volume 5 | |
|
Empress Tianzi hosts a pajama party together with C.C., Kaguya Sumeragi, Rakshata Chawla, Nagisa Chiba and Xianglin as they discuss about men and love. | ||
| "Turn 12.31" | Volume 6 | |
|
Nunnally, Schenizel, Suzaku, Gino, Anya, Guilford, Cécile Croomy, Lloyd Asplund, and Kanon Maldini are attending a casino designed by the late Clovis la Britannia. They have various discussions and concludes with Gino challenging Schenizel to a game where the latter confidently accepts. | ||
| "Turn 19.02" | Volume 7 | |
|
As Rolo nears death, he reminisces about his life with Lelouch and how he was moved by having a family for the first time. | ||
| "Turn 22.05" | Volume 8 | |
|
C.C. and Cecile discuss Zero Requiem and their feelings towards it. They are then joined by Lelouch, Suzaku, Lloyd, and Jeremiah as they prepare for their departure to Japan. | ||
| "Turn 25.01" | Volume 9 | |
|
Nunnally, Suzaku, and Lelouch's friends gather at Ashford Academy to discuss their current lives and to honor Lelouch's sacrifice. | ||
| "Turn 12.06" | Blu-ray box collection | |
|
Lelouch and friends attend Milly's graduation party. | ||
English
In North America, Bandai Entertainment released the series in four DVD volumes;[107] each volume release was accompanied with a limited edition version.[108] Later, Bandai Entertainment released a box collection containing the four volumes.
In the United Kingdom, Kazé announced its acquisition of the series during the London MCM Expo in October 2012.[114] They released the series as a DVD and Blu-ray box collection on March 11, 2013, with distribution by Manga Entertainment.[19][20] In Australasia, Madman Entertainment released a single volume, then concluded with a DVD box collection on December 20, 2010.[21][115] The Blu-ray version was released on June 16, 2013.[22]
