From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Please! Psammea-don
おねがい!サミアどん
(Onegai! Samia-don)
Genre Fantasy
Anime television series
Directed by Osamu Kobayashi
Music by Kentarō Haneda
Studio Telecom Animation Film
Original network NHK
Original run April 2, 1985 February 4, 1986
Episodes78

Please! Psammea-don (おねがい!サミアどん, Onegai! Samia-don) is a Japanese anime that was broadcast from 2 April 1985 to 4 February 1986 with a total of 78 episodes produced. This anime is based on the 1902 novel Five Children and It by English author Edith Nesbit.

The anime differs from the novel in revolving around four children rather than five. Three of the children (Cyril, Robert and Jane) are siblings while the fourth (Anne) is their friend and neighbor. The four children encounter the Psammead who, in the anime, is depicted as being yellow with a blue hat, and more of a grumpy and lazy being than mischievous.

In Latin America and Spain, the series was known as Samed, el duende mágico ("Psammead, the magic goblin") and in France and Quebec as Sablotin. In the Arab world, it was known as Moghamarat Samid ("Samid's adventures").

External links


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Please! Psammea-don
おねがい!サミアどん
(Onegai! Samia-don)
Genre Fantasy
Anime television series
Directed by Osamu Kobayashi
Music by Kentarō Haneda
Studio Telecom Animation Film
Original network NHK
Original run April 2, 1985 February 4, 1986
Episodes78

Please! Psammea-don (おねがい!サミアどん, Onegai! Samia-don) is a Japanese anime that was broadcast from 2 April 1985 to 4 February 1986 with a total of 78 episodes produced. This anime is based on the 1902 novel Five Children and It by English author Edith Nesbit.

The anime differs from the novel in revolving around four children rather than five. Three of the children (Cyril, Robert and Jane) are siblings while the fourth (Anne) is their friend and neighbor. The four children encounter the Psammead who, in the anime, is depicted as being yellow with a blue hat, and more of a grumpy and lazy being than mischievous.

In Latin America and Spain, the series was known as Samed, el duende mágico ("Psammead, the magic goblin") and in France and Quebec as Sablotin. In the Arab world, it was known as Moghamarat Samid ("Samid's adventures").

External links



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