Following the announcement of Detective Conan‘s 28th anime film, titled Detective Conan: Sekigan no Flashback (One-eyed Flashback), earlier this week, the film’s official website unveiled its very first trailer on Dec 4, 2024.
The trailer can be viewed below:
Detective Conan: Sekigan no Flashback is set to premiere in Japan on April 18, 2025.
The film will feature characters Kogoro Mori, known as “The Sleeping Mysterious Detective,” and Yamato Gansuke, “The One-Eyed Detective.” It is set in the snowy mountains of Nagano Prefecture, according to the official website.

It is being produced by TMS Entertainment, with a new creative team taking the reins:
Katsuya Shigehara is stepping in as director, replacing Chika Nagaoka, who directed The Million-dollar Pentagram, the highest-grossing film in the franchise’s history.
Similarly, Takeharu Sakurai replaces the previous scriptwriter Takahiro Okura. Yugo Kanno will, however, return to compose the music for the movie.
Twenty-seven feature films based on the Case Closed series have been released. They are animated by TMS Entertainment and produced by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation, Nippon Television, ShoPro, and Toho.
The first seven were directed by Kenji Kodama, films 8–14 were directed by Yasuichiro Yamamoto, films 15-21 were directed by Kobun Shizuno, film 22 was directed by Yuzuru Tachikawa, films 23 and 24 were directed by Chika Nagaoka, and film 25 was directed by Susumu Mitsunaka.
Detective Conan, is a Japanese detective manga series written and illustrated by Gosho Aoyama. It has been serialized in Shogakukan’s shounen manga magazine Weekly Shonen Sunday since January 1994, with its chapters collected in 102 tankobon volumes as of September 2022.
Due to legal problems with the name Detective Conan, the English language releases from Funimation and Viz were renamed to Case Closed.
The anime version of Case Closed is produced by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation and TMS Entertainment. Over 1000 episodes have aired in Japan since the anime’s premiere on January 8, 1996, making it the fifteenth longest anime series to date.
Source: Official Website


























