
The sixth One Piece feature, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, sends the Straw Hats to a resort island whose host turns their bonds against them. Darker and more stylized than its predecessors, it follows Luffy's struggle to save his crew from a flower that feeds on broken friendships.

Chopper takes the spotlight in the crew's third feature, mistaken for a prophesied King of Beasts on an island populated by talking animals. A horn-obsessed count schemes after a fabled treasure, forcing Chopper to shield both his new subjects and a boy named Mobanby who despises pirates.

The second theatrical One Piece film pairs the Straw Hats with a duo of thieving brothers to take back their stolen Going Merry from the card-themed Trump Pirates. Their foe is the tyrant Bear King, who covets a devastating superweapon and intends to seize Nami as his bride.

The fourth One Piece film throws the cash-strapped Straw Hats into a secret pirate race called the Dead End. Their chief rival is Gasparde, a deserter Marine with a deadly scheme, hunted in turn by a bounty hunter seeking revenge for his ruined hometown.

This brief animated short rode alongside the crew's third theatrical feature and stages a Grand Line Cup soccer final between Luffy's team and Buggy's roster of villains. Created to salute Japan's role in co-hosting the 2002 World Cup, it even hands creator Eiichiro Oda a guest role.

Compressing the Arabasta Arc into a single feature, the crew's eighth movie sends them racing across Vivi's parched desert homeland. Their aim is to stop a civil war secretly stoked by the Warlord Crocodile through his Baroque Works syndicate.

Reworking the Drum Island story into a what-if version, the crew's ninth feature folds in Robin, Franky, and the Thousand Sunny. Hunting a cure for a fever-stricken Nami, the pirates scale a frozen peak and clash with the ousted king Wapol and a newly invented foe, Musshuru.

The sixth television special connected to the One Piece anime, this feature maroons the crew on Hand Island, an artisan town squeezed by a corrupt Marine officer who weaponized a local wax secret. Its December 2012 premiere was scheduled to land on the very date that One Piece Film: Z reached cinemas.

Glorious Island is a two-part prologue to One Piece Film: Z, penned by Eiichiro Oda and first distributed to smartphones in late 2012 before reaching Blu-ray alongside the film. It is a light, comedic interlude that leads straight into the movie's opening.

Jango's Dance Carnival is a short animated featurette, running about five and a half minutes, that screened alongside the second One Piece film, Clockwork Island Adventure. Its main purpose is to spotlight the song Ready! by Folder 5.

Numbered as the eleventh Straw Hat feature and set prior to the timeskip, this short entry became the franchise's debut in stereoscopic CGI. Running roughly thirty minutes, it sends Luffy across sea and ice after a thief who has made off with his treasured hat.

ONE PIECE 3D! Trap Coaster is a standalone twelve-minute computer-animated short shown in select Japanese theaters across the winter of 2011 to 2012. It pits the Straw Hats against a clever Marine captain whose island-sized tower of traps tries to capture Luffy.

Reaching Japanese theaters in July 2016 as the thirteenth Straw Hat feature, this entry drops the crew into Gran Tesoro, a floating city of gambling and spectacle. Its ruler, the golden emperor Gild Tesoro, uses raw wealth to buy the loyalty of pirates, Marine officers, and figures within the World Government itself.

Released in mid-2016 to sit alongside the Episode 0 short that preceded the Film Gold theatrical release, this 111-page volume is a companion art book rather than a film. It bundles storyboards, concept art, and interviews drawn from the making of the Film Gold project.

Arriving in August 2022 as the fifteenth Straw Hat feature, this entry unfolds on the musical island of Elegia. It centers on the debut live show of Uta, an adored singer whose bombshell reveal as the daughter of Shanks upends the fate of every listener present.

One Piece Film: Strong World is the tenth One Piece film and the first written by series creator Eiichiro Oda himself. Made for the franchise's tenth anniversary, it sends the crew against the legendary Golden Lion Shiki, a sky-soaring pirate who breeds monstrous beasts to hold the world hostage.

One Piece Film: Z is the twelfth One Piece film, released in December 2012 and the first set after the timeskip. It follows the crew's collision with Z, a former Marine Admiral whose hatred of pirates drives him to seize the Marines' doomsday weapons and threaten the entire New World.

One Piece: Stampede is the fourteenth One Piece movie, released in August 2019 for the anime's twentieth anniversary. Staged at a vast Pirates Festival, it gathers crews from across the seas in a treasure hunt that masks a scheme to crown a new age through the monstrous Douglas Bullet.

One Piece: The Movie is the franchise's first theatrical feature from Toei Animation, released in March 2000. Running fifty minutes, it tells an original tale of the early Straw Hats clashing with a gold-obsessed pirate over the fabled hoard of the late Captain Woonan.

A roughly five minute comedy short tied to the fifth One Piece film, in which Luffy's crew faces Arlong's fish-men in a chaotic baseball match called by Buggy and Bon Kurei, with iron spiked balls standing in for ordinary ones.

The fifth One Piece feature centers on Roronoa Zoro, who appears to abandon his crew and side with Marines on Asuka Island. Behind the betrayal lies an old friend corrupted by a beautiful but cursed blade, and a ritual that must be completed before the red moon awakens its power.

The seventh One Piece film carries the crew to Mecha Island after they haul an old woman out of a sea chest. Her promise of a Golden Crown draws them through folk-song riddles, robotic defenses, and the ambitions of the inventor Ratchet toward a secret that upends the whole island.

An eleven minute short made exclusively for the Tokyo One Piece Tower attraction. The Straw Hats chase a treasure on Tongari Island only to be ambushed by Marines after Trafalgar Law appears to betray them, culminating in a battle against Admiral Kizaru powered by friendship.

A 2022 soundtrack album gathering the seven songs written for the character Uta in One Piece Film: Red. Every track is performed by the singer Ado, who voiced Uta's singing, with each number built alongside a different guest creator, plus a bonus rendition of Binks' Sake.
This content is original writing by Daddy Jim Headquarters based on the One Piece anime series, manga, and official materials. Episode and chapter references are cited where applicable.
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