Detective Conan: Angel on a Highway – Stage Greeting Live Viewing Report [Yokohama Burg 13]

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Detective Conan: Angel on a Highway – Stage Greeting Live Viewing Report

The special stage greeting event celebrating the massive box office success of Detective Conan: Angel on a Highway (theatrical film #29, released in 2026) was held in Yokohama, Kanagawa.

Note: I attended via live viewing, not in person at the venue. Please keep that in mind while reading. Details are based on memory, so some wording may not be exact.

Event Overview

  • Venue: Yokohama Burg 13 (main stage greeting venue)
  • Screening time: 13:20 showing
  • Live viewing ticket price: Same as a regular movie ticket
Being able to watch the stage greeting live from your local theater — at no extra cost — is a great deal!

Tickets sold out fast. I was on standby right before midnight to snag a good seat. The purchase itself went smoothly, but within a minute seats were already filling up — clearly other fans had the same idea. If you’re planning to attend next time, book as early as possible.


Event Flow & Duration

After the film’s ending credits, a special bonus video for attendees was screened, followed immediately by the live broadcast of the stage greeting. The whole thing lasted about 30 minutes, wrapping up around 4:00 PM.


Guests | Angel on a Highway Stage Greeting Live Viewing

The following six guests appeared:

  • Minami Takayama (voice of Conan Edogawa)
  • Miyuki Sawashiro (voice of Chihaya Hagiwara)
  • Akio Ohtsuka (voice of Jugo Yokomizo)
  • Shinichiro Miki (voice of Kenji Hagiwara)
  • Nobunaga Kanai (voice of Jinpei Matsuda)
  • Takahiro Hasui (director)

Report | Angel on a Highway Stage Greeting Live Viewing

Direct Interaction with the Audience

Just hearing those iconic voices during the introductions was already incredible.

When the team announced the film had surpassed 7.4 million admissions and ¥10.88 billion in box office revenue, Takayama-san laughed and said, “Where are all these people coming from!?”

Then came the question: how many times have you seen the film?

Takayama: “Raise your hand if you’ve seen it 3 or more times!” → More than half the audience raised their hands

Takayama: “Why does everyone look like that’s totally normal?! Okay, 5 times? 10 times?” → Hands stayed up

Takayama: “Okay, 20 or more!! Self-report time!!”

I believe the record was around 25 times. She wrapped it up with a big “SOLD!” — the whole room was in stitches.

The Voice Actors Are Blown Away by ScreenX

The stage greeting was held in a ScreenX theater.

ScreenX is a next-generation multi-projection system that extends the image onto the left and right walls of the theater, creating a 270-degree viewing experience.

The cast sat in the front row and watched the film’s climax scene in ScreenX — the moment right after Jugo’s phone call, where the protagonist mutters “Invincible…” and rides a motorcycle straight onto a helicopter.

Takayama-san was visibly stunned: “I was going to joke around but… I was just completely overwhelmed. I want to keep watching!”

Q&A (Teach-In) Time with the Cast

Sawashiro-san was asked whether she felt pressure taking over the role of Chihaya from the late Atsuko Tanaka. Her response:

“Of course there was pressure. But Chihaya is brought to life by so many people — illustrators who draw her, animators who bring her to motion… I’m not alone in this. That’s how I was able to step into the role.”

She also mentioned how much she admires Tanaka-san’s voice. It was a deeply respectful answer.

Takayama-san was asked what she’s mindful of in her performance:

“I’m always aware of who Conan is with. Should he sound more like a kid right now? Or calmer? Also — whoever he talks to first, he kind of gets stuck with them (laughs).”

If You Could Ride Tandem, Whose Bike Would You Choose?

Sawashiro-san’s Adorable Cluelessness Steals the Show

First, Sawashiro-san asked, “Wait — what’s tandem?!” The whole audience burst out laughing.

Once it was explained that tandem means riding two on one bike, she said:

Sawashiro: “Oh! I want to ride with Ran! She was so good on the simulator~”

Takayama: “But Ran doesn’t have a license!?”

Sawashiro-san’s natural airiness sent everyone into fits of laughter.

We Got to Hear THAT Line Live!

Kanai-san said he’d want Okumura (Kenji) riding in front with Amuro-san on the back — just so he could deliver the line:

“Don’t you bite your tongue!!”

Just getting to hear that line in person (well, via live viewing) was everything.z

The director answered “Professor Agasa” — prompting Takayama-san to warn, “A dad joke is coming, I guarantee it!” The director just laughed and said he was looking forward to it.

Conan Just Wants a Safe Ride

Takayama: “I don’t want any of them! Something always happens! Sato’s driving is wild, Amuro is absolutely out of the question… Maybe Takagi, or Kazami — they seem safe.”

Audience: *nodding vigorously*

Takayama: “You all know exactly what I mean!”

Ohtsuka: “I did give Chihaya a ride once (in the anime). What about Genta? I’d love to show a kid like that a bigger world.”

Takayama: “Genta?! Every time Genta says ‘WHOA, AWESOME,’ something explodes!”

The laughter just kept coming.

Behind-the-Scenes Stories!

The Director Is Constantly Amazed by the Fans

Both Takayama-san and the director agreed that fans catch the tiniest details — and it never stops surprising them. With a “you may have already noticed, but…” they revealed two behind-the-scenes facts:

  • Amuro-san can be spotted in the final scene
  • The person shooting at Sera and Conan is NOT Aigi-senpai

Ran’s Post-Credits Humming Was Improvised!

An audience member asked whether the scene after the end credits — where Ran hums to herself — was improvised. Turns out, it was! Apparently the actress first tried humming the Yokohama City Anthem, but it was decided that while locals would love it, it might not land with everyone, so it was changed.

Matsuda’s Famous Line — First Take Was Too Intense

The line: “The one who carries Chihaya in a wedding dress — that’s me.” Kanai-san shared that on his first take, he put so much of Matsuda’s feelings into it that it came out far too intense. He was asked to soften it, and Miki-san smiled and said, “Yeah, the way it ended up was just right.” Such a wholesome exchange between the two.

Takayama and Sawashiro: Perfect Chemistry to the End

Takayama-san sometimes goes directly to the director to suggest changes between the script and the final recording. She mentioned adjusting the police radio lines to feel more realistic — which earned a “I thought you were actually a police officer!” from Sawashiro-san.

The event closed with the iconic “The truth is always one!” pose. Takayama-san had Sawashiro-san (Chihaya) and Ohtsuka-san (Jugo) teach her the pose, and the three of them struck it together to close out the event. Their chemistry was perfect right up to the very end.

Kenji Escorts Chihaya

Both during the ScreenX viewing and at the close of the stage greeting, Miki-san (Kenji Hagiwara) gently escorted Sawashiro-san (Chihaya) wherever there were steps or uneven surfaces.

The women in the audience let out a collective “awww,” and honestly — even through a screen — I felt it too. It was a beautiful little moment that showed just how deeply these actors carry their characters.


Wrap-Up

Even via live viewing, this was an incredibly fun and satisfying 30 minutes — full of laughs, genuine emotion, and fascinating behind-the-scenes stories. If you haven’t seen Angel on a Highway yet, get yourself to a theater!

 

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