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Showing posts with label MOVIES AND GAMES. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOVIES AND GAMES. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

你看起来好像很好吃/You Are Umasou/おまえ うまそうだな












DirectorMasaya Fujimori
ScreenplayOsamu Murakami
Hiroaki Jinno
CastTomoyo Harada,
Kiyoshi Kato, Shiro
Kappei Yamaguchi,
Tetsuya Bessho
MusicTomoya Terashima people
Theme songAyaka Hirahara " in time and you enter "
ShootingAkio Saito
EditYuriko Sano
Production companyProduction Committee Yeah you're horse
DistributionTokyo Theatres Co., Inc.
Public2010 October 16
Running Time89 minutes
Production countryFlag of Japan Japan
LanguageJapanese
allcinema
Kinema Junpo
A female maiasaura finds a lost egg and decides to raise it along her own baby. To the herd's surprise, the child born from the stray egg is a tyrannosaurus. Determined to not leave the newborn behind, the mother abandons the pack and raises her two kids by herself. Named Heart by his adoptive mother, the tyrannosaurus grows up besides his maiasaura brother, Light. Soon enough the siblings discover why Heart is unlike the others and the difference between carnivores and herbivores. Heart then makes a tough decision and leaves his family behind to discover who he really is. By a twist of fate, Heart stumbles upon the hatching egg of an ankylosaurus and finds himself taking care of this plant-eating little one.

Monday, March 19, 2012

The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

Feature Film: 7 July 2006 / 98 minutes
Director: Mamoru Hosoda
Art Director: Nizo Yamamoto
Background Artist: Kazuo Oga


This theatrical production by Madhouse of The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (時をかける少女 Toki o Kakeru Shoujo (Tokikake)?) is one of eight film or TV adaptations (and the only animated one) based on the 1967 manga by Yasutaka Tsutsui (筒井 康隆 Tsutsui Yasutaka?) (Paprika). The film premiered on Tanabata, 7 July 2006 in Japan and on 19 November 2006 in North America at the Waterloo Festival for Animated Cinema.

The film has many of the crowd-pleasing qualities of a Studio Ghibli film. Not surprising, given that it was directed by Mamoru Hosoda, the director originally selected to helm Howl's Moving Castle. It also features the work of two current or former long-time Ghibli veterans, with art direction by Nizo Yamamoto, and background art in part by Kazuo Oga (freelancing for Ogura Workshop).

The story centers on 17-year-old Makoto Konno, who one day accidentally gains the ability to, quite literally, "leap" backwards through time. She immediately does what any teenager would do, using this power for simple things like improving her grades and preventing mishaps for herself and her friends. However, she soon realizes that changing the past isn't as simple as it seems, and definitely has unintended consequences.

Like the Clouds, Like the Wind

雲のように 風のように
(Kumo no yō ni Kaze no yō ni)
GenreDrama, Fantasy, Historical, Romance
Novel
Kōkyū Shōsetsu
Written byKen'ichi Sakemi
Published byShinchosha
PublishedMarch 5, 1989
Anime film
Directed byHisayuki Toriumi
StudioStudio Pierrot
ReleasedMarch 21, 1990
Runtime80 minutes



Story

Ginga is a simple—yet energetic—country girl, living with her father far from the capital city of the empire in ancient China. When she learns of an opportunity to become a concubine of the young new Emperor, with the possibility of becoming his head wife in charge of all of the other wives, Ginga convinces her father to let her go. Once there, she meets all of the other potential head wives, each of whom have various reasons for being there. All of them must learn to read and write, learn the history of their country, and learn the proper mannerisms for being in the royal court.

Ginga's enthusiasm tends to get her in trouble more often than not, but it works to her advantage when they learn that the former emperor's head wife, who is not the mother of the current emperor, is plotting treachery against the new emperor, and that a rebellion is headed toward the capital.


Theme song

Kumo no yō ni Kaze no yō ni

Lyrics: Anju Mana
Composed by: Tetsurō Kugizaki
Arranged by: Etsuko Yamakawa
Vocals: Ryōko Sano

Lupin III-The Castle of Cagliostro


Kanjiルパン三世 カリオストロの城
RōmajiRupan Sansei: Kariosutoro no Shiro
Directed byHayao Miyazaki
Produced byTetsuo Katayama
Screenplay byHaruya Yamazaki
Hayao Miyazaki
Based onLupin III by
Monkey Punch
StarringYasuo Yamada
Kiyoshi Kobayashi
Makio Inoue
Eiko Masuyama
Goro Naya
Sumi Shimamoto
Tarō Ishida
Music byYuji Ohno
CinematographyHirokata Takahashi
Editing byMitsutoshi Tsurubuchi
StudioTokyo Movie Shinsha
Topcraft
Distributed byToho
Release date(s)December 15, 1979
Running time100 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese

Pom Poko


Directed byIsao Takahata
Produced byToshio Suzuki
Yasuyoshi Tokuma
Hayao Miyazaki
Screenplay byIsao Takahata
Story byHayao Miyazaki
StarringKokontei Shinchou
Makoto Nonomura
Yuriko Ishida
Editing byTakeshi Seyama
StudioStudio Ghibli
Distributed byToho
Release date(s)July 16, 1994
Running time119 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Pom Poko (平成狸合戦ぽんぽこ Heisei Tanuki Gassen Ponpoko?) As civilisation draws ever nearer to their idyllic forest home, a group of mischievous Japanese tanuki (raccoon dogs - Nyctereutes procyonoides) try to scare humans away. But they soon discover that humans are not their only rivals in the struggle for their age-old territory.

Released in 1994 as the Japanese economy slumped, but looking back to the sixties construction boom in Tokyo’s Tama Hills, Pom Poko questions the money-grabbing ethics of yuppie Japan, and mourns the loss of the countryside. Drawing on Japanese myths and legends, writer and director Isao Takahata presents a satirical view of woodland spirits using every available magical ruse to take on modern developers: including transformations, sabotage and trickery.

Pom Poko is a unique window into Japanese folklore, a comedy of modern failings, and an elegiac tale of unlikely heroes fighting insurmountable odds.

Ocean Waves (film)

海がきこえる
(Umi ga Kikoeru)
GenreDrama, Romance, School life
Novel
Written bySaeko Himuro
Illustrated byKatsuya Kondō
Published byTokuma Shoten
Published1993
TV film anime
Directed byTomomi Mochizuki
Produced byIsao Takahata
Hideo Ogata
Music byShigeru Nagata
StudioStudio Ghibli
Licensed byUnited Kingdom Optimum Releasing
NetworkNTV
ReleasedMay 5, 1993
Runtime72 minutes
Novel
I Can Hear the Sea II: Because There Is Love
Written bySaeko Himuro
Illustrated byKatsuya Kondō
Published byTokuma Shoten
Published1995
Ocean Waves (海がきこえる Umi ga Kikoeru?) is the official English title (from Japan) for a film more commonly known as I Can Hear the Sea (the literal meaning of the Japanese title). Set in Kochi (on the island of Shikoku), Umi tells the story of a love triangle that develops between two good friends and the new girl in school who transferred from Tokyo. The new girl, Rikako, is at first arrogant and distant, but eventually makes friends.

Porco Rosso

Directed byHayao Miyazaki
Produced byToshio Suzuki
Written byHayao Miyazaki
StarringShūichirō Moriyama
Tokiko Kato
Akemi Okamura
Akio Ōtsuka
Music byJoe Hisaishi
CinematographyAtsushi Okui
Editing byTakeshi Seyama
Hayao Miyazaki
Distributed byToho (Japan)
Walt Disney Pictures(US)
Release date(s)July 18, 1992
Running time94 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese


Porco Rosso (紅の豚 Kurenai no Buta?, literally "The Crimson Pig") was first planned as a 30-45 minutes in-flight movie on Japan Airlines. It's been described as "a movie which tired businessmen on international flights can enjoy even with their minds dulled due to lack of oxygen." As Miyazaki's imagination took off, it became a feature-length movie about an Italian Air Force pilot who left the service due to the rise of fascism. He became a bounty hunter, assuming the name "Porco Rosso."

Soundtrack

  1. "The Wind of Time (When a Human Can Be a Human)" – 2:50
  2. "MAMMAIUTO" – 1:21
  3. "Addio!" – 0:37
  4. "The Bygone Days" – 2:16
  5. "A Sepia-Coloured Picture" – 0:47
  6. "Serbia March" – 1:03
  7. "Flying Boatmen" – 2:36
  8. "Doom (Cloud Trap)" – 1:23
  9. "Porco e Bella" – 1:06
  10. "Fio-Seventeen" – 2:04
  11. "The Women of Piccolo" – 2:04
  12. "Friend" – 3:04
  13. "Partnership" – 2:28
  14. "Madness (Flight)" – 2:39
  15. "To the Adriatic Sea" – 1:50
  16. "In Search of the Distant Era" – 2:18
  17. "Love at First Sight in the Wildness" – 1:11
  18. "At the End of Summer" – 1:26
  19. "Lost Spirit" – 4:11
  20. "Dog Fight" – 2:10
  21. "Porco e Bella (Ending)" – 2:35
  22. "The Time of Cherries" (sung by Tokiko Kato) – 2:52
  23. "Once in a While, Talk of the Old Days" (composition, lyrics, singing by Tokiko Kato, arrangement by Yoko Kanno, Junichiro Ohkuchi) – 3:56

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Laputa-Castle in the Sky


Kanji天空の城ラピュタ
RōmajiTenkū no Shiro Rapyuta
Directed byHayao Miyazaki
Produced byIsao Takahata
Written byHayao Miyazaki
StarringKeiko Yokozawa
Mayumi Tanaka
Kotoe Hatsui
Minori Terada
Music byJoe Hisaishi
CinematographyHirokata Takahashi
Editing byHayao Miyazaki
Takeshi Seyama
Yoshihiro Kasahara
StudioStudio Ghibli
Distributed byToei Company
Release date(s)August 2, 1986
Running time126 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Laputa: Castle in the Sky (天空の城ラピュタ Tenkū no Shiro Rapyuta?) is an adventure movie. Pazu rescues an unconscious girl descending from the night sky with a glowing pendant around her neck. He helps the girl, Sheeta, to escape from the air pirates and the military who are obsessed with Laputa, a legendary kingdom on a floating island in the sky with which Sheeta is suspected of being connected.

With an adventurous boy as the main character, Miyazaki tells "a story that involves discoveries and wonderful encounters...a story that carries a message of hope." The production of Laputa also led to the establishment of Studio Ghibli in 1985.

Initially, this film had a brief theatrical screening in America in 1989. Since then, Disney has brought the film to the United States and to the rest of the world with a soundtrack freshly rescored by Joe Hisaishi, who composed the original, and performed by a full symphony orchestra.

Soundtrack and Download



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