Maquia - Eine unsterbliche Liebesgeschichte
Originaltitel: Sayonara no asa ni yakusoku no hana o kazarô
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,4/10
9877
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Ein unsterbliches Mädchen und ein normaler Junge treffen sich und werden Freunde, die eine Bindung teilen,die die über die Jahre dauert.Ein unsterbliches Mädchen und ein normaler Junge treffen sich und werden Freunde, die eine Bindung teilen,die die über die Jahre dauert.Ein unsterbliches Mädchen und ein normaler Junge treffen sich und werden Freunde, die eine Bindung teilen,die die über die Jahre dauert.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 Gewinne & 3 Nominierungen insgesamt
Manaka Iwami
- Maquia
- (Synchronisation)
Miyu Irino
- Erial
- (Synchronisation)
Yôko Hikasa
- Tita
- (Synchronisation)
Hiroaki Hirata
- Baro
- (Synchronisation)
Yoshimasa Hosoya
- Lang
- (Synchronisation)
Misaki Kuno
- Medmel
- (Synchronisation)
Miyuki Sawashiro
- Rashine
- (Synchronisation)
Tomokazu Sugita
- Isol
- (Synchronisation)
Xanthe Huynh
- Maquia
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
Ryan Shanahan
- Ariel (Teen)
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
- …
Barnaby Lafayette
- Ariel (Child)
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
Cherami Leigh
- Leilia
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
Kevin T. Collins
- Krim
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
Michael Allan Schneider
- Lang
- (English version)
- (Synchronisation)
- (as Michael Schneider)
- …
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If anime as a genre brings to mind fanservice, childish boob-humour and a bizarre obsession with characters that have a single emotion they express every time they open their mouths, then leave it to this film to add some variety to the pallet.
While anime has examples of all styles and genres of film housed within its animated shelves, there aren't a lot of films that bring a serious tone, thoughtful plays on philosophy and stunning animation, while avoiding the cliche's of anime. This is one of them.
Beginning strong, the film immediately sets out gorgeous visuals with a high-key pallet and beautifully envisioned world. The attention to detail in architecture and environments will encourage the use of the pause button, while the complexity of background animation is at such a level that the sheer number of moving characters approaches that of a live action film. This level of work is rarely seen in animation and is worth applause on its own, not to mention the beautifully coordinated combat late in the film.
Characters are written to be fairly simple, but in complex circumstances. This dedication to simplicity, at times, struggles to progress the characters despite time moving fairly quickly at times. Ariel, in particular, is barely developed in spite of the story's scope containing his entire life. Other characters are deeply wounded by their circumstances and have decisions to make regarding the road they will follow afterward. At times these wounds are gut wrenching but sadly aren't utilized to their fullest extent in developing the characters involved.
If watching the english subtitled version, there are some things lost in translation, that could result in some confusion. The jumps in time are also not the easiest to follow, which doesn't help the pacing. In the end, however, they successfully blend a heart-felt story of love and maturity and family together with a fantastical setting with hints of deep lore and history that satisfies on a higher level than the vast majority of big-budget films being released in current days. The animation is spectacular, the story is thought-provoking and the world is entrancing.
While anime has examples of all styles and genres of film housed within its animated shelves, there aren't a lot of films that bring a serious tone, thoughtful plays on philosophy and stunning animation, while avoiding the cliche's of anime. This is one of them.
Beginning strong, the film immediately sets out gorgeous visuals with a high-key pallet and beautifully envisioned world. The attention to detail in architecture and environments will encourage the use of the pause button, while the complexity of background animation is at such a level that the sheer number of moving characters approaches that of a live action film. This level of work is rarely seen in animation and is worth applause on its own, not to mention the beautifully coordinated combat late in the film.
Characters are written to be fairly simple, but in complex circumstances. This dedication to simplicity, at times, struggles to progress the characters despite time moving fairly quickly at times. Ariel, in particular, is barely developed in spite of the story's scope containing his entire life. Other characters are deeply wounded by their circumstances and have decisions to make regarding the road they will follow afterward. At times these wounds are gut wrenching but sadly aren't utilized to their fullest extent in developing the characters involved.
If watching the english subtitled version, there are some things lost in translation, that could result in some confusion. The jumps in time are also not the easiest to follow, which doesn't help the pacing. In the end, however, they successfully blend a heart-felt story of love and maturity and family together with a fantastical setting with hints of deep lore and history that satisfies on a higher level than the vast majority of big-budget films being released in current days. The animation is spectacular, the story is thought-provoking and the world is entrancing.
Plot: a very beautiful story. It has a lot of deep messages and scenes. And there is also that magic that only Japanese can manage this well... Probably it would makes you cry (like I did).
Animation: perfect, smooth.
Drawings: particular, they have their fingerprints and it is a very good one.
Soundtrack: another very good thing. It is very enjoyable and pleasing.
Conclusions: an amazing, deep work that I can surely recommend to everyone. Especially for moms or who have doubts about being one.
Animation: perfect, smooth.
Drawings: particular, they have their fingerprints and it is a very good one.
Soundtrack: another very good thing. It is very enjoyable and pleasing.
Conclusions: an amazing, deep work that I can surely recommend to everyone. Especially for moms or who have doubts about being one.
This should be definitely a must-watch for everyone! As a matter of fact, this particular story of a girl who actually dared to raise another child perfectly demonstrates how sincere and bold single mothers could be! Undoubtedly, it was flawlessly narrated, incredibly expressed and excellently depicted!! Highly recommended! 10/10! What's more, its storyline and plot were unbelievably enthralling that a viewer could be submerged in the whole atmosphere of fighting, love and compassion between heroes! I was petrified and speechless! Hats off!
I saw this movie during its limited theatre release in Australia. Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms is the directorial debut by Mari Okada. She also wrote the film. The writing, voice acting and animation is great. The main characters Maquia and Erial are realistic and convey the relationships between Children and their parents. The film also explores themes of motherhood. The film however is dragged down by some of the side characters and several flashback scenes which I thought were unnecessary.
Overall I thought this was a great movie and it was only held back by some minor flaws.
I had the pleasure to see a preview of Maquia without any previous knowledge of it. This is something that I recommend.
That being said, Maquia start off quite dense with different warring factions and odd bits of vocabulary. No worries though, because even though every detail is not fully explained the word building and slow pacing eases you into the story. And it IS quite detailed, both story vise and visually. The protagonist Maquia from the title, is born in village where the inhabitants record and keep history by weaving long tapestries. Her people are a legendary elf-like lot who can live for hundreds of years and stop aging in their teens. Now, this trope could easily turn quite nasty, but Maquia steers tastefully far from most potential threats. In all, Maquia is a story about family and relations. It's poignant and serious in an oddly down-to-earth way regardless of it's fantasy setting.The animations are a high-budget marvel to see. My only gripe is that the movie kind of ends multiple times, and the last 30 minutes or so feels like one ending after another. Apart from that it also made me cry quite profusely.
So, go see it.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesDirectorial debut of screenwriter Mari Okada.
- VerbindungenReferenced in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: The Puppet Master (2018)
- SoundtracksWiâtoru
Lyrics by riya
Music and arrangement by rionos
Performed by rionos
Courtesy of Lantis (as Rantisu)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizielle Standorte
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- Auch bekannt als
- Maquia: When the Promised Flower Blooms
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 204.238 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 71.472 $
- 22. Juli 2018
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 4.345.395 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 55 Minuten
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.78 : 1
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