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Chôjikû Yôsai Macross: Ai Oboeteimasuka

  • 1984
  • 6
  • 1 Std. 54 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,7/10
3615
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Arihiro Hase and Mari Iijima in Chôjikû Yôsai Macross: Ai Oboeteimasuka (1984)
Adult AnimationAnimeMechaSci-Fi EpicSpace Sci-FiActionAdventureAnimationMusicRomance

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuEarth braces for an invasion of the Zentradi.Earth braces for an invasion of the Zentradi.Earth braces for an invasion of the Zentradi.

  • Regie
    • Noboru Ishiguro
    • Shôji Kawamori
  • Drehbuch
    • Shôji Kawamori
    • Ken'ichi Matsuzaki
    • Sukehiro Tomita
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Arihiro Hase
    • Mari Iijima
    • Mika Doi
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,7/10
    3615
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Noboru Ishiguro
      • Shôji Kawamori
    • Drehbuch
      • Shôji Kawamori
      • Ken'ichi Matsuzaki
      • Sukehiro Tomita
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Arihiro Hase
      • Mari Iijima
      • Mika Doi
    • 28Benutzerrezensionen
    • 10Kritische Rezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos122

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    Topbesetzung37

    Ändern
    Arihiro Hase
    Arihiro Hase
    • Hikaru Ichijyo
    • (Synchronisation)
    Mari Iijima
    Mari Iijima
    • Lynn Minmay
    • (Synchronisation)
    Mika Doi
    Mika Doi
    • Misa Hayase
    • (Synchronisation)
    Michio Hazama
    Michio Hazama
    • Bruno J. Global
    • (Synchronisation)
    Noriko Ohara
    Noriko Ohara
    • Claudia LaSalle
    • (Synchronisation)
    Akira Kamiya
    Akira Kamiya
    • Roy Focker
    • (Synchronisation)
    Osamu Ichikawa
    • Golg Boddole Zer
    • (Synchronisation)
    Eiji Kanie
    • Vrlitwhai 7018
    • (Synchronisation)
    Ryûsuke Ôbayashi
    • Exsedol 4970
    • (Synchronisation)
    Hirotaka Suzuoki
    Hirotaka Suzuoki
    • Lynn Kaihun
    • (Synchronisation)
    Show Hayami
    • Maximillian Jenius
    • (Synchronisation)
    Katsumi Suzuki
    • Hayao Kakizaki
    • (Synchronisation)
    Hiromi Tsuru
    Hiromi Tsuru
    • Kim Kaviroff
    • (Synchronisation)
    Sanae Miyuki
    Sanae Miyuki
    • Shammy Milliome
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Miyuki Muroi)
    Run Sasaki
    Run Sasaki
    • Vanessa Laird
    • (Synchronisation)
    Eri Takeda
    • Milia 639
    • (Synchronisation)
    Yoshino Ôtori
    • Moruk LapLamiz
    • (Synchronisation)
    Kôsuke Meguro
    • Quamzin 03350
    • (Synchronisation)
    • (as Yûichi Meguro)
    • Regie
      • Noboru Ishiguro
      • Shôji Kawamori
    • Drehbuch
      • Shôji Kawamori
      • Ken'ichi Matsuzaki
      • Sukehiro Tomita
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen28

    7,73.6K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    elp_gr

    Get hold of the Perfect Version, subtitled.

    If you get your hands on a decently-subtitled version, this movie plain rocks. Great animation, music, voice acting. The plot has a few flat spots, as expected in a movie that came as the summary of a series, but it's still one of anime's finest.

    And to think that it was all drawn by hand. Excellent work.

    Avoid "Clash of the Bionoids" at all costs. The dubbing is horrible.
    MovieCriticMarvelfan

    More facts about Macross

    It's nice to see so many Robotech fans, comment about the film.

    Just wanted to share more facts about Macross:

    There is an upcoming Gameboy Advance version coming out, which will add another great game based on Robotech.

    This movie is still one of the best anime's ever made.
    10davidemartin

    After 20 years, still the greatest Sf animated film ever made

    I first saw this film in the late 80s. Like most anime in the US at the time, it was solely available in a grainy, much-duplicated VHS. Still, the film drew me in. Okay, I was a little confused when I finally saw the American adaptation of the Macross TV series, but what the heck....

    It was very disappointing that for years the sole legit commercial copy in English was the bastardized Australian production, ATTACK OF THE BIOROIDS. Suffice it to say, if you want a good example of how NOT to adapt a foreign film, that is the example to study. I used to watch it with the sound mostly turned off.

    When I got on the internet, an online acquaintance gave me a VCD of DO YOU REMEMBER LOVE. It was pretty nice, at least until the viewer program failed.

    But now I FINALLY have a DVD of the film. I just finished watching it and.....oooooooooooooooooooooooh bliss!!!!!!!!!!!!!! As I said in my title, this is still the greatest SF animated film ever made!

    And the DVD includes the final concert! This was originally planned for the film but cut due to budget constraints. It was finally made for the MACROSS FLASHBACK 2012 music compilation. But now it is where it belongs, backing up the closing credits.

    happy, happy, joy, joy.....
    10hellraiser7

    Love Unforgotten

    People we fall in love with are always ones we would least suspect or even picture in our minds, once the reality hits you know it's right.

    This film is one of my favorite anime films but also favorite films in general loosely based on one of my favorite TV shows "Macross", so that's two for two. I love this film because I feel it was just made for me, because it has everything I could possibly want, and that's something I don't say much, but most importantly it's a romance story done the right way.

    It's a little hard for me to do a review about this movie since I've seen the original TV show so I know who is going to get who and what is going to happen in the end. But what makes this film unique is that's it's a different style and the rich story is retold differently.

    The animation style is more up to date than the original show, making everything seem more realistic, and personally I still feel it looks great. From the violence which doesn't pull no punches and is even more intense due to some blood involved, my favorite fight is the one between Milia and Max which was awesome. The design of Macross city looks reminiscent of modern day Tokyo or New York City. Most importantly the human characters physically look right for their age.

    The music score and soundtrack is great, to me it's one of the best damn one's for movies in general. A few new songs are in it that were never in the show, like the "Do you remember love" and the end theme, both of them are the kind of songs I can listen to forever.

    However the real power of this film as usual like the show is the fact it's not concerned so much with it's plot but with the characters, Hikaru, Misa, and Minmei, whose love triangle is the real plot.

    You just love all three of these characters all of them are fleshed out well. One of the things I appreciate about this movie is how they handled Minmei. Minmei in this movie is actually a lot different than she was in the TV show, because not just does she look this time like a woman in her twenties where in the TV show she looked like she was still in her teens and a bit young for Hikaru. She acts more mature and actually likable, but also sympathetic because we see in one scene when she goes back home with her jerk of a step cousin and manager, we see her place which looks like any other celebrities place clean and full of nice things, but despite the fame and fortune she wears a look of sadness, because the only thing that's missing in her life right now is someone to love, it's like how Austin stated from "Pride and Prejudice" how one with great fortune is always in need of a significant other. Hikaru and Misa are pretty much the same like in the original show, which makes us love them all the same.

    I really like the chemistry with all three of them it's believable due to the dialog and how they interact, it's doesn't turn melodramatic or stupid. It does romantic tension right because it really looks like the characters try. You hope that one of the female characters gets Hikaru, (though it's pretty obvious who it is if you saw the TV show)and when one of them gets Hikaru it feels right you feel both do deserve each other. But most of all that Hikaru makes the right choice and loves the other for the right reasons.

    There are two unforgettable scenes which occur in the film where were also in the TV show but in the movie they last a long while, have depth and are important parallels to one another. We see one where Hikaru is trapped in a section with Minmei and both romantic and sexual tension endures, in a way this part of the film emulates any person's dream of being trapped in the same place with someone you can only dream of ever having. But the most memorable scene is with Hikaru and Misa which plays out beautifully, Misa is a person that Hikaru obviously thinks is a non likely person he can deeply love from the constant arguments and disagreements they have mainly due to misunderstandings, though he does harbor some desire/attraction for her from a camera shot where both are in some heated argument and we see a shot of Misa's legs and he looks down on them as she chews him out; it's a common feeling for some guys whom desire girls that look/seem unattainable. Both come to a post apocalyptic Earth, seeing that I'll admit I found unnerving, kinda similar to the film "The Quiet Earth". When they explore more of the planet they soon discover a lost city (possibly Atlantis or Eden), warm up to one another along the way and both fall in love. This scene I can't help but feel serves as a biblical allegory where both Hikaru and Misa are Adam and Eve and the ruined Earth is the new Eden.

    And of course there is one other couple that somewhat parallels Max and Milia, even though I wish there were more scenes with the two together, but I did get the feeling both connected, from the fact both are unable to kill one another in the fight due to being equally matched, even one scene when both see one another in the flesh for the first time and say one word that seals their fate. It just demonstrates that even people two people from different ends of the spectrum can love.

    Love is unforgotten as long as one always has the ability to love.

    Rating: 4 stars
    8genrebusters

    Stands Up To The Best, Even Today

    Super Dimensional Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love? Ah, what a name and what a movie. This is what classic Japanese Animation is all about. Just the name itself conjures up nostalgic memories of yesterday, running home from fourth grade to catch the latest episode of Robotech, to attending my first Anime convention and realizing the true power of the unedited series as well as this incredible film which retells the story. The music, the characters, the animation and the story are the very things that attracted me to Japanese animation in the first place. And still, even after all of these years, SDFM:DYRL not only holds up, but is still a force to be reckoned with.

    This is due, in no small part, to the creative talent and storytelling capabilities of Shoji Kawamori. Although his filmography may be small, it is an example of quality over quantity. Kawamori's Macross series made giant transforming robots, singing pop-idol young starlets, heroic floppy haired boys, and melodramatic drama popular to thousands of fans across the globe. Who in their right mind never dreamed of someday flying a Valkyrie, or meeting a girl as spunky and hot as Lynn Minmay or as gorgeous and smart as Misa Hayase? Or who never wished that their hair were as cool as Max's blue locks or Hikaru's tangled mop? And who never wished for the experiences and friendships shared by the Defense Force as they battled the onslaught of the Zentradi forces? Without Kawamori, none of these questions would have ever even been possible. To me, this is like trying to imagine a childhood without Star Wars.

    SDFM:DYRL is at it's core, a story of an alien invasion. The Zentradi, a race of aliens created for only war are hell-bent on tracking down a lost ship, the Macross, which is the key to the universal power of Protoculture. Protoculture is the universal matter from which all things were created and it gives life to those who have it. The Zentradi track down this lost ship, which has landed on Earth. The humans of Earth learn, to a somewhat limited degree, the power of the Macross, and are able to escape with a few hundred survivors to the outer reaches of space, thus setting in motion the constant game of cat and mouse between the Zentradi and the humans. Although this story is quite basic on the surface, what really set Macross apart from the other giant-invading-robot movies/series was the investment the audience had in the characters.

    The animation itself is quite beautiful, although it may seem somewhat primitive by today's digital standards. It is, however, a great example of how Japanese animation differs from its Western counterparts. While Western animation, especially concerning studios such as Disney and Warner Bros., put more energy into creating smooth animated movement, the Japanese directors and artists have always been more interested in creating insanely detailed drawings. Some Japanese directors have claimed that Japanese animation is actually more of a mix between the detailed still drawings of manga and the fluidity of traditional Western animation, thus it is an art form in and of itself being neither comic book nor cartoon. Macross is a perfect example of this ideology. Although the animation may not be extremely fluid, what we are given are vastly detailed cityscapes, landscapes and space frontiers, as well as mechanical and character designs to die for.

    And how can I possibly even mention the word Macross without at least a brief mention of the music? Kentaro Haneda, who created the original music, made sure that the score and songs were as captivating as the film itself, as well as making sure every note of every song fit perfectly with what was being shown on screen. After all, with music playing such an intricate roll in the entire Macross saga, the music really needed to be top notch – and it was.

    SDFM:DYRL is a classic in every sense of the word. A movie that is just as good today as it was almost 20 years ago. Some films do not live up to the memories we have of them, and as we get older some films lose their power. SDFM:DYRL on the other hand, becomes a beacon of light to remind us of the reasons we fell in love with Japanese films in the first place.

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    • Wissenswertes
      In the TV series the Zentraedi's dialouge was automatically translated into Japanese. Here they speak an actual made-up language and subtitles are provided for the audience. Much like Klingon in Star Trek, of which a word wasn't spoken until they appeared in the first movie.
    • Zitate

      [Hikaru tries to convince Minmay to sing to defeat the Zentradi]

      Lynn Minmay: You can't win a war by singing! Stay with me, if we're going to die anyway...

      Hikaru Ichijo: It's not just for us. It's for everyone onboard Macross.

      Lynn Minmay: That has nothing to do with us! Why aren't we the only two in the universe? I wish everyone would die except you and me!

      [Hikaru slaps Minmay, as a panoply of war's destruction plays across the screen.]

      Hikaru Ichijo: Sempai died. Kakizaki died. So many have died. They had plans for peace. You can still sing, can't you?

      [An explosion blows off an armored shutter behind Hikaru and Minmay. They watch, horrified, as a Valkyrie fighter is blown to pieces in front of them.]

      Lynn Minmay: I'm sorry, Hikaru. I don't know what came over me. I chose to become a singer. If I don't now, my mother and father's spirits will never forgive me. Me, I'll sing with all my heart!

    • Alternative Versionen
      "Macross in Clash of the Bionoids" is an edited translation of "Chôjikû yôsai Macross: Ai Oboeteimasuka," with 20 minutes of footage removed, and a running time of 95 minutes. "Superdimensional Fortress Macross (Super and Dimensional placed together in the title)" (aka "Macross"), is another alternate translation of "Chôjikû yôsai Macross: Ai Oboeteimasuka." It contains the same dub as "Macross in Clash of the Bioniods," but is un-edited, and has a full running time of 115 minutes.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Videofobia: Robot King (2013)

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 21. Juli 1984 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Offizieller Standort
      • The official Macross Webpage, set up by Big West. In English and Japanese
    • Sprachen
      • Englisch
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Macross: Do You Remember Love?
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Artland
      • Big West
      • Mainichi Broadcasting System (MBS)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      1 Stunde 54 Minuten
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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    Arihiro Hase and Mari Iijima in Chôjikû Yôsai Macross: Ai Oboeteimasuka (1984)
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