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Krieg der Dämonen - The Great Yokai War

Originaltitel: Yôkai daisensô
  • 2005
  • 16
  • 2 Std. 4 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,3/10
2806
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Krieg der Dämonen - The Great Yokai War (2005)
AbenteuerFamilieFantasie

Ein kleiner Junge wird zum Verteidiger des Guten auserwählt und muss sich mit Japans alten Geistern und Geschöpfen der Überlieferung zusammentun, um die Kräfte des Bösen zu vernichten.Ein kleiner Junge wird zum Verteidiger des Guten auserwählt und muss sich mit Japans alten Geistern und Geschöpfen der Überlieferung zusammentun, um die Kräfte des Bösen zu vernichten.Ein kleiner Junge wird zum Verteidiger des Guten auserwählt und muss sich mit Japans alten Geistern und Geschöpfen der Überlieferung zusammentun, um die Kräfte des Bösen zu vernichten.

  • Regie
    • Takashi Miike
  • Drehbuch
    • Hiroshi Aramata
    • Takashi Miike
    • Mitsuhiko Sawamura
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Hiroyuki Miyasako
    • Chiaki Kuriyama
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    6,3/10
    2806
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Takashi Miike
    • Drehbuch
      • Hiroshi Aramata
      • Takashi Miike
      • Mitsuhiko Sawamura
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
      • Hiroyuki Miyasako
      • Chiaki Kuriyama
    • 29Benutzerrezensionen
    • 47Kritische Rezensionen
    • 63Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 3 Gewinne & 1 Nominierung insgesamt

    Fotos106

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    Topbesetzung41

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    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Tadashi Ino
    • (as Ryuunosuke Kamiki)
    Hiroyuki Miyasako
    • Sata
    Chiaki Kuriyama
    Chiaki Kuriyama
    • Agi
    Bunta Sugawara
    Bunta Sugawara
    • Shuntaro Ino
    Kaho Minami
    Kaho Minami
    • Youko Ino
    Riko Narumi
    Riko Narumi
    • Tataru Ino
    Etsushi Toyokawa
    Etsushi Toyokawa
    • Lord Yasunori Kato
    Kiyoshirô Imawano
    • General Nurarihyon
    Seiko Iwaidô
    • Kawahime, the River Princess
    • (as Mai Takahashi)
    Masaomi Kondô
    • Shojo, the Kirin Herald
    Sadao Abe
    • Kawataro, the River Sprite
    Takashi Okamura
    • Azuki-Bean Washer
    Naoto Takenaka
    Naoto Takenaka
    • Lamp-Oil
    Ken'ichi Endô
    Ken'ichi Endô
    • Ou Tengu
    Renji Ishibashi
    Renji Ishibashi
    • Ou Kubi
    Toshie Negishi
    Toshie Negishi
    • Sunakake Baba
    Asumi Miwa
    • Rokuro-Kubi
    Hiroshi Aramata
    • Demon Prince
    • Regie
      • Takashi Miike
    • Drehbuch
      • Hiroshi Aramata
      • Takashi Miike
      • Mitsuhiko Sawamura
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen29

    6,32.8K
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    7zetes

    Not one of my favorite Miike films, but even mediocre Miike still makes a good film

    Miike makes a children's adventure film, not unlike The Neverending Story. It's actually one of my least favorite of the director's films. Even the worst Miike is better than a good many films, though, and The Great Yokai War has a lot in it that's worth recommending. It's at least as loud and obnoxious as most American kiddie flicks. I might think kids themselves would find a lot to like in it (the DVD includes an English dub), but, like all of Miike's films, it can tend to move very slowly. That means you've got kind of a weird unevenness, where sometimes there's a loud action sequence and the next scene will drag on forever as characters converse. The story itself isn't very good, either, and Miike's perpetual flaw of incoherency rears its ugly head. Most of what I liked came from the technical side of things. This has to be Miike's most expensive movie, and it looks fantastic. "Yokai" are Japanese spirits, and they come in all different, fantastical forms, and the costume designers, special effects crew, and everyone else involved in the designs just did an outstanding job. I've seen the 1968 film this one is supposedly based on (Yokai Monsters: Spook Warfare), and the cheesy rubber-suit monsters you can find there have been transformed into more believable entities using state-of-the-art makeup and special effects. I especially liked the look of one of the bad guys (or girls, in this case), Agi, who sports dark eye shadow, a tight, white outfit, a white beehive hairdo and a whip. She's played, incidentally, by Chiaki Kuriyama, whom you might remember as Lucy Liu's teenage henchgirl in Kill Bill: Vol. 1. The hero of the film is played by Ryunosuke Kamiki, who provided voices for Miyazaki's Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle.
    6GorePolice

    A decent fantasy film, but not a great Miike film.

    What happens when director Takashi Miike (Audition, Ichi the Killer) tackles a children's fantasy film? Unfortunately, the end result is not as awesome as one might expect. The Great Yokai War is a reinterpretation of the Japanese monster classic Spook Warfare (1968) and, like its predecessor, features a host of creepy, and sometimes just plain goofy (I'm looking at you, umbrella monster), creatures from Japanese folklore. Ryunosuke Kamiki stars as the young hero Tadashi who squares off against the evil Lord Kato (Etsushi Toyokawa) and his twisted, but incredibly hot, henchwoman Agi, played by Chiaki Kuriyama (EXTE, Kill Bill: Vol. 1).

    Tadashi, the son of recent divorcées, moves from Tokyo to a seaside village to live with his mother and grandfather. In typical children's fantasy fashion, Tadashi lacks confidence. He finds it difficult to adapt to his new life and his heavy-drinking mother and dementia-suffering grandfather don't make it any easier. Everything changes when Tadashi is chosen by the Yokai to be the Kirin Rider, protector of all things good, at a local festival. He discovers that, as the Kirin Rider, he is destined to obtain the magic sword, Daitenguken, from the Great Tengu and protect the Yokai from the advances of Lord Kato and Agi.

    Meanwhile, we discover that Lord Kato has summoned Yomotsumono, a massive factory-like Yokai born from all the things that humans throw away. Lord Kato and Agi have also imprisoned several Yokai, including Tadashi's friend Sunekosuri, a cute hamster-like thing with a penchant for humping shins, and developed a method of absorbing their powers and, in the process, transforming them into rage-driven mechanized guardians. Accompanied by a small group of companions, Tadashi undertakes the quest to defeat Lord Kato and rescue Sunekosuri (and Tokyo) before it's too late.

    Although this sounds like a great premise for a children's film, in Japan at least, The Great Yokai War never quite reaches its full potential. I expected a bit more experimentation from Miike, especially given the weirdness of the source material. That's not to say that there aren't some great moments: an early scene in which a dying newborn Yokai warns a frightened witness of the coming war is both visually striking and establishes the rather dark nature of the film. Unfortunately, this destined war never quite materializes and, by the end of the film, things just start to seem goofy.

    Thematically, Miike tackles the human potential to discard things without a second thought and the detachment from the realm of nature and imagination that inevitably occurs as we grow older. All in all, this is a message that is more likely to resonate with adult viewers than with children, upon whom a lot of the underlying thematic subtleties of the film are probably lost. Adult viewers will find themselves wishing that Miike had explored this rather depressing subject matter as an adult fairytale, something more along the lines of Guillermo Del Toro's excellent Pan's Labyrinth, than within the constraints of a children's fantasy film.

    As it stands, The Great Yokai War has its moments and does boast great special effects and a horde of unique and interesting monsters. Unfortunately, it never quite succeeds as either a children's fantasy film or a Miike film. It never really establishes a sense of epicness in regard to Tadashi's quest, an element that is of utmost importance in this type of film. However, genre-wise it is much more akin to the mildly disturbing children's fantasy films of the '80s, like The Neverending Story, The Dark Crystal, and Return to Oz, than to other Miike works, like Audition, Visitor Q, and Ichi the Killer. Fans of the former will probably find a lot to like in The Great Yokai War, while fans of the latter will more than likely be a little disappointed.

    Gore Police (dreadfulreviews.com)
    9diseriq

    gorgeous and imaginative fun fantasy adventure!

    Wow! So much fun! Probably a bit much for normal American kids, and really it's a stretch to call this a kid's film, this movie reminded me a quite a bit of Time Bandits - very Terry Gilliam all the way through. While the overall narrative is pretty much straight forward, Miike still throws in A LOT of surreal and Bunuel-esquire moments. The whole first act violently juxtaposes from scene to scene the normal family life of the main kid/hero, with the spirit world and the evil than is ensuing therein. And while the ending does have a bit of an ambiguous aspect that are common of Miike's work, the layers of meaning and metaphor, particularly the anti-war / anti-revenge message of human folly, is pretty damn poignant. As manic and imaginatively fun as other great Miike films, only instead of over the top torture and gore, he gives us an endless amount of monsters and yokai from Japanese folk-lore creatively conceived via CG and puppetry wrapped into an imaginative multi-faceted adventure. F'n rad, and one of Miike's best!
    I_John_Barrymore_I

    The Great Yokai War

    One of director Miike Takashi's very best. It's so good it's difficult to put into words. At nearly fifteen years older than the target audience it thrilled me from beginning to end.

    It recalls similar children's films from the 1980s in the sense that (unlike today) those films weren't afraid to scare - there's a lot of nasty detail here that I initially found jarring but soon realised it's nothing different to what I grew up on. The film is a compilation of '80s kid's films conventions. You name it, it's there: a young boy hero thrust from his own unhappy/dysfunctional world into another, inhabited by mythical and mystical goblins; a quest to save both worlds from an evil force; a beautiful heroine he has a crush on; a sadistic henchwoman (Go-Go Yubari from Kill Bill Vol. 1); a lead villain who draws his evil power from something everyone in the world can relate to. But all these genre conventions are given a fresh spin and added depth.

    One of the IMDb reviews begins "Where was this film when I was a kid?" and it's a sentiment I agree with wholeheartedly. Even while watching it I lamented the fact that I hadn't grown up on it; that it wasn't a part of my childhood like Labyrinth, Masters Of The Universe and, to a much lesser extent, The Neverending Story. Those films, and others like The Goonies are recalled but never copied - Miike relentlessly offering us a new take on things.

    Poor CGI is a staple of many of his films, sometimes due to budgetary limitations but just as frequently an artistic choice - a desire to present things in an outlandish way. Here the CGI is mostly average, solely due to budgetary limitations, but nevertheless he does a fantastic job of putting on a spectacle. The CG effects combine with traditional puppets, animatronics and truly extraordinary make-up to create a world filled with rich characters (and characterisation) that frequently borders on the visionary.

    This ranks as one of the greatest children's films ever made. Not for younger or more sensitive kids though.

    Just jaw-droppingly wonderful. See it for yourselves and if you think your kids can handle/appreciate it then show it to them. Let them grow up on The Great Yokai War as some small compensation for the fact you couldn't.
    7cherold

    odd, entertaining kid's film

    Watching The Great Yokai War really felt like going back to childhood. To that youthful time watching movies on a Saturday afternoon that were a little fanciful and that I, at 9 or 10, couldn't quite follow but still enjoyed.

    The movie is utterly bizarre, as a young boy is chosen to battle against a great evil with the help of Yokai, which are fantastical folkloric Japanese creatures.

    The story is fast paced, doesn't always make sense, is very weird, and is sometimes pretty violent and disturbing for a kid's movie.

    It's hard for me to judge the visual quality of this movie because I found a low-rez version on youtube. All I can say for sure is the creatures themselves are tremendously entertaining.

    I watched this movie because I'm ever in the search for something weird and not too dark from director Miike, who make The Happiness of the Katakuris but mainly makes movie that sound so dark I can't bring myself to watch them. Yokai War isn't as good as Katakuris, but it is entertaining.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      The film contains several direct references and homages to the work of Shigeru Mizuki, the manga artist who is generally credited with bringing the tradition of yokai tales into the modern day via the comic-book medium. The young hero researches yokai by traveling to Mizuki's birthplace of Sakaiminato and visiting the museum dedicated to his work there; the actual museum, and its bronze statues of his most famous characters, including GeGeGe no Kitaro, are shown in the film. Later in the plot, when the yokai Ittan Momen shows reluctance to fight, another scolds it by saying "You're always really brave in those comics with Kitaro!"
    • Zitate

      Kawahime, the River Princess: People live in ignorance. Constantly turning a blind eye. Those that let go of their past, have no future.

    • Verbindungen
      Featured in Horror's Greatest: Giant Monsters (2024)

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    Details

    Ändern
    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 6. August 2005 (Japan)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Japan
    • Sprache
      • Japanisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • Krieg der Dämonen
    • Drehorte
      • Japan
    • Produktionsfirmen
      • Kadokawa Eiga K.K.
      • Nippon Television Network (NTV)
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

    Ändern
    • Budget
      • 1.300.000.000 ¥ (geschätzt)
    • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
      • 15.787.492 $
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

    Ändern
    • Laufzeit
      • 2 Std. 4 Min.(124 min)
    • Farbe
      • Color
    • Sound-Mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.85 : 1

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