Meikyû monogatari
- 1987
- 50min
NOTE IMDb
7,0/10
4,7 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation O... Tout lireA trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation Order", a man must shut down worker robots.A trilogy of separate stories. In "Labyrinth labyrinthos", a girl and her cat enter a strange world. In "Running Man", a racer takes on the ultimate opponent. In "Construction Cancellation Order", a man must shut down worker robots.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Robert Axelrod
- Tsutomu Sugioka (segment "The Order to Stop Construction")
- (English version)
- (voix)
Cheryl Chase
- Sachi (segment "Labyrinth")
- (English version)
- (voix)
Barbara Goodson
- Mother (segment "Labyrinth")
- (English version)
- (voix)
Steve Kramer
- Chief Technician
- (English version)
- (voix)
- …
Michael McConnohie
- Reporter (segment "Running Man")
- (English version)
- (voix)
- …
Jeff Winkless
- Zach Hugh
- (English version)
- (voix)
- …
Tom Wyner
- Walla (segment "Running Man")
- (English version)
- (voix)
- …
Rafael Ferrer
- Reporter (segment "Running Man") (MTV Liquid Television version)
- (English version)
- (voix)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
I was lucky enough to obtain this film off an online auctions. And this is my review the film displays three short stories all extremely trippy.
The first one involves a girl, a circus, a cat and a mirror and a parade of very odd animals. This one makes you feel like your on acid at one point.
The second on is called the running man about a psionic race car driver who pushes his limits. Very Cool.
The third one contains probaly the most talking out of all three. itis a grim sardonic comedy about a man who can't stop a robot crew from working. it has a very ironic ending.
The first one involves a girl, a circus, a cat and a mirror and a parade of very odd animals. This one makes you feel like your on acid at one point.
The second on is called the running man about a psionic race car driver who pushes his limits. Very Cool.
The third one contains probaly the most talking out of all three. itis a grim sardonic comedy about a man who can't stop a robot crew from working. it has a very ironic ending.
Neo Tokyo is an interesting, often surreal work of anime. It covers two rather dark science fiction pieces through the framework of a young girl's imaginings. Each piece was made by a different filmmaker, making for very different animation styles and narrative approaches.
The first piece "Labyrinth-Labyrinthos" is frankly surreal, and follows the daydreams of a young girl and her cat as they look into a mirror. The short is very imaginative, with borderline psychedelic imagery. Overall, it's a good piece, though the animation is at times headache inducing.
The second short, "The Running Man," has a much more obvious narrative structure, although very little dialogue. Following the story of a futuristic race car driver with some interesting abilities, it represents a 180 degree turn from Labyrinth. The animation is excellent, with very realistic and at times disturbing renderings of car accidents. However, the lack of dialogue in this short makes it somewhat difficult to follow, a matter compounded by the fact that parts of the film are dream sequences.
The third, and best, piece is "Order to Cancel Construction," which follows the attempt of an executive to shut down a robotic construction site. The robots, which have been programmed to follow a rigid schedule, defy the executive. What makes this piece good is the subtle irony that the executive ultimately becomes as single-minded in his task as the robots are in theirs.
Ultimately, this film is good, although not great, and worth a rent.
The first piece "Labyrinth-Labyrinthos" is frankly surreal, and follows the daydreams of a young girl and her cat as they look into a mirror. The short is very imaginative, with borderline psychedelic imagery. Overall, it's a good piece, though the animation is at times headache inducing.
The second short, "The Running Man," has a much more obvious narrative structure, although very little dialogue. Following the story of a futuristic race car driver with some interesting abilities, it represents a 180 degree turn from Labyrinth. The animation is excellent, with very realistic and at times disturbing renderings of car accidents. However, the lack of dialogue in this short makes it somewhat difficult to follow, a matter compounded by the fact that parts of the film are dream sequences.
The third, and best, piece is "Order to Cancel Construction," which follows the attempt of an executive to shut down a robotic construction site. The robots, which have been programmed to follow a rigid schedule, defy the executive. What makes this piece good is the subtle irony that the executive ultimately becomes as single-minded in his task as the robots are in theirs.
Ultimately, this film is good, although not great, and worth a rent.
I can't say I always knew why was going on, but I had a good time watching Neo Tokyo.
The first of three short films inside this anthology had more of a fantastical spin than a sci-fi one, the second was a kind of grim and gritty sci-fi story that I think I connected with the least, and then the third and final part was like a blend of sci-fi and comedy. It looked at the madness of a world where robots enforce rules too strictly, having a bit of a Kafka feel, owing to the human protagonist at its centre who's slowly driven mad.
It's short and maybe not the kind of thing that'll stick with me, but I really liked two out of three shorts here, and didn't mind the other. Plus, the animation is surprisingly great throughout the entire thing.
The first of three short films inside this anthology had more of a fantastical spin than a sci-fi one, the second was a kind of grim and gritty sci-fi story that I think I connected with the least, and then the third and final part was like a blend of sci-fi and comedy. It looked at the madness of a world where robots enforce rules too strictly, having a bit of a Kafka feel, owing to the human protagonist at its centre who's slowly driven mad.
It's short and maybe not the kind of thing that'll stick with me, but I really liked two out of three shorts here, and didn't mind the other. Plus, the animation is surprisingly great throughout the entire thing.
Is there a connection between these shorts? Do they take place in the same universe? No. Do they share a theme? No. Are they all sci-fi? Well, two are, but the first one isn't. The first two take place at night, but the last mostly during the day. Nothing on the surface is shared, although they each have a similar style and sense of imagination.
There's not much to say about this short movie. The stories are quite simple, although one is silent and vague. They're just quick glimpses into other worlds. But I liked each one of them. They're interesting, mysterious, and well-animated. There are better anthology films, but this is perfectly fine for a watch. If it interests you, give it a shot. There aren't too many movies like it.
There's not much to say about this short movie. The stories are quite simple, although one is silent and vague. They're just quick glimpses into other worlds. But I liked each one of them. They're interesting, mysterious, and well-animated. There are better anthology films, but this is perfectly fine for a watch. If it interests you, give it a shot. There aren't too many movies like it.
Animated Circus With Racing and Robots
Neo Tokyo Is what happens when your animate for the joy of animation, the story is an afterthought. It's all about the joy of animated fire.
They are 3 stories and they each has their own strength. The first one is cute and has very stylish designed And wonderful backgrounds and the main girl looks super cute with her daddy's pants on.
The second is psychic racing which looks phenomenal has very masculine designs and just wonderful explosion and animated fire.
The third one is the only one that tries to have a narrative and it does it well. A Japanese man that is sent out to close down a construction site run by robots.
Each story is wonderfully animated you can really feel that this was done in that Japanese bubble economy, because everything looks great.
And the third story is my favorite, just looking at these robots that is on the tip of destroying themselves and constantly moving and having Explosions it's so fun to look at.
But it's over quickly and there is no story to make it stay in your mind. You are there for the designs and animation, those are done well. So if you want candy for eyes, watch it.
Neo Tokyo Is what happens when your animate for the joy of animation, the story is an afterthought. It's all about the joy of animated fire.
They are 3 stories and they each has their own strength. The first one is cute and has very stylish designed And wonderful backgrounds and the main girl looks super cute with her daddy's pants on.
The second is psychic racing which looks phenomenal has very masculine designs and just wonderful explosion and animated fire.
The third one is the only one that tries to have a narrative and it does it well. A Japanese man that is sent out to close down a construction site run by robots.
Each story is wonderfully animated you can really feel that this was done in that Japanese bubble economy, because everything looks great.
And the third story is my favorite, just looking at these robots that is on the tip of destroying themselves and constantly moving and having Explosions it's so fun to look at.
But it's over quickly and there is no story to make it stay in your mind. You are there for the designs and animation, those are done well. So if you want candy for eyes, watch it.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesAfter premiering in 1987 the film had its first wide release in its native Japan on video, on October 10 that year. It was only after the success of Akira (1988) that Tôhô gave it a general theatrical release, on April 15, 1989.
- Versions alternativesThe "Running Man" segment had a different English dub, narrated by Rafael Ferrer instead of Michael McConnohie, when aired on MTV's Liquid Television (1991) program than the Streamline or ADV home video versions.
- ConnexionsEdited from Rabirinsu rabirintosu (1986)
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- How long is Neo Tokyo?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Manie Manie: Les Histoires du labyrinthe
- Sociétés de production
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