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IMDbPro

Nadia - Il mistero della pietra azzurra

Titolo originale: Fushigi no Umi no Nadia
  • Serie TV
  • 1990–1991
  • T
  • 25min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,8/10
2276
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
POPOLARITÀ
4937
5298
Nadia - Il mistero della pietra azzurra (1990)
The Perfect Collection
Riproduci trailer1:06
4 video
99+ foto
GiapponeseAnimazione disegnata a manoAnimazione per adultiAnimeAvventura in mareDark fantasyMissioneSteampunkSwashbucklerAnimazione

Una adolescente acrobata dalle origini misteriose e un giovane inventore si ritrovano invischiati in una trama sinistra che coinvolge il destino del mondo.Una adolescente acrobata dalle origini misteriose e un giovane inventore si ritrovano invischiati in una trama sinistra che coinvolge il destino del mondo.Una adolescente acrobata dalle origini misteriose e un giovane inventore si ritrovano invischiati in una trama sinistra che coinvolge il destino del mondo.

  • Ideazione
    • Jules Verne
  • Star
    • James Arnold Taylor
    • Nathan Parsons
    • Guy Roberts
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,8/10
    2276
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    POPOLARITÀ
    4937
    5298
    • Ideazione
      • Jules Verne
    • Star
      • James Arnold Taylor
      • Nathan Parsons
      • Guy Roberts
    • 18Recensioni degli utenti
    • 14Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • Episodi39

    Sfoglia gli episodi
    InizioI più votati1 stagione

    Video4

    Nadia: Secret of Blue Water
    Trailer 1:06
    Nadia: Secret of Blue Water
    Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water
    Trailer 1:07
    Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water
    Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water
    Trailer 1:07
    Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water
    Nadia: Secret Of Blue Water: The Adventure Begins
    Trailer 1:04
    Nadia: Secret Of Blue Water: The Adventure Begins
    Nadia: The Secret Of Blue Water
    Trailer 1:27
    Nadia: The Secret Of Blue Water

    Foto111

    Visualizza poster
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    + 103
    Visualizza poster

    Cast principale99+

    Modifica
    James Arnold Taylor
    James Arnold Taylor
    • Red Noah
    • 1990–1991
    Nathan Parsons
    Nathan Parsons
    • Jean
    • 1990–1991
    Guy Roberts
    Guy Roberts
    • Field Soldier…
    • 1990–1991
    Judson Jones
    Judson Jones
    • Gargoyle's Henchman…
    • 1990–1991
    Nanker Phelge
    • Field Soldier
    • 1990–1991
    Douglas Taylor
    • Nautilus Cook…
    • 1990–1991
    Clay Towery
    • Tavern Sailor…
    • 1990–1991
    Craig Kanne
    • Red Noah
    • 1990–1991
    Talbot McKitt
    • New Nautilus Radio
    • 1990–1991
    Carl Domaski
    • Field Soldier
    • 1990–1991
    Noriko Hidaka
    • Jean
    • 1990–1991
    Meg Bauman
    Meg Bauman
    • Nadia
    • 1990–1991
    Shawn Sides
    Shawn Sides
    • King
    • 1990–1991
    Toshiharu Sakurai
    • King…
    • 1990–1991
    Yoshino Takamori
    • Nadia
    • 1990–1991
    Karen Kuykendall
    • Narrator
    • 1990–1991
    Sarah j Price
    • Grandis
    • 1990–1991
    Martin Blacker
    • Sanson
    • 1990–1991
    • Ideazione
      • Jules Verne
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti18

    7,82.2K
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    9MissSimonetta

    Classic steampunk series

    Nadia seems to have fallen off the radar when it comes to 90s anime, but it's truly one of the classics of the decade. Few shows feel as equally accessible to kids and adults alike, and the show's themes about technology, power, and love remain provoking.

    The characters are all so memorable. Jean and Nadia are the finest protagonists one could ask for in this sort of adventure, likable while still leaving a lot of room for character development. (Nadia can get supremely irritating at times, but she's such a unique heroine and her growth is so powerful that her more zealous moments can be tolerated.) The child Marie and Nadia's pet lion cub King are cute without being cloying, and the Grandis trio are comic gold who come to be more fleshed out as the story goes on. Nemo, Electra, and the rest of the Nautilus submarine crew are all fantastic, and the villains are sinister without feeling one-note.

    The animation in the first season is breathtaking for a television series, though it notably declines in quality by the second season. Speaking of the second season, it is awful, the one true drawback to this great show. The characters lose much of the development they gained at the end of season one and little of interest happens. Unless you are a completion-ist like me, it could be skipped altogether without losing much narrative cohesiveness.

    Secret of Blue Water needs rediscovery. It's much superior to some of the more popular 90s anime and as far as coming-of-age adventures go, this series dwells with the best of the genre.
    Vegeta-2

    One of the greatest anime series of all time.

    This series, a creation of Studio Gainax, is a perfect example of why I love anime. It has everything: Adventure, romance, action, comedy, and drama. Oh, does it have drama. And all of these elements are brought together in such a way that "perfection" doesn't do it justice. Running for 39 episodes, this series starts out in Paris in the late 1800's. Jean (pronounced the French way), a young boy with an incredible knowledge for designing aircraft, meets a girl named Nadia. Nadia is a mysterious girl, and quite unusual. Her companion is a grey lion cub named King, and they are being chased by a band of jewel thieves (Graten, Samson, and Hanson, three of the coolest anime characters ever)because Nadia has a pendant around her neck, a diamond-shaped, blue crystal. But, that's just a small part of the story, for you see, that crystal holds a secret capable of destroying the world. Nadia and Jean meet other characters, including the enigmatic Captain Nemo, captain of a high-tech, almost futuristic submarine named the Nautilus (the series borrows some elements from the Jules Vernes novel 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, then adds it's own spin to them). They also encounter the series' true villain, the leader of a society called Neo Atlantis. This villain, named Gargoyle, is perhaps the single most evil villain I've ever seen, as well as one of the coolest. He's very proper, with a calm, smooth voice, not loud and over-the-top like most typical villains, and hides his face behind a mask (take Darth Vader's coolness and multiply it by about 10, and you've got Gargoyle). Eventually, the series explores the secrets of Nadia's past, her relationship with Nemo and Jean, and the awesome power her pendant, the Blue Water, unlocks. The series' finale, the final four episodes, are some of the best viewing you can get (why, oh why can't American animation be this good?), with heart-wrenching drama and glorious animation. The music, by the same composer as the Evangelion music, is heavenly, and the character designs by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto are as good as his Eva character designs (the man is an artistic genius). The opening and ending themes are fantastic, also. All in all, this series is the only anime I can think of that equals Neon Genesis Evangelion in every respect, and in some may actually surpass Eva. After all, Eva was great, but lacked a cool villain (and Gargoyle is one of the coolest). If A.D. Vision ever gets around to releasing this officially over here, buy it (and please buy the subtitled versions, the voices are just TOO GOOD to watch a dubbed version). An 11 out of 10.
    gladrius

    Guyver was my first anime love, but Secret of Blue Water always loved me back

    Possible spoilers ahead.

    I don't know what I can possibly say about this phenomenal series that hasn't been said already, but I'm here to try anyway. From the moment I saw a review of this series in Gamefan magazine (rest in peace), I fell in love. I had to see it. I dashed out to the mall and grabbed the first copy I saw. And it grabbed me right back, and would not let me go.

    The series uses 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (and to a lesser extent the sequel Mysterious Island) as a jumping point for its own story. It takes place in 1889, and revolves around two teens, Jean, a French boy who wants to change the world with inventions and is the biggest weenie who's ever been the hero of an anime, and Nadia, a circus acrobat and animal trainer who has a magical crystal, the Blue Water, and no clue about where she comes from. During the course of things they embark on an adventure to get to the bottom of Nadia's past, meet Captain Nemo and help to stop a group of people from Atlantis from taking over the world. And I loved every minute of it.

    I mean for crying out loud, what kind of mad genius does it take to make episodes on end of adjusting to life on a submarine entertaining? Whatever kind it is, the guys at Gainax had it. Their smarts in storytelling show in other areas too, mainly the finely tuned characters, like the obligatory kid, Marie, who manages to be anything but the obnoxious brat the kid in an anime series almost always is. Nadia's the only short-tempered anime girl I've ever actually liked. The Grandis Gang go from the comically inept antagonists to helpful and resourceful back-up for the other characters once the real menacing villains show up. In the two really big battles of the series it's arguably them who ultimately save the day.

    It does warrant mentioning that this show kind of flounders in the middle, owing to a bunch of quickly-proudced episodes that were shoehorned in to pad out the length of the series when it became an unexpected hit. Most of the mid-to-late 20's of Nadia can be skipped without missing anything worth seeing.

    If you're an anime fan, want to watch a series with people in it you'll care about, and don't mind being expected to root for a dork like Jean, please do yourself a favor and pick this up. Oh, and do yourself another favor and watch it with the subtitles on. I'm sure Nathan Parsons is a wonderful human being who'd give me the shirt off his back, but a friend of mine actually started laughing out loud at how dumb Jean's voice sounded when we watched it with the English voices.

    And before I go, I want affirm what everyone else is saying, that the sequel movie is terrible and should be avoided by fans of the series at all costs. Unless you want to see how badly a story can undermine itself (pretty much every suspense issue is defeated by watching the series epilogue and twenty five minutes straight of the movie is series flashbacks). Otherwise, stay away. You'll thank me.
    boonewilliams

    schizo, but fun!

    i bought a package of various bootleg anime series (bad, i know) and spent a few months muddling my way through them all. some were really good (pretear, love hina) some grew on me (macross 7) and some flat-out stunk. (to heart, and ironically, the series for which i bought the bundle, angelic layer) i approached them all with a certain amount of skepticism and nadia was no different. the story takes place in the 1880's and spent its first few minutes placing the viewer within the frame of the times. however, a few minutes later the story introduces the villains/heroes known as the grandis gang and their apparent mastery of a level of technology unavailable now 100 years later. so if anachronisms and anthropomorphisms bug you, nadia won't appeal to you.

    as the plot develops, the characters take on depth and voice and you can't help but be charmed. the story becomes complicated and textured and not a little dark. then suddenly the first act closes and the second begins by abruptly changing from a tense drama into a wile e. coyote cartoon. then as soon as you settling into the admittedly funny and loopy island adventures, the series swiftly switches back into its formerly dramatic theme. so if wild swings in tone bug you, nadia won't appeal to you.

    can a series flip and twist back and forth between drama and slap-stick comedy and still work? watch nadia for yourself and you be the judge. i found myself forgiving its flaws because it created characters i cared about, who seemed to have the depth to consider who they themselves were and what motivated them. the series lovingly embraces its characters flaws rather then exploiting them. (as was the case in evangelion, also by hideki anno) i forgave the surreality of the plot because it had the profound insight and courage to craft REAL teenagers. (i know a real kid who in his loving teenage cluelessness could have written jean's painfully funny "nadia" song) i especially appreciated the fact that marry's 5-year-old character wasn't nearly as obnoxious as she could have been. nadia could have been done differently, eliminating either its most serious moments or its most ridiculous, but it might not have been the same.

    somewhere between the wide swings of our own pendulum is where real life happens.

    p.s. there is a movie. it stinks, and adds nothing to anyone or anything in the story. resist the temptation to find it or watch it.
    8dave13-1

    Exciting, beautifully drawn, wonderfully animated; a must see series.

    Before anime characters started sporting gravity defying hair and using freaky psychic powers to subvert the laws of physics, we got a few gems like these. Nadia is one of the most popular series of the 80s and one of the best looking, especially over the first few episodes. The visuals are breathtaking and the action is edge-of-your-seat exciting. The action is driven by exciting stunts and the (then) cutting edge inventions from the age of steam make for wonderfully unpredictable getaway vehicles. The first episode alone has one of the best anime chase scenes of the period, as memorable as anything in Castle Cagliostro, and the excitement keeps up from there. The 'villainous' trio pursuing the main character are my only real complaint with the series; they are meant to be both threatening and comical, but they just come off as goofy and tend to get in the way. The pace also tends to slacken a bit after episode two, but the rest of the series is still worth watching for its likable characters and gorgeous visuals. The first couple of episodes are maybe the best in the series and start things off at a frenetic pace, making for memorable entertainment and good fun.

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    Trama

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    Lo sapevi?

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    • Quiz
      Gainax, the production company, has a reputation for being frugal when it comes to animation in some of their productions. This sometimes means that they will reuse animation; not only from the current production, but from other series they've produced if the budget becomes too tight. This is apparent in one episode of this series - when the Nautilus is doing battle against a pack of Garfish, footage of missile tubes opening is lifted from Punta al top! - GunBuster (1988). Also, stock footage of the ocean waves beating against the sand from the Island episodes and the explosion caused by the Tower of Babel's energy beam in this series ends up being used again in Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995).
    • Connessioni
      Edited into Nadia: The Secret of Blue Water - Nautilus Story I (1991)
    • Colonne sonore
      El misterio de la piedra azul
      (Spanish Theme)

      Composed by Carmelo Carucci

      Written by Tony Seven

      Performed by Sol Pilas (uncredited)

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    Dettagli

    Modifica
    • Data di uscita
      • 1 luglio 1991 (Italia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Giappone
    • Lingua
      • Giapponese
    • Celebre anche come
      • Il mistero della pietra azzurra
    • Aziende produttrici
      • Corad
      • Gainax
      • Group TAC (I)
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

    Modifica
    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 25min
    • Colore
      • Color
    • Mix di suoni
      • Stereo
    • Proporzioni
      • 1.33 : 1

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