Il film descrive l'incontro tra una bambina e un viaggiatore in un mondo rovinato (incentrato sul mistero di un uovo da lei custodito), contiene pochi dialoghi ma è invece disseminato di sim... Leggi tuttoIl film descrive l'incontro tra una bambina e un viaggiatore in un mondo rovinato (incentrato sul mistero di un uovo da lei custodito), contiene pochi dialoghi ma è invece disseminato di simboli e citazioni bibliche.Il film descrive l'incontro tra una bambina e un viaggiatore in un mondo rovinato (incentrato sul mistero di un uovo da lei custodito), contiene pochi dialoghi ma è invece disseminato di simboli e citazioni bibliche.
Recensioni in evidenza
THE ANGEL'S EGG is amazing barrage of gorgeous visuals that slowly creep up on the screen for one to admire. It's images of egg-carrying little girls walking across a destitute landscape, strange, orb-shaped machines, ancient skeletons and villagers spearing illusionary fish which they will never catch (perhaps a metaphor for religious fanaticism) are truly lovely. The animation is beautiful and it translates Amano's visions, of a world not of the past, present or future that looks equal parts medieval and post apocalyptic, the best of any animation rooted in his worlds. One can choose to see the film for its metaphors, but one is more recommended to simply sit back and enjoy the lovely, painterly images that flash before your eyes.
If you are expecting something furiously paced and full of action and violence like many other anime films, you will be let down and the film is not recommended. It's the closest Japanese animated film to being a true art-house film and is recommended to be approached with that mentality. Simply sit back for an hour or so and let this film take you to its vivid world. Highly recommended for lovers of artistic and intelligent animation.
Where some complain of pace, I was content to listen to the glorious music (as even the characters on screen did) and allow it to tell me the story.
Only after I was forced to view a still image for an interminable amount of time, and feel the anger rise up in me as I imagined the creators of the film laughing at me, did I notice that it created the necessary tension for what was the climax of the film.
I enjoyed having to pay attention to the details of the film, such as how loud the running water was, and what happened when that volume changed; such as whose perspective was I looking from at a particular moment and why; such as why the image persisted but the sound did not, or vice versa; such as why the floor in the beginning looks like a chess board, and who seemed to win at the end.
The less you enjoy thinking about these things, the less you will enjoy this film about shattered innocence, life, death, birth, dreams, causality, and memory.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizWas released in Australia in an edited form under the title "In the aftermath: Angels never sleep" with some obscure live-action footage included.
- Citazioni
Boy: I've seen a tree like this somewere... When was it? So long ago that I've forgotten... Under a sky where the clouds made sound as they moved. The black horizon swelled and from it grew a huge tree. It sucked the life from the ground... And it's pulsing branches reached up, as if to grasp something...
- Versioni alternativeIn the North Korean release, the names of the Japanese cast and crew names are written in Korean characters.
- ConnessioniEdited into In the Aftermath (1988)
I più visti
2025 New York Film Festival Guide
2025 New York Film Festival Guide
Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 2656 USD