VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,7/10
2096
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Rudger, un ragazzo immaginario che solo Amanda può vedere, arriva nella Città delle Immaginarie per affrontare una misteriosa minaccia dopo essere stato dimenticato.Rudger, un ragazzo immaginario che solo Amanda può vedere, arriva nella Città delle Immaginarie per affrontare una misteriosa minaccia dopo essere stato dimenticato.Rudger, un ragazzo immaginario che solo Amanda può vedere, arriva nella Città delle Immaginarie per affrontare una misteriosa minaccia dopo essere stato dimenticato.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 1 candidatura in totale
Kokoro Terada
- Rudger
- (voce)
Rio Suzuki
- Amanda
- (voce)
Sakura Andô
- Lizzie
- (voce)
- (as Sakura Ando)
Riisa Naka
- Emily
- (voce)
Takayuki Yamada
- Jinzan
- (voce)
Issei Ogata
- Mr. Bunting
- (voce)
Akira Terao
- Old Dog
- (voce)
Hana Sugisaki
- Aurora
- (voce)
Mitsuaki Kanuka
- Koyuki
- (voce)
Ikue Ôtani
- Doron
- (voce)
Kokoro Hirasawa
- Julia
- (voce)
Eito Kawahara
- John
- (voce)
Louie Rudge-Buchanan
- Rudger
- (English version)
- (voce)
Evie Kiszel
- Amanda
- (English version)
- (voce)
Hayley Atwell
- Lizzie
- (English version)
- (voce)
Recensioni in evidenza
Giving this an 8/10 rating
New film from Studio Ponic, which is and adaptation of an english fantasy novel. This film covers ground that has been stepped on by 'Imaginary Friends', which is still out in the cinema, so you can do this as a double bill if you want, both films are very good and quite dream like, but this more so as it's animated, giggling it a very different feel, the story is different, but the themes is both films are the same.
In this film, the power of the mind is very well explored into dark territory, as the evil in this, is evil, and is quite scary, and you will go-'what the hell is this',, and the film has these comments in it, and some quite joyful scenes, and the characters, real or not, a very well defined and worth sicking with.
I managed to see this in the cinema, and as always, this is the best way for an very well crafted animation, you will get the most out of it.
New film from Studio Ponic, which is and adaptation of an english fantasy novel. This film covers ground that has been stepped on by 'Imaginary Friends', which is still out in the cinema, so you can do this as a double bill if you want, both films are very good and quite dream like, but this more so as it's animated, giggling it a very different feel, the story is different, but the themes is both films are the same.
In this film, the power of the mind is very well explored into dark territory, as the evil in this, is evil, and is quite scary, and you will go-'what the hell is this',, and the film has these comments in it, and some quite joyful scenes, and the characters, real or not, a very well defined and worth sicking with.
I managed to see this in the cinema, and as always, this is the best way for an very well crafted animation, you will get the most out of it.
Movie review by Dennis D. McDonald
Kids' movies about imaginary friends might be a dime a dozen, but The Imaginary has several characteristics that make it special.
Artwork
The animation and artwork are exemplary and gorgeous. Both urban and rural environments are rendered using beautiful drawings and traditional techniques, even when rapidly evolving fantastical events are being portrayed. Remember the parade scene in Paprika? Be prepared for some similar imagery.
Story
The story in this PG rated film starts out feeling recognizable. A young girl in a troubled home with an overactive imagination not only has an imaginary friend, but she also constructs amazingly illustrated worlds into which she and her friend escape. But soon we see a darker side of her imaginary world.
Characters
We eventually see that the problems she experiences in her imaginary world must be addressed by her imaginary friend and his newfound allies. The number of characters rapidly expands including-remember this is a Japanese film-a talking cat.
Crossover
While the crossover between real and imaginary worlds is handled initially via a fairly standard Alice In Wonderland style portal, eventually the relationship between the two worlds becomes complicated as danger emerges into the real world and an accident occurs that has repercussions in the imaginary world.
Rating
This is a PG rated film. I would think carefully about how very young children will handle it. The death of a parent is referenced early on but that is a standard Disney plot point. There are some scary scenes that will frighten really young kids accustomed only to formulaic manufactured animated TV series.
My six-year-old granddaughter, already an experienced Miyazaki fan and lover of films like Bubble, Suzume, and My Oni Girl, liked it very much.
Someone with a preference for a Minions-style humor might not appreciate it. The dialogue is very well written. English voice acting is solid. Plot points are revealed in ways that assume the viewer is paying close attention.
Review copyright 2024 by Dennis D. McDonald, www ddmcd com.
Kids' movies about imaginary friends might be a dime a dozen, but The Imaginary has several characteristics that make it special.
Artwork
The animation and artwork are exemplary and gorgeous. Both urban and rural environments are rendered using beautiful drawings and traditional techniques, even when rapidly evolving fantastical events are being portrayed. Remember the parade scene in Paprika? Be prepared for some similar imagery.
Story
The story in this PG rated film starts out feeling recognizable. A young girl in a troubled home with an overactive imagination not only has an imaginary friend, but she also constructs amazingly illustrated worlds into which she and her friend escape. But soon we see a darker side of her imaginary world.
Characters
We eventually see that the problems she experiences in her imaginary world must be addressed by her imaginary friend and his newfound allies. The number of characters rapidly expands including-remember this is a Japanese film-a talking cat.
Crossover
While the crossover between real and imaginary worlds is handled initially via a fairly standard Alice In Wonderland style portal, eventually the relationship between the two worlds becomes complicated as danger emerges into the real world and an accident occurs that has repercussions in the imaginary world.
Rating
This is a PG rated film. I would think carefully about how very young children will handle it. The death of a parent is referenced early on but that is a standard Disney plot point. There are some scary scenes that will frighten really young kids accustomed only to formulaic manufactured animated TV series.
My six-year-old granddaughter, already an experienced Miyazaki fan and lover of films like Bubble, Suzume, and My Oni Girl, liked it very much.
Someone with a preference for a Minions-style humor might not appreciate it. The dialogue is very well written. English voice acting is solid. Plot points are revealed in ways that assume the viewer is paying close attention.
Review copyright 2024 by Dennis D. McDonald, www ddmcd com.
I just watched a new anime kid's movie on Netflix called The Imaginary. It's about a little girl and her imaginary friend who are threatened by someone who has lived for hundreds of years by devouring children's imaginary friends. I think kid's movies can be broken into two types. There are Miyazaki's films, which are the best. They were made because they had to be made. They were a compulsive expression of the artistic mind behind them and are not restricted to a juvenile viewing public. Then there are kid's movies that were made simply to be a kid's movie and make a buck from the kid audience. They range from utter trash like The Goonies to okay movies like The Imaginary. It has some good ideas in it and I guess it is worth a watch.
I was really looking forward to watching this with my kids after I saw the trailer but the end result was very disappointing for me. It had the surface charm of a Studio Ghibli flick, which we are huge fans of. What could have been a work of art sadly falls short for one very distracting reason. The story, art design, characters, world, etc. Are all fantastic and it would be a visual treat were it not for the jarring camera movements, jittering, and blurriness that are prevalent throughout the movie, especially during high action sequences. Made it very difficult for me to stay focused through the whole thing and nearly caused motion sickness in parts.
The Imaginary is proof that animation is by far the best medium to tell a story like this. Everything runs on imagination and childlike wonder here and the film has more than enough visual beauty, inventive character designs and wonderful adventures to be worthy of its title. It's colourful, emotional and briefly disturbing in ways that all greatest animated films achieve, even if it's not at their level.
Rio Suzuki and Kokoro Terada have all the required energy and childlike innocence, mixed with determination and affecting sadness to lead this with ease. Issey Ogata is surprisingly creepy with an uncomfortable presence that easily matches his character's most disturbing actions and on the other end of the spectrum, everyone else does a great job of being as adorable as the imaginary friends they voice.
Yoshiyuki Momose's direction is endlessly inventive from the very beginning and can handle the bigger tonal shifts in a way that prevents them from feeling jarring. The animation in general is absolutely breathtaking, relishing the opportunity to deliver so much exciting, colourful spectacle. Kenji Tamai's score has the sweeping emotion required to really tug at the heartstrings when necessary.
Rio Suzuki and Kokoro Terada have all the required energy and childlike innocence, mixed with determination and affecting sadness to lead this with ease. Issey Ogata is surprisingly creepy with an uncomfortable presence that easily matches his character's most disturbing actions and on the other end of the spectrum, everyone else does a great job of being as adorable as the imaginary friends they voice.
Yoshiyuki Momose's direction is endlessly inventive from the very beginning and can handle the bigger tonal shifts in a way that prevents them from feeling jarring. The animation in general is absolutely breathtaking, relishing the opportunity to deliver so much exciting, colourful spectacle. Kenji Tamai's score has the sweeping emotion required to really tug at the heartstrings when necessary.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe Imaginary is produced with hand-drawn animation.
- Curiosità sui creditiThe Studio Ponoc logo features Rudger.
- ConnessioniFeatured in MsMojo: Top 10 Best Animated Movies of 2024 (2024)
- Colonne sonoreNothing's Impossible
Performed by A Great Big World featuring Rachel Platten
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 919.996 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 45 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.39 : 1
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