AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,1/10
2,5 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaAlice transfers to a new school, where students believe that one student per school year is cursed, whom they call Judas Iscariot. Alice is deemed the new Judas, but what happened to the for... Ler tudoAlice transfers to a new school, where students believe that one student per school year is cursed, whom they call Judas Iscariot. Alice is deemed the new Judas, but what happened to the former Judas?Alice transfers to a new school, where students believe that one student per school year is cursed, whom they call Judas Iscariot. Alice is deemed the new Judas, but what happened to the former Judas?
- Prêmios
- 2 indicações no total
Yû Aoi
- Tetsuko Arisugawa (Alice)
- (narração)
Anne Suzuki
- Hana
- (narração)
Shôko Aida
- Kayo Arisugawa
- (narração)
Sei Hiraizumi
- Kuroyanagi Kenji
- (narração)
Tomohiro Kaku
- Asanaga-sensei
- (narração)
Ryô Katsuji
- Yuda Kotaro
- (narração)
Midoriko Kimura
- Tomomi Arai
- (narração)
Tae Kimura
- Tsutsumi Yuki
- (narração)
Haru Kuroki
- Satomi Hagino-sensei
- (narração)
Ranran Suzuki
- Tomomi Mutsu
- (narração)
Avaliações em destaque
This is an interesting little tale of how two teenage girls became friends. It has a very honest feeling in how the characters speak and move. Having lived in Japan, this movie really gives a surprisingly unexpected sensation of the everyday there.
What sets this movie apart is probably what bothers me. This movie reminds me of the Flowers of Evil TV series from 2013 since both are animated through rotoscoping (an animation technique in which animators trace over footage, frame by frame). This is a decent story, but it could have easily been done without animation. The animation gave some really pretty colors to some scenes, but in the overall it feels unnecessary. You could have told the same story with actors and the result wouldn't be much different.
The fact that it is animated will most likely be an important factor to attract and repel some people and it shouldn't. This is not your typical high school anime. It is a movie that happens to be animated. Just that.
All in all, a cute adventure of two girls living an unforgettable moment of their adolescence. If you are into teenage dramas and Japan, you might like this.
What sets this movie apart is probably what bothers me. This movie reminds me of the Flowers of Evil TV series from 2013 since both are animated through rotoscoping (an animation technique in which animators trace over footage, frame by frame). This is a decent story, but it could have easily been done without animation. The animation gave some really pretty colors to some scenes, but in the overall it feels unnecessary. You could have told the same story with actors and the result wouldn't be much different.
The fact that it is animated will most likely be an important factor to attract and repel some people and it shouldn't. This is not your typical high school anime. It is a movie that happens to be animated. Just that.
All in all, a cute adventure of two girls living an unforgettable moment of their adolescence. If you are into teenage dramas and Japan, you might like this.
This film perfectly captures the adventurous spirit, the whimsical imaginations, and the awkward solutions that fuels every day life of a 14 year old. As someone who grew up in this kind of environment (although a decade ago) I was uplifted by nostalgia and the naive purity of all the characters.
Just look at the screen! The sky painted in this film is absolutely stunning. Backgrounds are detailed and yet not an eye-sore. Sure the characters looked like rough sketch compared to other more visually accomplished Japanese anime, but I think it was simply a wonderful style to match the story.
Iwai Shunji, the sensitive soul behind such classics like "Love Letter" and "April Story (Shigatsu Monogatari)" reunites with the original 2004 cast of "Hana and Alice" (Yu Aoi and Anne Suzuki) to tell this small but emotionally rich story involving ballet, a school cult, and a murder investigation. It's fine that you haven't watched the 2004 film. This sets up a new story and invests time in proper character development. The film follows Alice as she interacts with a number of people and proceeds to build relationships with them. Some are hilarious (the cult leader), some are touching (an old man) and her meeting with Hana, is something else entirely. Despite an over-the-top set-up, the mystery's solution actually makes sense and isn't contrived to deliver ridiculous twist.
The laughs are there, it looks amazing, the characters are people whom I'd give big hugs to and Iwai Shunji is definitely on-form in his direction.
Just look at the screen! The sky painted in this film is absolutely stunning. Backgrounds are detailed and yet not an eye-sore. Sure the characters looked like rough sketch compared to other more visually accomplished Japanese anime, but I think it was simply a wonderful style to match the story.
Iwai Shunji, the sensitive soul behind such classics like "Love Letter" and "April Story (Shigatsu Monogatari)" reunites with the original 2004 cast of "Hana and Alice" (Yu Aoi and Anne Suzuki) to tell this small but emotionally rich story involving ballet, a school cult, and a murder investigation. It's fine that you haven't watched the 2004 film. This sets up a new story and invests time in proper character development. The film follows Alice as she interacts with a number of people and proceeds to build relationships with them. Some are hilarious (the cult leader), some are touching (an old man) and her meeting with Hana, is something else entirely. Despite an over-the-top set-up, the mystery's solution actually makes sense and isn't contrived to deliver ridiculous twist.
The laughs are there, it looks amazing, the characters are people whom I'd give big hugs to and Iwai Shunji is definitely on-form in his direction.
Through anecdotes, superstitions, and myths, the story captures the essence of Asian culture in a straightforward yet profoundly significant way. It emphasizes the errors made in high school and is sympathetic and relevant. Western and European audiences find the story's straightforward yet profound delivery to be endearing and delightful.
Alice was a transfer student at first, and when she arrived at her new school, her classroom had a tale. The tale of her desk made her the center of attention, and I suddenly realized that I was drawn into the narrative as well. Can you tell me about her desk? Abruptly, I found myself immersed in a tale of friendship, revelation, veracity, and the frailty of human emotions. Without knowing the truth, you cannot move on, and without accepting reality, you cannot move at all. Otherwise, your life would be stagnate and you will suffer.
Alice was a transfer student at first, and when she arrived at her new school, her classroom had a tale. The tale of her desk made her the center of attention, and I suddenly realized that I was drawn into the narrative as well. Can you tell me about her desk? Abruptly, I found myself immersed in a tale of friendship, revelation, veracity, and the frailty of human emotions. Without knowing the truth, you cannot move on, and without accepting reality, you cannot move at all. Otherwise, your life would be stagnate and you will suffer.
This is a strange little movie. OK, so in 2003, Shunji Iwai makes a live action film named "Hana and Alice". Then 9 years later, he makes a prequel starring the same two actresses, but animates it. In this world of making live action adaptations (which I hate) this is one that goes the opposite direction.
The animation is all rotoscoped. That is where you trace over a live action reference to make your animation. It reminds me of Matthew McCleskey's YouTube videos. It is a very...distinct style for a feature.
The titular case is the worst run investigation I have ever seen. As I explained it out loud, I couldn't help but laugh at Hana and Alice's incompetence in solving the mystery. The movie spends most of its runtime on these misadventures. The two of them spinning their wheels as they go nowhere.
And to think, the whole mystery happens because of a Kit-Kat bar. Give me a break.
The animation is all rotoscoped. That is where you trace over a live action reference to make your animation. It reminds me of Matthew McCleskey's YouTube videos. It is a very...distinct style for a feature.
The titular case is the worst run investigation I have ever seen. As I explained it out loud, I couldn't help but laugh at Hana and Alice's incompetence in solving the mystery. The movie spends most of its runtime on these misadventures. The two of them spinning their wheels as they go nowhere.
And to think, the whole mystery happens because of a Kit-Kat bar. Give me a break.
No pun intended - and of course not comparable with the new phone thing I am ripping this off. But I hope you are not too mad about me trying to be a bit funny. Even darker stuff that the movie does have some in, do not take away from some funny moments here too. So there is always light - without which there can be no darkness ... or was it shadows? Well I think you get the sentiment.
Being new somewhere - I think we can relate to that. Most of us, especially if we have some years/experience. If not we will earn or get that. But even without that, you can relate to the school thing at least. You have to love animated movies - or at least not dislike them. I wouldn't know why you should or would have a problem with them - but in case you have, skip this. You'll be missing out on a pretty good movie, even though there are better ones of course. Still imagination is running high and the movie/story is quite packed. A lot of characters and a lot of stuff to keep track of. Nice twists and turns too ... right up until the end ... finding out stuff/people ...
Being new somewhere - I think we can relate to that. Most of us, especially if we have some years/experience. If not we will earn or get that. But even without that, you can relate to the school thing at least. You have to love animated movies - or at least not dislike them. I wouldn't know why you should or would have a problem with them - but in case you have, skip this. You'll be missing out on a pretty good movie, even though there are better ones of course. Still imagination is running high and the movie/story is quite packed. A lot of characters and a lot of stuff to keep track of. Nice twists and turns too ... right up until the end ... finding out stuff/people ...
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAnne Suzuki and Yû Aoi provide the voices of Hana and Alice, respectively, whom they also played in Hana e Alice (2004).
- ConexõesFollows Hana e Alice (2004)
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- How long is The Murder Case of Hana & Alice?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Murder Case of Hana & Alice
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora 40 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.85 : 1
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