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Horus, prince du soleil

Original title: Taiyô no ôji: Horusu no daibôken
  • 1968
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Horus, prince du soleil (1968)
AnimeActionAdventureAnimationDramaFamilyFantasy

A boy with a mythical sword wants to protect a Norse village from an evil ice wizard and his minions, who destroyed his family's village. However, the villagers don't fully trust him and a m... Read allA boy with a mythical sword wants to protect a Norse village from an evil ice wizard and his minions, who destroyed his family's village. However, the villagers don't fully trust him and a mysterious girl with a dark secret befriends him.A boy with a mythical sword wants to protect a Norse village from an evil ice wizard and his minions, who destroyed his family's village. However, the villagers don't fully trust him and a mysterious girl with a dark secret befriends him.

  • Director
    • Isao Takahata
  • Writer
    • Kazuo Fukazawa
  • Stars
    • Mikijirô Hira
    • Etsuko Ichihara
    • Eijirô Tôno
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Isao Takahata
    • Writer
      • Kazuo Fukazawa
    • Stars
      • Mikijirô Hira
      • Etsuko Ichihara
      • Eijirô Tôno
    • 25User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos25

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    Top cast23

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    Mikijirô Hira
    Mikijirô Hira
    • Grunwald, the Demon of Ice
    • (voice)
    Etsuko Ichihara
    • Hilda
    • (voice)
    Eijirô Tôno
    Eijirô Tôno
    • Ganko, the blacksmith
    • (voice)
    Masao Mishima
    Masao Mishima
    • Village Leader
    • (voice)
    Yasushi Nagata
    • Drago, villager
    Hisako Ôkata
    • Hols
    • (voice)
    Hiroshi Kamiyama
    • Villager
    • (voice)
    Hisashi Yokomori
    • Horu's Father
    • (voice)
    • …
    Tokuko Sugiyama
    Tadashi Yokouchi
    • Paul
    • (voice)
    • …
    Asako Akazawa
    • Piria, Rusan's fiancée
    Yuriko Abe
    Yuriko Abe
    • Young woman
    Kazuo Tachibana
    • Villager
    Taisaku Akino
    Taisaku Akino
    • Rusan
    • (as Masaaki Tsusaka)
    Yoshie Hinoki
    Yôko Mizugaki
    • Little girl Mauni
    • (as Yoko Mizugaki)
    Noriko Ohara
    Noriko Ohara
    • Chiro
    Yoshiko Asai
    • Coro, the little Bear
    • (voice)
    • (as Yukari Asai)
    • Director
      • Isao Takahata
    • Writer
      • Kazuo Fukazawa
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews25

    6.52.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8siderite

    Very good anime, for its time

    I can only imagine how hard it was to do an animation such as this in 1968. At the time Disney was doing Mickey Mouse animation (the squeaky voice ones) and Yellow Submarine was released.

    However, as in most Isao Takahata animes the focus is not on the animation, but on the script. People battle against the forces of evil using their most powerful weapon: will power. Evil comes in the form of bad luck, misfortune, direct attacks and sneaky social manipulation. Good's champion is a boy that has come to fulfill his dying father's last wish. You can find love, betrayal, anger, violence, marital ceremonies, friendship, all the hallmarks of good Japanese anime.

    OK, the animation is not great. There are whole scenes of static images that are filmed , for example. Also, there is a plague that Disney is just now getting rid of, the plague of group songs in the middle of the film. But there are a lot of good things that overcome by far the bad parts. It's like a battle of good versus evil in its own :)

    Doesn't hurt to mention Hayao Miyazaki, which is humbly placed somewhere in the middle of the crew list, as an animator and scene designer. As far as I know this is his first work, but you already find a lot of elements that will appear in all his work from then on.

    Any anime fanatic must watch this. Children or very young people might get slightly bored.
    9BabelAlexandria

    Impressive, Well-Aged Debut for Miyazaki and Takahata

    Although it was made in 1968, this fascinating animated film feels more like it came out a few years before Nausicaa in the early 1980s; fans of Studio Ghibli will recognize all of its distinctive calling cards. One of these calling cards is the feeling of being totally immersed in an alternate world, which, in this case, is achieved through cultural ambiguity. The odd title, Horus: Prince of the Sun, suggests a pseudo-Egyptian setting, but that couldn't be further from the truth: it is instead vaguely Scandinavian, with its focus on northern villages, but drawing on the culture and mythology of the Ainu, the indigenous people of Hokkaido, Japan's northern island. There are relatively few people, and they are barely surviving given the harsh environment and the evil demon Grunwald, who wants to eliminate humanity; in fact, the isolated village recalls in many ways the post-apocalyptic world of Nausicaa.

    While this movie is usually heralded as an auspicious beginning for Japanese anime and Studio Ghibli, I noticed the strong influence of one of its forebears: Lev Atamanov's Snow Queen. In particular, the dark and cold Grunwald is very much like a male version of the Snow Queen, including his appearance. Horus and Hilda recall Kay and Gerda, except that here it is Hilda who is under the spell of the Snow (King). Hilda, like Gerda, is guided by a bird, this time an evil owl. I could go on, but the influence is real, and significant, as acknowledged by Miyazaki. The major difference is that, unlike the later Ghibli films (and Atamanov's Snow Queen, for example), it is the male rather than the female who is the lead.
    7emasterslake

    The first Isao Takahata film

    Before My Neighbors the Yamadas, before Pom Poko, before Only Yesterday, and before Grave of the Fireflies. There was Little Prince Horus(USA Title). This was the first Movie Isao Takahata directed.

    He and legendary Anime maker Hayao Miyazaki and some other animators who were still in their early years in animation industries made this film possible.

    It's nothing like Isao Takahata's other works. This one is about an Alternate Viking/Scandinavian Time Period about a boy named Horus who receives a sword from some Earth God, and is sent on a quest to defeat an Ice Demon(who's pretty cool looking) meets a group of village locals and a mysterious Girl who has the key to restoring peace to the land.

    It took 3 years for this film to be made. Animation is well done even if this was made 38 years ago. Back when Anime was still primitive. It's interesting to watch. Too bad it didn't do well when it was in Japanese Theatures. But what's cool about it is it became known as the earliest forms of modern anime.

    In other words it's anime that doesn't have to be made for kids to watch.

    I'm not sure when it'll get licensed to get it's own English Debut. But worth seeing for those who are interested in Animes that broke the rules. I'd recommend this film for Ages 12 and up contains cartoon violence and a split second of nudity.
    7benjamin_lappin

    An Inspirational Film In More Ways Than One

    Was this the start of anime as we know it? I'm not versed enough in the history of Japanese animation to make such a bold statement, however what I can tell you is that with the creation of this film we have derived many classic, awe inspiring and moving stories from Studio Ghibli. As some may say with no Akira there would have been no Matrix, without The Little Norse Prince, there would have been no Nausicaa, Laputa, Princess Mononoke, Grave Of The Fireflies, Spirited Away and many more. While The Little Norse Prince may not be as grand as the fore-mentioned it is an emotionally captivating fairytale whose importance transcends the 81 minutes it runs for.

    Set within the medieval ages of Nordic Europe, The Little Norse Prince tells the tale of a young boy named Hols embarking on a journey to find his kinsmen and restore peace to a land taken by a devious sorcerer named Grunwald. Isao Takahata's film is an innocent telling, yet harbours some severely darker moments (for the younger viewer), as our hero ventures through a blend of myth, legend, swords and magic, showing the courage and bravery that have become the hallmark for the protagonists at Studio Ghibli.

    While Disney were creating gimmicky films like The Sword In The Stone, Takahada filled his film with the truest essence of humanity, as Hols must not only fight The Frost King, but must also deal with peoples misconceptions, stubborn attitudes and discriminatory views. The Little Norse Prince is deeper than fighting shape changing witches and squirrel romances, and in its purity is so awe inspiring. It has the ability to turn you into a child again, and view it with the eyes of an innocent as he manages to remind us what is noble about humanity and what we sometimes lack in ourselves. The Little Norse Prince is by no means a classic in the grand sense of cinema, but has an undeniable ability to transport us to a time and space when the world seemed a better place and life was worth fighting for.

    Takahada laid the foundations with The Little Norse Prince for some remarkable and simply brilliant films, and it is quite easy to see how he and Miyazaki (who was an animator on this production) found the inspiration to be able to take the essence of Norse Prince, elaborate and expand on the settings and morals. One of the notable aspects is how exceptionally refined the imagination of Takahada is, as this film just exudes originality and feels completely different and fresh next to its contemporaries, and indeed the same can be said of the more recent Ghibli films compared to talking fish and super hero families. The Little Norse Prince may not be the greatest anime ever created, but it certainly is true to itself and the messages it wishes to deliver us as an audience and can only be praised as an effective means of emotive story telling which can and does not only appeal to all ages, but speak to all ages.
    10MissSimonetta

    An unsung milestone in animation history

    The influence of Horus: Prince of the Sun (1968) cannot be overstated. It is not only the feature debut of the legendary Isao Takahata or a precursor of Studio Ghibli; it changed the face of Japanese animation forever, pushing aside the notion that all animation must be for children, that all animation must fit in the Disney musical mold.

    I don't feel I need to go into the film's notoriously troubled production; other reviewers have done so with skill. But let me stress to you that if you consider yourself a fan of animation at all, you owe it to yourself to view Horus. Its musical numbers and talking animals are belied by psychological realism, a gritty sensibility, and political commentary. This isn't just a dark family film in the mode of Disney's Pinocchio (1940) or Bluth's The Secret of NIMH (1982), nor is it an "edgy" adult animation which mistakes crudity for maturity.

    The film was a disappointment when first released, but its fan base grew quickly with re-releases, many of these fans being high school and college aged students who connected with the struggles of the protagonists, Horus and Hilda. In the United States, we have no equivalent to Horus as of this writing. We are still trapped by the Snow White and Toy Story model. I earnestly pray an American Takahata will one day give us a film such as this and change our animation landscape too.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The production was ridden with problems, mainly due to the difficult union relationships between the artists and the company Tôei Animation (then known as Tôei Dôga). The movie was released far beyond schedule and kept in the theaters only for 10 days. Because of this, it bombed, and Isao Takahata never directed for Toei again. However, the movie became immediately an underground hit among students and young anime artists, and is now widely considered the first modern anime.
    • Goofs
      When Grunwald is holding Hols' rope on the icy cliff, you can see his gloves change color from black to blue to black again.
    • Quotes

      Hols: [after escaping from the Endless Woods and encountering Hilda] Hilda, come with me to the village.

      [She steps back, clutches her amulet and glares coldly at him]

      Hols: I was right, I knew we could get the other Hilda out of you. Come to the village, Hilda.

      [Shaking her head, she attacks him with her sword and he fends her off with his axe]

      Hols: That's the Hilda we must get out of you. Be brave and show them how human you really are.

      [He disarms her and she bows her head]

      Hols: There... you are human

      Hilda: [Gazes sadly at him] Goodbye, Hols.

      [Begins to slide into the snow darkness like a ghost]

      Hols: Hilda!

      Hilda: My brother went to the village... you'd better hurry to help Flep and Mauni.

      Hols: Hilda...

    • Alternate versions
      The English-dubbed version from AIP-TV changed the location of the film from Northern Japan to Norway.
    • Connections
      Featured in Hana to Arisu (2004)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 4, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • TOEI ANIMATION (Japan)
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Horus, Prince of the Sun
    • Filming locations
      • Tokyo, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Toei Animation
      • Toei Animation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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