IMDb RATING
6.8/10
3.5K
YOUR RATING
A compassionate young nurse is determined to help an elderly invalid strapped to a revolutionary health care bed but there are unexpected consequences.A compassionate young nurse is determined to help an elderly invalid strapped to a revolutionary health care bed but there are unexpected consequences.A compassionate young nurse is determined to help an elderly invalid strapped to a revolutionary health care bed but there are unexpected consequences.
- Awards
- 1 win total
Shinji Ogawa
- Suguru Terada
- (voice)
Ryûji Saikachi
- Old Man
- (voice)
Takeshi Aono
- Old Man
- (voice)
Kôji Tsujitani
- Mitsuru Maeda
- (voice)
Chie Satô
- Nobuko Ômae
- (voice)
- (as Chie Satou)
Rica Matsumoto
- Tomoe Satô
- (voice)
Teiji Ômiya
- Manager Minagawa
- (voice)
Sho Saito
- Haru Takazawa
- (voice)
Bin Shimada
- Staffer A
- (voice)
Chô
- Reporter A
- (voice)
- (as Yûichi Nagashima)
Toshiyuki Morikawa
- Reporter B
- (voice)
Wataru Takagi
- Reporter C
- (voice)
Takumi Yamazaki
- Reporter D
- (voice)
Featured reviews
An odd feature-length anime which haphazardly mashes genres and ideas that, while curious, aren't completely successful together. I'm not sure if it was meant to be a comedy or a straight sci-fi nightmare, but it tries mixing elements of both and their clash hurts the whole.
The plot is out-there and interesting, a concerned rumination on the looming near-future in which young are outnumbered by old, their careers hampered by the need to care for aging family. To address this worry, and liberate the fresher generation, a major metro hospital has developed (what else) a fully self-contained cybernetic bed, complete with built-in exercise routines, bathing capabilities and self-defense mechanisms. Katsuhiro Otomo handles the screenplay and many of the mechanical designs, and boy, does it feel a whole lot like Akira in places. Particularly the last hour, when the bed inevitably gains sentience, staggers through the city with a test subject strapped to its chest and swallows up machines in a gale of techno-organic vines and limbs.
The crazier bits are nice to look at, detailed and smooth in motion (if not quite to the intricate level of Otomo's masterwork), but the flat character designs and overly simplistic storytelling leave a lot to be desired. Also, not entirely a knock on the film itself, but my copy randomly swapped subtitles for dubs around the halfway mark and the English voice acting is downright unbearable.
The plot is out-there and interesting, a concerned rumination on the looming near-future in which young are outnumbered by old, their careers hampered by the need to care for aging family. To address this worry, and liberate the fresher generation, a major metro hospital has developed (what else) a fully self-contained cybernetic bed, complete with built-in exercise routines, bathing capabilities and self-defense mechanisms. Katsuhiro Otomo handles the screenplay and many of the mechanical designs, and boy, does it feel a whole lot like Akira in places. Particularly the last hour, when the bed inevitably gains sentience, staggers through the city with a test subject strapped to its chest and swallows up machines in a gale of techno-organic vines and limbs.
The crazier bits are nice to look at, detailed and smooth in motion (if not quite to the intricate level of Otomo's masterwork), but the flat character designs and overly simplistic storytelling leave a lot to be desired. Also, not entirely a knock on the film itself, but my copy randomly swapped subtitles for dubs around the halfway mark and the English voice acting is downright unbearable.
Roujien Z starts out being a wonderfully vicious satire of society's treatment of the aged. We see a young nurse taking care of an almost vegetative geriatric, one of the many old and infirm that would be in a nursing home in the USA. He is then selected to be the guinea-pig for a new, completely automated caretaking robot, a sly jab at the dehumanizing sterility of geriatric care. The story maintains its high energy and grinning cynicism until the robot goes insane and decides it is the old man's wife; from here it becomes a rather confusing action movie before pulling itself together in time for a poignant ending. Still worth watching, if you can find it.
It was a cynical comedy that was depicted serious problem of an aging society and care for them.
A nursery experiment by robots was done in the name of Ministry of Health and Welfare. They said that pushing to nurse them was just exhausting time of youger people, so the robots would solve all of them. Recently I watched a TV program. It showed the possibility of AI would serve as someone to talk to them. That's why I couldn't laugh over it as just a fiction.
Of coure, the thoughtfulness is a vital to care them. If you would take for own parents and elderly parter, I don't think all of them have love with the care completely. That's just an another thing.
I felt a prototype robot acted like Tachikoma from Ghost in the Shell. Just it had one of parts like a brain, so was it Otomo's design type? It seemed to be influenced by Kubrick, Ghost in the Shell and other works about robots. But it was convincing as much as it won them!
Of coure, the thoughtfulness is a vital to care them. If you would take for own parents and elderly parter, I don't think all of them have love with the care completely. That's just an another thing.
I felt a prototype robot acted like Tachikoma from Ghost in the Shell. Just it had one of parts like a brain, so was it Otomo's design type? It seemed to be influenced by Kubrick, Ghost in the Shell and other works about robots. But it was convincing as much as it won them!
A simple movie straightforward message to the viewers, personally didn't feel anything from the movie I think a bit more could be done to show it more effective to the viewers. The artwork was awesome, Japanese old-school art is always great.
A great manga film with a somewhat unusual storyline about a young nurse and her patient, an old near-vegetative man who is chosen to test drive 'project z', a government funded initiative to care for the old; using state of the art computer controlled care beds but of course this being manga, this guys bed turns out to be more than they bargained for. The animation is a little lazy in places but this is a great little film with lots of subtle comedy, satire and enjoyable over-the-top manga moments. Comedic but with good dialogue and some serious ideas, so one to watch with subtitles and not dubbed.
Did you know
- TriviaThis movie features several devices made by Sony, the most recognizable being the Trinitron and the Unix-based NEWS workstation.
- SoundtracksHashire jitensha
(Run, Bicycle Run)
Lyrics by Mishio Ogawa
Music by Bun Itakura
Arranged by Bun Itakura
Courtesy of Epic/Sony Records
- How long is Roujin Z?Powered by Alexa
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