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Steamboy

Original title: Suchîmubôi
  • 2004
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
19K
YOUR RATING
Steamboy (2004)
Theatrical Trailer from Columbia Tristar
Play trailer0:36
1 Video
99+ Photos
Action EpicAnimeSci-Fi EpicSteampunkActionAdventureAnimationFantasySci-FiThriller

In 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.In 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.In 1860s Britain, a boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power.

  • Directors
    • Shinji Takagi
    • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
  • Writers
    • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
    • Sadayuki Murai
  • Stars
    • Anna Paquin
    • Patrick Stewart
    • Alfred Molina
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    19K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Shinji Takagi
      • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
    • Writers
      • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
      • Sadayuki Murai
    • Stars
      • Anna Paquin
      • Patrick Stewart
      • Alfred Molina
    • 97User reviews
    • 102Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins total

    Videos1

    Steamboy
    Trailer 0:36
    Steamboy

    Photos141

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    + 135
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    Top cast29

    Edit
    Anna Paquin
    Anna Paquin
    • James Ray Steam
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Patrick Stewart
    Patrick Stewart
    • Dr. Lloyd Steam
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Alfred Molina
    Alfred Molina
    • Dr. Eddie Steam
    • (English version)
    • (voice)
    Anne Suzuki
    Anne Suzuki
    • James Ray Steam
    • (voice)
    Masane Tsukayama
    Masane Tsukayama
    • Eddî Suchîmu-hakase
    • (voice)
    Katsuo Nakamura
    Katsuo Nakamura
    • Dr. Lloyd Steam
    • (voice)
    Manami Konishi
    • Scarlett O'Hara
    • (voice)
    Kiyoshi Kodama
    • Robert Stephenson
    • (voice)
    Ikki Sawamura
    • David
    • (voice)
    Susumu Terajima
    Susumu Terajima
    • Alfred Smith
    • (voice)
    Osamu Saka
    • Admiral
    • (voice)
    Satoru Saitô
    • Archibald Simon
    • (voice)
    Tetsu Inada
    Tetsu Inada
    • Jason
    • (voice)
    Sanae Kobayashi
    Sanae Kobayashi
    • Emma
    • (voice)
    Keiko Aizawa
    • Mrs. Steam
    • (voice)
    Rosalind Ayres
    Rosalind Ayres
      Mark Bramhall
      Mark Bramhall
      • Alfred Smith
      • (English version)
      • (voice)
      Oliver Cotton
      Oliver Cotton
      • Robert Stephenson
      • (English version)
      • (voice)
      • Directors
        • Shinji Takagi
        • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
      • Writers
        • Katsuhiro Ôtomo
        • Sadayuki Murai
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews97

      6.819.3K
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      Featured reviews

      8trioptimum24601

      Excellent adventure, flawed structure

      Steamboy has such a rare quality of production values that it almost merits a viewing for the aesthetics alone. But there is a story to the film; and although the hardcore fans of Otomo may have been expecting something a little deeper, and although the pacing and characterization is notably flawed, it still stands as an extremely fun yarn with no shortage of what you'd expect from a classic action/adventure flick. The film, in many respects, is comparable to works like Sky Captain and the Indiana Jones films; a classic storytelling style somewhat augmented for a modern audience.

      Numerous characters such as Scarlett and the henchmen are essentially devoid of anything resembling development. Scarlett in particular seems to have had her personal developments skipped or accelerated just to give a comic or emotional foil to Ray and the others, and it sticks out noticeably. She's given the typical "redeeming moment" at the end of the film that has no real grounding or weight considering her screen presence; it comes and goes without making a single ripple in an audience.

      Essentially, Steamboy crams too many action set pieces and grand ideas into a story too lightweight to fully support them, and the plot suffers because of it. But it's far from lacking meaning or emotion, so as long as you can detach yourself from expectations you're assured quite a ride.

      As a final note, if anyone finds the explicit diatribes concerning science a little distracting, try to keep in mind that they all come from your stereotypical mad scientists types. It becomes somewhat more plausible!
      7colettesplace

      An extraordinarily inventive depiction of an alternative 'steampunk' Victorian era, but plotwise, it's as vapid as anything produced by Jerry Bruckheimer.

      The latest film from the director of Akira, Katsuhiro Ôtomo, is a pacy thriller anime set in an alternate 1850s London, in the middle of the industrial age. Rai Steam is the third in a line of engineer inventors who dreams of going to the first ever Great Exhibition – when his grandfather unexpectedly returns from the United States with an new invention, the steamball. About the size of a bowling ball, the steamball is a source of immense, self-renewing power and the people who funded the invention want it back at any price. Rai escapes on his steam-powered unicycle, and the race is on. On the way, he encounters a steam-powered cyborg, a giant steam-powered "Death Star" and a feisty, economic rationalist sidekick, the Gone With The Wind-inspired Miss Scarlett (Manami Konishi).

      While the plot is nothing new – and very much in the Hollywood thriller style, the inventiveness of the world Steamboy is set in is exhilarating. Imagine steam-powered individual submarines, flying machines and more, all drawn in painstaking detail – with thousands of cogs and wheels all impacting on each other. Although some CGI is used, most of the film's made in the traditional anime style – around 180 000 individual pictures were used to make Steamboy, and it shows.

      Steamboy's a rip-roaring 'steampunk' piece of entertainment, complete with an insane despot who plans to take over the world. Although it's strange to see a film set in London where all the (Anglo) characters are speaking Japanese, it's best not to take Steamboy too seriously. Comic relief is provided by Miss Scarlett and Rai's grandfather, Loyd Steam (Katsuo Nakamura). Loyd Steam also speaks for the natural order, something that's often found in Japanese anime and was inspired by both the animist former national religion, Shinto, and the WWII atomic bombings. Unlike Miyazaki's Princess Mononoke, however, it's barely touched on here. Steamboy succeeds because of the fantastic imagination behind the animation, not for its philosophy. ***½/***** stars.
      6CapnDred

      Where this film's heart should have been, there's just cogs and steam.

      I haven't marked this as a spoiler, but I do mention a couple of things that occur in the film. I don't think they'll spoil it though...

      I wanted to like this film SO much. I love the Steampunk genre and knowing how good the animation on Akira was I thought this would be a lush Steampunk adventure akin to Ghibli's Castle in the Sky.

      However, where that film had heart, this one had cogs and steam. Yes, it was beautifully animate and had some lovely ideas in it. The central concept of a power source that never was, and yet is so powerful it corrupts all manner of men and turns family upon itself is fascinating. It's something that I would expect to see in a futuristic sci-fi with some kind of newly discovered power. Setting it in a steam age where the power source is a new way of harnessing steam is, for me, the single best thing about this film. It's a nice twist. My main problem with it is bland characters with nothing to make you feel the ties between them. The film tries to get us to sympathise with James' plight when he makes revelations about both his father and grandfather, without EVER having shown us any kind of previous relationship between himself and them. We are asked to assume that there is an emotional tie between a boy and a father and grandfather who have been absent for an undivulged amount of time. The film asks us to feel betrayal from both the father and the grandfather towards the other, without ever having shown us that they ever did anything but hate each other. It is hard to empathise with this betrayal from two people who we have only seen mistrust each other from the outset. The film asks us to feel James' angst when Scarlett is in peril, without ever having shown us he has any kind of emotional tie to her (and quite rightly so in my opinion for she is rude, abrasive and irritating throughout the whole movie. Why the film then expects us to want James to save her is beyond me!)

      This film is actually quite cold and mean-spirited. Rarely do we see any character in it act out of anything other than their own interests. Rarely does anyone help anyone else. The characters are selfish and single-minded. I'm normally not so cynical, but maybe this is truer to life than most films. Maybe in such extraordinary circumstances, people would be so selfish. But as a piece of cinematic entertainment, it leaves me cold.

      What I DID enjoy was that the film didn't clearly outline who was "good" and who was "evil". There was a point, round about where James first meets his grandfather in the castle and stops trying to hinder him, that I almost kicked myself. It was about there that I had a revelation that the film wasn't going to tell me who to root for and I was disappointed in myself for being annoyed with the film up to that point for not making it clear who were the "goodies". Such is how used to being force fed emotion and morals by films. At that point, I was pleased that the film left it up to both James, and the viewer to decide who was "right". Yes, James makes his choice, and as the viewer we are then more likely to side with him, but at the point I described in the film it was very much up in the air and I liked that.

      Unfortunately I watched the dubbed version. Though, being set in England with English characters, maybe, for one, this was more authentic. I bought my DVD, put it in the player, went to find the language options only to discover it was an English only DVD. Yes - some of the accents were ropey to say the least, but not to the point of distraction. I'm a Midlander but I know what a broad Mancunian accent sounds like. With Patrick Stewart being from Huddersfield, not far from Manchester, I though he might've gotten the accent closest, but he seemed a little too generic northern pushing towards Lancaster. Though that is a minor quibble. And hey - maybe the granddad moved to Manchester from Yorkshire?

      Lastly - my final major quibble with the film is that by the end of it, I was left with a "so what?" feeling. Has this experience changed James in any way? Or the balance of international power? From the closing credits, I think James went on to develop a super steam train and maybe become a superhero who fought in something like WWI, brought forward maybe due to the steamball? I don't know. The film didn't focus at all on how this monumental experience of being kidnapped and, whilst aboard a pioneering and potentially world-altering piece of technology being actively and aerially embroiled in an explosive international battle for power on which two of his close family members are very active on opposite sides has affected young Master Steam and as such, I find the film again rings hollow.

      I don't just come on IMDb just to knock films. I come on to comment when something about a film is notable enough to me to comment on, good or bad. And the hype surrounding this film coupled with a certain amount of disappointment was one thing. Also, it is rare that whilst watching a film, I notice a lack of emotional connection at the time of watching. If that lack is there, it's normally afterwards that I notice so I thought this was notable.

      Technically, a very proficient film. Emotionally, lacking.

      Where this film's heart should have been, there's just cogs and steam.
      7ma-cortes

      A breathtaking but overlong anime by the great director and screenwriter Katsuhiro Ôtomo

      A lavish anime production that did it mean a new record for the most expensive Japanese animated movie . This is one of the smartest, most overwhelming animations ever . The yarn takes place in an alternative universe , where some modern inventions where never discovered or made available for the advancement of our societies. In the middle of the 19th century, in the midst of the Industrial Revolution, the young inventor Ray, raised in a family of scientists, awaits the return of his father and grandfather to America where they continue their research. However, the only news that Ray receives about them is a mysterious metal ball sent by his grandfather. From the moment that comes into his hands, Ray finds himself involved in a world of incredible intrigues , being relentlessly pursued by the the nefarious O'Hara Foundation . As the steam-engine inventor Lloyd Steam and his son Edward discover a pure mineral water source . The axis of the film is a strange ball , in fact, it's an extraordinary ball of steam, the secret key to an incomparable force that various powerful organizations are eager to capture. Ray must discover which of these organizations represents good and which represents evil. Then an experiment goes wrong and a ball-like machine appears from the destruction.

      Japanese animation set in 1860s Britain, directed by Katsuhiro Ôtomo one of the masters of the genre , author of the science fiction classic ¨Akira¨. It is a literary playground for non-stop action , nail-biting chases , spectacle , drama , escapism and scientific exploration . But most of all it is fun This movie Steamboy is an excellent Anime, made in the purest catastrophic and futuristic style by the master Otomo with animated scenes in a clear line , containing great spectacularity and a story that combines the past and future common mastery. An interesting an engaging plot about a teen calle Ray who has to choose sides when his father and his grandfather at odds over the progress and meaning of science, Ray must try to determine for himself what he believes in and whom he can trust, as the future lies in his young hands. As the boy inventor finds himself caught in the middle of a deadly conflict over a revolutionary advance in steam power. There're also historical characters as Robert Stephenson who was the son of George Stephenson, known as the Father of the Railway , in 1829, they built a locomotive "Rocket" in the Rainhill Trials and won and Robert built lots of steam locomotives in England. ¨Steamboy" is definitely a perfect example of Steampunk fiction sub-genre , as it takes a historical setting : Industrial Revolution, and adding the element of Sci-fi super science and whose main representation was ¨April and the Extraordinary World¨ by Christian Desmares, Franck Ekinci based on Jaques Tati's drawings , the latter creator of the imaginative stories of Adèle Blanc-Sec .

      Lavishly financed by Production companies Production I. G. and Sunrise , being efficiently directed by master animator Katsuhiro Ôtomo (Akira, Memories ,Mushishi , World Apartment Horror, Spriggan, Robot Carnival) who used one hundred ninety thousand individual drawings . It had a budget of 22 million dollars, being the most expensive Japanese animation production up to that time. Steamboy won the animation award at the Sitges Festival 2004 . Rating : 7/10 . Better than average . Well woorth seeing.
      MidgetAmputee

      Lives up to the hype and more!

      Saw this at the Toronto International Film Festival, and I swooned with the massive audience in sheer awe at the absolutely astounding masterpiece that Otomo-san has created. 10 years in the making, the visual feast pays off with an incredible bang.

      Although not as violent and complex as the powerhouse Akira, Steamboy is a straight-forward sci-fi-action-adventure story set in Victorian London, England that even strangers of the anime genre can follow with ease. I can see this film being another landmark hit in North America that will hopefully draw more people to appreciate anime. When this comes out in 2005, don't miss it for the world!

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Began production in 1995 and, because of financial problems, it was put on hiatus during 1998. Production companies Production I.G. and Sunrise got involved and brought the movie back in production. A total of eight years was spent on making the movie.
      • Goofs
        During the opening ceremonies of the Great London Exhibition, the Tower Bridge is featured prominently. The Exhibition took place in 1851, while construction of the Tower Bridge didn't even begin until 1886. The movie is set in 1866: neither of these should exist at this time.
      • Quotes

        Dr. Loyd Steam: An invention with no philosophy behind it is a curse.

      • Crazy credits
        Under the end credits, images of future events in the lives of the characters are shown.
      • Alternate versions
        The 106 minute English dubbed cut replaces the Japanese end credits with English ones that credit the voice cast and production crew for the dub. The US DVD and UMD release, however, utilizes the Japanese end credits, due to it utilizing the original Japanese cut of the film instead. The version with the English end credits was only available on a demo VHS release and, at one point in 2023, for streaming online.
      • Connections
        Featured in Katsuhiro Otomo Cinema Anthology (2005)
      • Soundtracks
        Coronation March
        Written by Giacomo Meyerbeer (uncredited)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • September 22, 2004 (France)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Official sites
        • Official site
        • Sony Pictures (United States)
      • Languages
        • Japanese
        • English
      • Also known as
        • Cậu Bé Hơi Nước
      • Production companies
        • Bandai Visual Company
        • Steamboy Committee
        • Studio 4°C
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Budget
        • $22,000,000 (estimated)
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $468,867
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $136,148
        • Mar 20, 2005
      • Gross worldwide
        • $10,870,198
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        2 hours 6 minutes
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • DTS
        • Dolby Digital
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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