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Amer béton

Original title: Tekkon kinkurîto
  • 2006
  • Tous publics avec avertissement
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
15K
YOUR RATING
Michael Arias, Scott Menville, Kazunari Ninomiya, Yû Aoi, and Elliot Fletcher in Amer béton (2006)
Home Video Trailer from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Play trailer2:08
1 Video
99+ Photos
Adult AnimationAnimeHand-Drawn AnimationSeinenActionAdventureAnimationCrimeDramaFantasy

Two boys defend Treasure Town and Yakuza try to take over and clear it for new development.Two boys defend Treasure Town and Yakuza try to take over and clear it for new development.Two boys defend Treasure Town and Yakuza try to take over and clear it for new development.

  • Directors
    • Michael Arias
    • Hiroaki Andô
  • Writers
    • Anthony Weintraub
    • Taiyô Matsumoto
  • Stars
    • Kazunari Ninomiya
    • Yû Aoi
    • Yûsuke Iseya
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    15K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Michael Arias
      • Hiroaki Andô
    • Writers
      • Anthony Weintraub
      • Taiyô Matsumoto
    • Stars
      • Kazunari Ninomiya
      • Yû Aoi
      • Yûsuke Iseya
    • 40User reviews
    • 59Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Tekkonkinkreet
    Trailer 2:08
    Tekkonkinkreet

    Photos123

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    Top cast71

    Edit
    Kazunari Ninomiya
    Kazunari Ninomiya
    • Kuro
    • (voice)
    • …
    Yû Aoi
    Yû Aoi
    • Shiro
    • (voice)
    Yûsuke Iseya
    Yûsuke Iseya
    • Kimura
    • (voice)
    Kankurô Kudô
    Kankurô Kudô
    • Sawada
    • (voice)
    Min Tanaka
    Min Tanaka
    • Suzuki
    • (voice)
    Rokurô Naya
    • Jitcha
    • (voice)
    Tomomichi Nishimura
    • Fujimura
    • (voice)
    Mugihito
    • Kumichô
    • (voice)
    Nao Ômori
    Nao Ômori
    • Chokora
    • (voice)
    Yoshinori Okada
    Yoshinori Okada
    • Banira
    • (voice)
    Kazuko Kurosawa
    • Kozô
    • (voice)
    Tomoko Murakami
    • Kozô
    • (voice)
    Miyuki Ohshima
    • Kozô
    • (voice)
    Yûki Tamaki
    • Asa
    • (voice)
    • (as Yukiko Tamaki)
    Mayumi Yamaguchi
    • Yoru
    • (voice)
    Harumi Asai
    • Akutsu
    • (voice)
    Atsushi Imaizumi
    • Yasuda
    • (voice)
    Bryan Burton-Lewis
    • Goshima
    • (voice)
    • (as Buraian Bâton Ruisu)
    • Directors
      • Michael Arias
      • Hiroaki Andô
    • Writers
      • Anthony Weintraub
      • Taiyô Matsumoto
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews40

    7.515.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8oneloveall

    Everything I could have asked for in an Anime

    Eye-watering Japanimation might not have all the spit-shined polish afforded a Miyazaki production, though any excuse offered from the same studio that provided many eclectic animated thrills with the Animatrix compilation could only be explained by admiring their unabashed passion for detail. Nearly every frame of this marvelous, Manga-adapted feature is littered with an unprecedented level of specific illustrations that really aims to set the bar for sheer artistic commitment. It is the city itself that rules the film, and these passionate animators do not disappoint when it comes to delivering scene after scene showcasing an unfathomable detail rendered in these massive, severely inspired cityscapes.

    First time Director Michael Arias does stumble a bit at times, making the episodic material feel that way, but we do see a compelling fusion with CGI effects in many of the action scenes that make this visually stimulating feast rise to fluidly spectacular levels. Despite many pratfalls found in the script, sometimes silly voice acting (common in the genre), and some (at times) counter-intuitive pacing, scene-for-scene Tekon kinkurîto (US title is Tekkonkinkreet) will probably remain the most compulsively rewatchable, primarily hand-drawn work of art to be savored by pencil-aficionados until the next driven team of artists desires even more.
    10vitalogst

    One of the best films I've seen

    A moralistic fairy tale set in modern day. Brothers Black and White are orphans and run the streets of Treasure Town, doing what Cats do best, stealing and running. The Yakuza show up and start causing concern. Leaving little Black and sort out the situation. It is unbelievable how good this film is. Nuanced interesting characters are a vehicle for a over arching moral diatribe on cities, the people in them, and how we all deal with each other. White is purity, he's naive, but has a general sense of good, which is married to his seemingly stunted educational and emotional growth. His older brother, Black, on the other hand, is smart, streetwise, good in a fight, and has lost the innocence that White still possess. And we are able to interpret events that occur during the film through both of their eyes. This film had very interesting art, childish of a sort, but designed for the sake of experimentation, and to remind us that we're in a story that is seen and narrated by children. It used a full palette of colors and symbolism to help extend the story to the viewer and it succeeded masterfully. All said, this film broke my heart in a million different beautiful ways. I loved this film, and not since Hotaru no haka (Grave of the Fireflies) has a film been able to effect me so profoundly. I know I will never forget this film. When this comes out of DVD, rent it, or, if you're lucky, run to the theater and catch this before it disappears.
    8benjamin_lappin

    Solid As Concrete? No, It's A Bit More Than That...

    "Tekkonkinkreet", literally translated as reinforced concrete, is an hypnotic experience set upon the kaleidoscopic drop of some truly gorgeous drawings which tells the tale of two street urchins as they do battle with an array of colourful characters in order to defend their city from being taken over. Adapted from the three volume manga series by Taiyo Matsumoto, the film doesn't usually carry the infuriating hallmarks of a manga-to-anime switch over, which can often make the film an unenjoyable experience as the viewer struggles to come to terms with the story and characters and in the process miss the film. In this instance, any preconceptions are staved as "Tekkonkinkreet" absorbs the viewer all but instantly in a cacophony of animation, sound and, perhaps surprisingly, emotion.

    Tekkonkinkreets original manga form is what is known as a "seinen" manga, which is a subset of the animated genre which targets males, usually, from between the ages of eighteen and thirty, and as a twenty-four year old male myself, I perhaps enjoyed it more than others outside my demographic bracket. Ostensibly, it is a boys film as the premise bases itself on gangster films as our two street urchin protagonists, the aptly named "Black" and "White" find themselves coming into contact with an ever escalating array of Yakuza as they try to take over the ridiculously sublime "Treasure Town". There is a great deal of violence within the film (which while in my eyes completely justifies the progression of the film is incredibly misleading when you look at the UK Film Certificate Branding of a mere 12) as the battles waged become more intense, more bloody and more important to the survival of our two heroes. Tekkonkinkreet also utilises a much more avant-garde style of animation which we are currently beginning to see more of in the western world as an increasing acceptance of things which are outside of the "norm" are filtering through, and it is certainly befitting of the style. Tekkonkinkreet successfully delivers on appeasing any and all who are looking for high quality hand drawn animation which surpasses the eternally vapid conveyor belt of repetitiveness that is Pixar, but it also delivers on being more than just a "fighting" film.

    The intrinsic parts of Tekkonkinkreet prove in being the messages the director and original creator are wishing to convey to their audiences, of which there are two major points. Firstly, we have the ying and yang nature of Black and White, how their coexistence is precisely that, how they are mirror images of each other, how in essence they are two parts of the same hole and that you could be forgiven for thinking someone spliced a singular entity at birth to form two. "Black" is the streetwise member of the "Cats", as they are known within the city, as he has a savvy and cunning which has enabled he and white to be high on the Treasure Town food chain. As expected for being orphaned children, each have their issues, and with Black it is the impression that he is only one bad day away from total insanity and mental breakdown, while with "White" the issue is if he were to have a mental breakdown it wouldn't have much to break. White is stated as being eleven within the film yet quite clearly finds it difficult keeping a grasp on reality and his surroundings as his mental age is quite obviously, less than that. However, it is not merely how much White relies on Black for survival with the treacherous confines, but it is also how much Black relies on White, as the director twists the uses of Black and White and indeed Good and Evil as roles interchange in all quarters. Secondly, we have yet again another confrontation, another coming together of two forces yet this time it is more theory based. Treasure Town is a gloriously colourful island sitting sedately in the centre of a river yet its buildings and inhabitants for all their grandeur seem incredibly outdated. Treasure Town isn't exactly a time warp but you could be forgiven for thinking so, it is a place contented in its own time, but for the Yakuza this is not acceptable as they wish to bring Treasure Town forward into the 21st Century, to update the scenery, to turn it into a money making venture of epic proportions . This second theme resonates with a fear of old replacing new, yet the new not being perhaps as grand as everyone believes it to be, it is a fear of traditions being eradicated by a machine which has no need for sentiment, and this feeling, from both points of view, is embedded within characters on all sides of the battle.

    Tekkonkinkreet is a highly charged emotional film, which looks at characters interactions and dependence on each other the yings and yangs within the city itself, the coming together of old and new and more evidently, people's desire for power. The phrase "my city" is uttered on numerous occasions as individuals all attempt to lay claim to the treasured turf, yet none truly understanding what the phrase means or why they are saying it. Tekkonkinkreet is a highly successful anime, which blends together elements of crime, violence, humour and fantasy creating a cerebral journey for the senses as director Michael Arias superbly transcribes this moralistic tale with an energetic style of directing which perhaps possesses some of the best and "coolest" "reveal" shots in recent times. Tekkkonkinkreet is an absorbing adventure which transcends genres and blurs styles in a hot pot of beautiful angst and proves itself to be worth a watch for any who allows themselves to be enveloped by a world which is never told in black and white.
    8soundbox

    Great work! Michael is genius.

    I saw this movie a couple of days ago. I thought this one is one of the best in the recent anime films including Miyazaki's. Even satisfied more than 007.

    Based on the comic by Matsumoto Taiyo (also Ping Pong), Michael Arius, who joined Animatrix production, directed the film. As he knows many Japanese old downtowns and landscapes, his way of constructing the imaginary town is so real though many Asian tastes are added, and I believe the town in the film must attract Americans too. The story is basically fights between two boys and intruders, old traditions and new. I also impressed how this Anime can express things which I have not felt in the other Anime films. Michael gathered many best creators in Japan and the world. I really recommend Tekkon to you all.

    By the way, MOMA's Artforum picked up this film as #1 in 2006. http://www.artforum.com/inprint/id=12076
    7Buddy-51

    style trumps coherence

    "Tekkon Kinkreet" is a sporadically engaging, though frequently confusing, anime gangster film from director Michael Arias. The story, based on the comic book by Taiyo Matsumoto, focuses on two homeless orphans, one named Black and the other White, who live on the streets of Treasure Town, a seething cauldron of criminality, vice and corruption. Black fancies himself a superhero crime-fighter, while White, who is given to extrasensory knowledge and visions, dreams of one day moving away from the city and getting a home of their own on the beach. Thanks to Black's insistence on taking on the bad guys, both youngsters get caught up in a turf war between the Yakuza and some robot-like killers who are duking it out for ownership of the city.

    Fans of anime will find much to enjoy in this film, which is marked by beautifully detailed urban landscapes, exciting action and chase sequences, occasional lyrical flights into fantasy, and a sometimes touching tale about commitment and friendship centered on the two young boys. On the other hand, the plethora of characters and occasional narrative incoherence can make it difficult at times to understand what exactly is going on, particularly when the story takes a decidedly metaphysical turn (with imagery taken straight out of "Contact") in the final half hour. Still, the visuals alone make it worth a gander.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      This film is a metaphor for the darkness lurking in all of us, the question is: When is it socially acceptable to release said Darkness onto society.
    • Goofs
      In the scene where Black gives money to "grandpa" the yin-yang symbol changes from white on top, black on top and then again white on top.
    • Quotes

      Jiccha: What is it about fire? So calm and peaceful but... inside, all power and destruction. It's hiding something. Just like people do. Sometimes you have to get close to find what's inside. Sometimes you have to get burned to see the truth.

    • Crazy credits
      The seed Black and White talk about through most of the film grows into a flower during the ending credits.
    • Connections
      Featured in Troldspejlet: Episode #37.12 (2007)
    • Soundtracks
      Aru machi no gunjô
      Performed by Asian Kung-Fu Generation

      Courtesy of Ki/oon Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 2, 2007 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Tekkonkinkreet
    • Production companies
      • Aniplex
      • Asmik Ace Entertainment
      • Beyond C.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $4,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $6,000
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,000
      • Jul 15, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $42,840
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 51 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1
      • 2.39 : 1

    Contribute to this page

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    Michael Arias, Scott Menville, Kazunari Ninomiya, Yû Aoi, and Elliot Fletcher in Amer béton (2006)
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