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Summer Wars

Original title: Samâ Wôzu
  • 2009
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
33K
YOUR RATING
Summer Wars (2009)
Kenji, an young math genius, takes a summer job to be near his crush, Natuski. While getting involved with Natsuki and her family, he discovers a mathematical equation that is causing a parallel world's collision with earth.
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
99+ Photos
AnimeArtificial IntelligenceHand-Drawn AnimationActionAdventureAnimationComedyDramaRomanceSci-Fi

A student tries to fix a problem he accidentally caused in OZ, a digital world, while pretending to be the fiancé of his friend at her grandmother's 90th birthday.A student tries to fix a problem he accidentally caused in OZ, a digital world, while pretending to be the fiancé of his friend at her grandmother's 90th birthday.A student tries to fix a problem he accidentally caused in OZ, a digital world, while pretending to be the fiancé of his friend at her grandmother's 90th birthday.

  • Director
    • Mamoru Hosoda
  • Writers
    • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Satoko Okudera
    • Patrick Seitz
  • Stars
    • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Nanami Sakuraba
    • Mitsuki Tanimura
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    33K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Writers
      • Mamoru Hosoda
      • Satoko Okudera
      • Patrick Seitz
    • Stars
      • Ryûnosuke Kamiki
      • Nanami Sakuraba
      • Mitsuki Tanimura
    • 84User reviews
    • 94Critic reviews
    • 63Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 10 wins & 5 nominations total

    Videos1

    Summer Wars
    Trailer 2:28
    Summer Wars

    Photos150

    View Poster
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    + 146
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    Ryûnosuke Kamiki
    • Kenji Koiso
    • (voice)
    Nanami Sakuraba
    Nanami Sakuraba
    • Natsuki Shinohara
    • (voice)
    Mitsuki Tanimura
    Mitsuki Tanimura
    • Kazuma Ikezawa
    • (voice)
    Takahiro Yokokawa
    • Takashi Sakuma
    • (voice)
    Mieko Nobusawa
    • Mariko Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Mutsumi Sasaki
    • Kazuo Shinohara
    • (voice)
    Takashi Kobayashi
    • Tasuke Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Yôji Tanaka
    • Yorihiko Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    • (as Tanaka Yôji)
    Kiyomi Tanigawa
    • Yukiko Shinohara
    • (voice)
    Hashiya Nakamura
    • Kunihiko Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Sakiko Tamagawa
    • Rika Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Kaori Yamagata
    • Naomi Miwa
    • (voice)
    Takuya Kirimoto
    • Ri'ichi Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Mitsutaka Itakura
    • Katsuhiko Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Tagame Tamura
    • Kiyomi Ikezawa
    • (voice)
    Eiko Kanazawa
    • Noriko Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Chigusa Takaku
    • Nana Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    Yutaka Shimizu
    • Shôta Jin'nouchi
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Writers
      • Mamoru Hosoda
      • Satoko Okudera
      • Patrick Seitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews84

    7.433.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8robertheinrich73

    no masterpiece, but not too bad either

    There are some anime masterpieces which can be recommended as a must-see to virtually anyone, and not only fans of the genre. Movies like Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away, Howl's Moving Castle, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, etc.

    If you know them you will understand what I mean. In addition to being visually compelling these also have an original plot with some twists here and there, and will leave you with the feeling that you have just watched something really awesome.

    Let's be honest: Summer Wars will not enter this eternal hall of fame, mostly because the plot is far too conventional and straight-forward.

    On the other hand, a solid plot is not necessarily a bad thing, and makes this movie suitable for a broad audience. While a real fan of anime will probably be disappointed by the lack of weirdness and original ideas, Summer Wars might be a real good starting point for a newbie.

    And if you are willing to excuse the fact that the plot won't knock your socks off, apart from that Summer Wars is a really good movie. It does quite an excellent job in introducing literally dozens of characters and still managing to give every single one of them a unique personality.

    The story unfolds on parallel levels (the action part about saving the world, the part about the values of a family, the dangers of relying too much on technology, a little bit of teenage love story, ...) - while each level is too obvious and shallow on its own, they blend in together nicely. Reminds me of a virtual chop suey - nothing special, yet very tasty.

    The visual presentation is quite good, too. The scenes in the real world are well done, and the cyberspace world is amazing.

    In conclusion, Summer Wars is OK. Not really original and far from being excellent, but good nevertheless. No unique masterpiece, yet solid work, and if you won't set your expectations too high, you will enjoy it.
    9valen060

    One of Mamoru Hosoda's Finest

    With an abundance of films made by Studio Ghibli, Mamoru Hosoda really found something to call his own by stepping outside that famed studio and finding focus on a movie that plays on themes of cyber warfare and the value of family.

    Kenji Koiso is an average high school student with a skill in mathematics and a job with OZ, an online virtual reality world where many users browse and socialize with each other. But when he's given a "job" by his crush Natsuki Jinnouchi to travel to the country with her during the summer, he gets himself in over his head when he's framed online by a rogue AI called Love Machine.

    For an anime film, I found this to be enjoyable and cleverly crafted. The cyber realm setting does borrow off the elements (albeit even a similar scenario) of one segment from Digimon: The Movie, but Hosoda admitted that Digimon is a prototype to Summer Wars. Now Kenji clearly lacks social skills, but his extensive math knowledge is put to the test as he and the rest of the Jinnouchi clan come together to put an end to this AI. The characters feel relatable and the family values remind me so much of my own that it feels inviting and immersive just by getting to know several of Natsuki's extensive family members.

    Although the movie may start off slow, there are some moments throughout its two-hour run time that give off an emotional sense when it comes to either angst amongst family or even the intense fight scenes in cyberspace. Hosoda's previous work The Girl Who Leapt Through Time was pretty impressive, so his follow-up Summer Wars is another hit. I also see parallels to the series Digimon (specifically, its segment Our War Game) in terms of story and concept since Hosoda coincidentally once contributed to that series years prior. Whether you're an avid anime fan or simply an average film-goer (and regardless of animation medium), its story is simple, yet complex in balancing the virtual world and reality. As for OZ itself, it's like a hybrid of Miyazaki's art style crossed with Nintendo's designs. Made me want to watch the movie again whenever I choose.
    7robinski34

    Here Comes The Summer

    'Summer Wars' is another excellent exponent of the Japanese anime genre, directed by Mamoru Hosoda, whose modest (so far) directorial cannon includes 'The Girl Who Leapt Through Time' (not to be mistaken for one of the Stieg Larsson trilogy!), which is also highly enjoyable. This film is a lively and colourful affair, nicely evoking the optimism and energy of the season, and its large cast of characters is well drawn in both senses, each one sketched with enough care and detail to be believable and interesting, and to make their own distinct contribution to the story, despite there being some twenty family members or so to deal with, no mean feat.

    The plot is bedded in the technology of future, an almost ubiquitous theme for the genre, but the story's posit of a worldwide virtual network to which every financial institution, emergency service and government agency links, and indeed some cedes control of its systems, is hardly Science Fiction! Events take a turn for the worst of course, but despite the action being centred on a bright and colourful online world, and a plethora of cuddly personal avatars, Hosoda invests the conflict with a dark malevolence that is convincing, and delivers a real sense of threat.

    'Summer Wars' may look at first glance like a kid's film, but don't dismiss it as 'some kind of Pokémon', the film delivers some emotional passages and a sweet central relationship that you will root for. All in all very satisfying for fans of the genre, and has something to offer those who are not. For me, the final note strays from the tone of the piece, but that is a minor quibble. Treat yourself to a dose of optimism.
    siderite

    What an excellent film! It had everything!

    If you can imagine the easy going yet fascinating Hayao Miyazaki stories, with their kind heartedness and deep Japanese roots being mixed with Denou Coil, you will get Summer Wars. It has good animation, a really cute story and features a cyber battle between a Japanese family and a malicious A.I. inside something that can be seen as the future of Facebook.

    What I found really nice in the film is that traditional family values are mixed with modern views of the world, a beautiful countryside scenery is mixed with the virtual cyber world of OZ. There are both moral values to be learned from the story as well as the excitement of a crisis and how giving your best can get one past it. I found brilliant the way the scenes of cyber battle were intertwined with scenes of Japanese baseball, birthday then dying rituals, the individual traits of all of the members of the family, all without losing anything, just adding more and more depth to each scene.

    I highly recommend it for all anime fans and for people who might become so, after watching a masterpiece like Summer Wars.
    9cherold

    lovely movie

    Summer Wars does a wonderful job of combining touching human Japanese animation with weird monster-fighting stuff. The former is the frame of the movie in which a young man finds himself caught in a friend's family drama involving a really cool old lady and a snarky black sheep. The latter involves a facebook-meets-second-life-meets-everything-else-on-the-internet entity that gets hacked. The two sections are beautifully integrated into a single, fantastic movie.

    There are criticisms I could make if I really wanted to. The technology really makes no sense at all, and some remarkable idiocy has to happen in the real world to worsen things in the virtual one. But none of that bothered me, because the characters feel real and the animation in both worlds is absolutely gorgeous.

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    Bruce Willis in Piège de cristal (1988)
    Action
    Still frame
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    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mamoru Hosoda completed all 500 pages of storyboards for the film at Denny's, working in hugely long 12 and 16-hour shifts.
    • Goofs
      The coordinates shown on screen by the satellite probe would put the castle more than 53 kilometers away from the center of Ueda-city and wouldn't even be in the Nagano-prefecture. It would then be the closest to the Agatsuma district in the Gunma prefecture.
    • Quotes

      Sakae Jinnouchi: Never turn your back on family, even when they hurt you. Never let life get the better of you. And if you remember nothing else, remember to find time to eat together as a family. Even when times are rough; especially when times are rough. There's no lack of painful things in this world, but hunger and loneliness must surely be two of the worst.Thanks to you, my precious family, I didn't know a moment of either of those the last ninety years.

    • Connections
      Featured in JesuOtaku Anime Reviews: Summer Wars (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      Bokura no Natsu no Yume
      (Our Summer Dream)

      Lyrics, Music, Arrangement & Performance by Tatsurô Yamashita

      Courtesy of Warner Music Japan

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Summer Wars?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 9, 2010 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Official Site (Japan)
    • Languages
      • Japanese
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Cuộc Chiến Mùa Hè
    • Production companies
      • Madhouse
      • Nippon Television Network (NTV)
      • Kadokawa Shoten Publishing Co.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $326,033
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,412
      • Dec 26, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $18,737,827
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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