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/ countries - Japan / Shôzô Îzuka, Tôru Emori / director - Shôgo Furuya / Description - On Christmas Eve, three homeless people living on the streets of Tokyo find a newborn baby among the trash and set out to find its parents / Writed by - Satoshi Kon, Keiko Nobumoto. The freaky thing about it though is that there WAS a dub by Animax. It was aired on TV quite a while ago, but for some reason it was never released. I remember watching it late at night on TV too, and it drives me FUCKING NUTS that I can't find evidence of it.

Please review attack on titan in space. I mean knight of sidonia.

 

Download movie tokyo godfathers locations. There are 2 directors that had to be in this list. The first one is, no doubt, Mamoru Oshii. After Hayao Misyazaki, Oshii is the most well known Japanese animation movie director, most known, not only by the series Ghost in The Shell, but also by the Patlabor movie trilogy. It's semi-realistic character design, combined with an unique style of animation makes his works true masterpieces, at the sme level at Miyazaki. The second director is Shinji Aramaki. I think Aramaki should be in this list, not beacuse of what he has done (decades ago) but what he has been doing in recent years, and how it can affect the future of Japanese Animation. For those who don't know, Shinji Aramaki is the guy who proved that Anime didn't have to be restricted to 2D animation and was able to do the most successfull 3D/CGI Anime movies/series ever done. From 2004's Appleseed, to 2019's Ultraman series, to the new CGI Starship Troopers films (as director) almost every Japanese 3D animation film has (at least) his participation. That's why Aramaki had to be in that list. While Miyazaki and Oshii represent the past, Aramaki represents the future of Japanese Animation, by breaking a barrier betwen conventional (or CGI Assisted) 2D animation an actual 3D Animation, in Japan.

I remember watching this on tv a day or two after a night of miyazaki movies and i love this movie! now if only i could find the whole movie in english. Download movie tokyo godfathers online. We don't clean. It gets too dirty we move. This is my new philosophy. Download movie tokyo godfathers episode 1. Download movie tokyo godfathers game. I need the music name. Véanla doblada. Háganme caso. Es increíble. Download movie tokyo godfathers 2017.

Tumblr Log in Sign up. Download Movie Tokyo godfather. Download Movie Tokyo godfathers. Download movie tokyo godfathers full. Download movie tokyo godfathers 1. Download movie tokyo godfathers de. Download movie tokyo godfathers movie. I legit cried toward the end of this. Breadsword I have loved everything you've made but this in particular hit home a lot never stop doing what your doing.

Hosada's best film is pretty hard to choose, either The Girl who leap through time or Wolf Children. Also Shinkai's worst film (Kimi no Nawa) is the most succesfull film by him.

BEST ANIME MOVIE EVER! beside spirited away. Download movie tokyo godfathers restaurant. Tokyo Godfathers Theatrical release poster Directed by Satoshi Kon Produced by Shinichi Kobayashi Masao Takiyama Taro Maki Screenplay by Keiko Nobumoto Satoshi Kon Story by Satoshi Kon Starring Tōru Emori Yoshiaki Umegaki Aya Okamoto Music by Keiichi Suzuki Moonriders Cinematography Katsutoshi Sugai Edited by Takeshi Seyama Kashiko Kimura Production company Madhouse Distributed by Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan Release date August 30, 2003 ( Big Apple Anime Fest) November 8, 2003 (Japan) Running time 92 minutes Country Japan Language Japanese Budget $2. 4 million [1] Box office $609, 525 [2] Tokyo Godfathers ( 東京ゴッドファーザーズ, Tōkyō Goddofāzāzu) is a 2003 Japanese anime film directed by Satoshi Kon loosely based on Peter B. Kyne 's novel Three Godfathers. [3] Tokyo Godfathers was the third animated film directed by Kon and the second which he both wrote and directed. Keiko Nobumoto, noted for being the creator of the Wolf's Rain series and a head scriptwriter for Cowboy Bebop, co-wrote the script with Kon. Tokyo Godfathers received an Excellence Prize at the 2003 Japan Media Arts Festival. [4] It also won Best Animation Film at the 58th Mainichi Film Awards. [ citation needed] Plot [ edit] One Christmas Eve, three homeless people – a middle-aged alcoholic named Gin, a former drag queen named Hana, and a dependent runaway girl named Miyuki – discover an abandoned newborn while searching through the garbage. Deposited with the unnamed baby is a note asking the finder to take good care of her and a bag containing clues to the parents' identity. The trio sets out to find the baby's parents. The baby is named Kiyoko ( 清子), based on the Japanese translation of Silent Night literally meaning "pure child", as she is found on Christmas Eve. Outside a cemetery, the group encounters a high-ranking yakuza trapped under his car. The man happens to know the owner of the club where Kiyoko's mother used to work; his daughter is to marry the club owner that day. At the wedding, the groom tells them that the baby's mother is a former bar girl named Sachiko. He gives them Sachiko's address, but the party is interrupted when a maid, revealed to be a Latin American hitman in disguise, attempts to shoot the bride's father. The hitman kidnaps Miyuki and the baby and takes them back to his home. There, Miyuki befriends the hitman's wife and shows her some pictures of her family. Hana searches for Miyuki and Kiyoko while Gin takes care of an old homeless man who is dying in the street. After giving Gin a little red bag, the old man peacefully passes away. Some teenagers show up and beat up Gin and the dead old man. Meanwhile, Hana finds the girls and they go off to find a place to stay. They go to Hana's former club. Gin, who was rescued by another member of the club, is also there. The trio sets out to find Sachiko's house, but they discover that it has been torn down. They are informed of the unhappy relationship between Sachiko and her husband, who is a gambling alcoholic. The group rests at a store until they are told to leave by the clerk. Hana collapses, and is taken by Gin and Miyuki to the hospital. Once at the hospital, Gin finds his daughter, who is also named Kiyoko, working as a nurse. Hana berates Gin in front of his daughter and storms out of the hospital, with Miyuki following behind with baby Kiyoko in hand. Hana and Miyuki find Sachiko about to jump off a bridge. Sachiko insists that her husband got rid of the baby without her knowledge, and that they return the baby to her. Meanwhile, Gin finds Sachiko's husband, who confirms a TV report Gin saw earlier that Kiyoko was actually stolen by Sachiko from the hospital. They chase after Sachiko and the baby. After an intense car chase, Miyuki chases Sachiko to the top of a building. Sachiko reveals she became pregnant in hopes it would bring her closer to her husband. When her baby was stillborn, she decided to kidnap Kiyoko from the hospital, thinking, in her grief, the baby was hers. As Sachiko is about to jump off the building, her husband comes out of his apartment, located just across the street, and begs her to start over with him. Sachiko jumps off nevertheless, but Miyuki manages to catch her before she falls, but then Sachiko accidentally drops Kiyoko. Hana jumps off the building after Kiyoko, catches the baby, and lands safely due to a miraculous gust of wind. Hana, Miyuki, and Gin are taken to the hospital. Miyuki hands Gin his cigarettes and drops the old man's small red bag on the floor, revealing a winning lottery ticket. Kiyoko's real parents want to ask the trio to become her godparents. When a police inspector introduces them to the trio, the inspector is revealed to be Miyuki's father. Cast [ edit] Tōru Emori (Japanese) and Jon Avner (English) [5] [a] as Gin ( ギン); a gambling addict and former bicycle shop owner who claims to have been a bicycle racer. He ran away from his family when his debts became too great. His daughter, a nurse, shares the name of the newfound baby Kiyoko. Yoshiaki Umegaki (Japanese) and Shakina Nayfack (English) [5] [a] as Hana ( ハナ); a former drag queen who became homeless following the death of a former boyfriend. Hana was also an abandoned child, and is the most sympathetic to Kiyoko's plight and is the one who gives the baby her name. Aya Okamoto (Japanese) and Victoria Grace (English) [5] [a] as Miyuki ( ミユキ); a runaway high school student who fled home following a violent argument with her father. Shōzō Iizuka (Japanese) and Jamieson Price (English) [5] as Ōta ( 太田); a yakuza boss who the main characters save from being crushed by his car. In gratitude, he invites them to his daughter's wedding reception. Seizō Katō (Japanese) and Kate Bornstein (English) [5] as Mother ( 母さん, Kaa-san); the proprietor of the gay bar Hana was formerly employed in. Hiroya Ishimaru (Japanese) and Kirk Thornton (English) [5] as Yasuo ( 泰男); Sachiko's husband and the one who left Kiyoko at the garbage dump. Ryūji Saikachi (Japanese) and David Manis (English) [5] as an old homeless man who is discovered by Gin. He entrusts Gin with the disposal of a small red bag before passing away. Yūsaku Yara (Japanese) and Crispin Freeman (English) [5] as Miyuki's father; a policeman in charge of searching for the missing baby Kiyoko, who was separated from her family. Kyōko Terase as Sachiko ( 幸子); a woman who claims to be Kiyoko's mother. Mamiko Noto as Gin's daughter; a nurse who is also named Kiyoko. Satomi Kōrogi as the daughter of the yakuza boss Ōta, who is also named Kiyoko. Akio Ōtsuka as a doctor engaged to Gin's daughter Kiyoko. Rikiya Koyama as Arao ( 新郎); Ōta's son-in-law who was collecting debt from Gin. Inuko Inuyama as Kurumizawa ( 胡桃沢); a resident of Sachiko's former neighborhood. Kanako Yahara as Yamanōchi ( 山之内) Rie Shibata as Nekobaba ( 猫ババ) Kōichi Yamadera as Taxi driver Additional voices (Japanese): Nobuyuki Furuta, Masao Harada, Bin Horikawa, Kazuaki Itō, Eriko Kawasaki, Akiko Kawase, Yuto Kazama, Tsuguo Mogami, Mitsuru Ogata, Chiyako Shibahara, Toshitaka Shimizu, Yoshinori Sonobe, Akiko Takeguchi, Hidenari Umezu, Atsuko Yuya Themes [ edit] The film puts an emphasis on the theme of "coincidences". Movie critic George Peluranee notes that "Tokyo Godfathers is a film that shows the small yet significant ties that each of us have with supposed strangers, and tells well the story of miracles, family, love, and forgiveness. " [ citation needed] Susan Napier points out that Tokyo Godfathers is part of a trend in anime and manga as depicting families in an increasingly dark fashion, showcasing the problems with traditional families, and attempts by people to construct a "pseudo-family" out of an increasingly fragmented and isolating modern Japanese society. [7] It is put forth that despite the seeming criticisms of traditional families throughout the film, it ends with a more conservative feeling as everyone returns to their traditional/original families. Despite its seemingly traditional ending, the film offers a more radical version of family. Throughout the story these three homeless vagabonds unknowingly form a "pseudo-family" to protect themselves from the outside world and to overcome their personal demons. [7] Release [ edit] This movie was released in North America by Sony Pictures on December 29, 2003 in an unsuccessful attempt to get an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature. [8] The movie was released on sub-only DVD on April 13, 2004, [9] and they've planned to use DTS for the DVD, but was ultimately scrapped. [10] Announced on December 19, 2019, international animation licensor, GKIDS, will release the movie on March 9, 2020 with a brand new 4K restoration and a new English dub. [11] Reception [ edit] The review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 90% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 68 reviews, with an average rating of 7. 07/10. The critics consensus states, "Beautiful and substantive, Tokyo Godfathers adds a moving – and somewhat unconventional – entry to the animated Christmas canon. " [12] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 73 out of 100 based on 25 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [13] Notes [ edit] ^ a b c In the Animax Asia release of the film, Gin is voiced by Darren Pleavin, Hana by Russel Wait, and Miyuki by Candice Moore. [6] See also [ edit] Homelessness in Japan Japanese films of 2003 References [ edit] ^ "Interview Satoshi Kon" (in French). Catsuka. October 18, 2006. Retrieved December 20, 2015. ^ "Tokyo Godfathers (2004) - Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved December 6, 2014. ^ Hunt, Leon (2010). Tauris World Cinema: East Asian Cinemas: Exploring Transnational Connections on Film. I. B Tauris. p. 122. ISBN   9781845116149. ^ "Excellence Award - TOKYO GOD FATHERS | Award | Animation Division | 2003 [7th] | Japan Media Arts Festival Archive". ^ a b c d e f g h Sherman, Jennifer (February 13, 2020). "GKIDS Announces New English Dub Cast for Satoshi Kon's Tokyo Godfathers Film". Anime News Network. Retrieved February 13, 2020. ^ "Tokyo Godfathers". Behind The Voice Actors. Retrieved 2019-09-21. ^ a b Napier, Susan (2008). "From Spiritual Fathers to Godfathers". In Akiko Hashimoto; John W. Traphagan (eds. ). Imagined Families, Lived Families. New York: SUNY Press. pp. 33–49. ISBN   978-0-7914-7578-2. ^ Macdonald, Christopher (October 30, 2003). "Tokyo Godfathers theatrical release". Retrieved December 19, 2019. ^ "Tokyo Godfathers on DVD April 13th". February 23, 2004. Retrieved December 19, 2019. ^ Macdonald, Christopher (February 3, 2004). "Tokyo Godfathers DVD Release". Retrieved December 19, 2019. ^ @GKIDSfilms (December 19, 2019). "GKIDS is proud to announce the acquisition of the North American theatrical & home video rights to TOKYO GODFATHERS from Satoshi Kon" (Tweet) – via Twitter. ^ "Tokyo Godfathers (2003)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved December 20, 2019. ^ "Tokyo Godfathers Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved December 20, 2019. External links [ edit] Tokyo Godfathers (film) at Anime News Network 's encyclopedia Tokyo Godfathers on IMDb Tokyo Godfathers at Box Office Mojo Tokyo Godfathers at AllMovie "東京ゴッドファーザーズ ( Tōkyō Goddofāzāzu)" (in Japanese). Japanese Movie Database. Retrieved 2007-07-21.

Tokyo Godfathers, by Shogo Furuya and Satoshi Kon, is an anime film so content to be mediocre that it is dispiriting to watch. It follows three destitute friends, a man, a transvestite, and a teenage girl, who find a baby on the street and try to take care of it. This alone is cliché and cloying but it only gets worse. The film can't decide if it wants to be melodramatic or realistic and so is filled with scenes of cornballish plot developments and splotched by serious ones (there is scene where a mobster gets shot in the head. The film is done with too light a touch when it should pound away at the corniness and is too corny when it should earn our respect. So many critics have forgiven the films lukewarm impact for its humanism. I am all for humanism, but I must say that the jarring stereotypes of transvestites (the transvestite character is made to look like freak) make me a little reluctant to praise this humanism critics speak of. I suppose the only real reason to catch this film is its radically weird style, with an awesome chase scene fueled by tacky music that sounds like its from a Sega 'Mario Brothers' game and ending with a shot of a dancing tower.

Tôkyô goddofâzâzu (2003) English Subtitles Christmas in Tokyo, Japan. Three homeless friends: a young girl, a transvestite, and a middle-aged bum. While foraging through some trash, they find an abandoned newborn. Hana, the transvestite with delusions of being a mother, convinces the others to keep it overnight. The next day, using a key found with the baby, they start tracking down the parents, with many adventures along the way. Written by Jon Reeves IMDb Download English. Is That An Apology! I love that part the best.

Author: AnimeX Project

 

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