AWARDS
Animation of the Year, Japan Academy Prize
Special Award, Hochi Film Awards
Best Animation Film, Mainichi Film Concours
In Japanese with English and Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Animation/Fantasy
Director: Mamorou Hosoda
Cast (Voices): Riisa Naka, Takuya Ishida, Ayami
Kakiuchi, Sachie Hara, Mitsutaka Itakuru
RunTime:
1 hr 38 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: PG
Official Website: http://www.kadokawa.co.jp/tokikake/index.php
Opening Day: 21 June 2007
Synopsis:
When 17-year-old Makoto Konno gains the ablility to quite
literally "leap" backwards through time, she immediately
sets about improving her grades and preventing personal mishaps.
However, she soon realises that changing the past isn't as
simple as it seems and eventually will have to rely on her
new powers to shape the future of her and her friends.
Movie Review:
Director Mamoru Hosoda was originally hired to direct Studio
Ghibli's "Howl's Moving Castle" but apparently left
the project midway. “The Girl Who Leapt Through Time”
is based on a story by the author of “Paprika”
(another acclaimed Japanese anime coming to our screen soon),
Yasutaka Tsutsui and based on these few facts; we hope to
expect something special…
The
story begins with our young protagonist Makoto Konno, an ordinary
high school girl who enjoys karaoke, baseball and hanging
out with her two best friends, Chiaki and Kousuke. Male to
be precise. A little character setup for the first act but
things start to pick up a little when Makoto for no apparent
reason survived a what’s supposed to be a fatal train
accident while cycling on the way home from school.
A
God-aided miracle? Supernatural power? Whatever it is, we
are equally befuddled as Makoto. Soon after, she decide to
confide in her aunt about her strange encounter and her aunt
simply tell her she has the power to time leap, it’s
her call. That’s how she survived the accident, by leaping
backward a few seconds earlier. We aren't particularly sure
if her aunt meant it literally though.
At
this juncture, you might turn a bit fidgety if you are not
used to the usual style of Japanese Anime. But there’s
where the fun lies because right now, Makoto is off to save
the world after learning of her newfound ability! Save is
too big a word. Makoto is just a playful teenager in search
of some fun. Now she’s no longer late for school, all
she has to do is leapt and be right on time. Test? No problem,
she just needs to jump back and forth to learn the questions
and write the answers.
But
things are not always what it seems. Makoto’s good intentions
to fix people’s problems unfortunately doesn’t
really work all the times. In fact, it got messier the more
she tries to fix it. You have some laugh-out moments especially
the part where Chiaki declare his love for her and she tries
to attempt to steer their conversation away to more mundane
topics and also the endless karaoke session.
If
you wish to make a comparison between a Studio Ghibli production
and “The Girl Who Leapt Through Time”, the latter
has less fancy anime-effects to show off perhaps due to a
tighter budget but the hand-drawn animation and linework is
equally captivating and the camera angles appropriately brought
out the vast boundary of Makoto’s time-leap world. Who
says traditional animation should be phase out?
Lastly
to get back to where we were, what’s the revelation
of this girl who can transport herself from time to time,
place to place? Not to spoil the soup, the outcome isn’t
anything mind-blowing. It's not on the grand scale of "Back
to the Future" or even "Groundhog Days".
In fact, it gets to the point of being too self-absorbing
and silly in the last act. But deep down, it has a far more
meaningful message which touches us all. We might only have
one chance in life to do the things we want and yes, no matter
how advance time-leap technology is, we will never ever return
to the original desired starting point.
Isn’t
that a wonderful lesson in life after you step out of the
theater?
Movie Rating:
(A fun meaningful piece of animation work that deserved a
wider audience)
Review by Linus Tee
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