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137 Minutes. 30789 vote. . genre - Animation. Countries - Japan. Resume - Deep into a swaying and lush bamboo forest, Okina, an elderly farmer, stumbles upon a mysteriously glowing bamboo stalk, that from within, a minuscule fairy-like creature enfolded in a royal robe sprouts before his amazed eyes. Without delay, the ageing man rushes to his wife, Ona, only to witness, much to their surprise, the tiny nymph transform into a baby. In the end, as the infant grows exponentially into a fine girl, the humble couple will take her to the capital, Kyoto, to make her an aristocratic and well-mannered lady worthy of Japan's most powerful suitors. But is this Princess Kaguya's fate?

鳥 虫 けもの 草 木 花. Kaguyahime no monogatari trailer. Love this movie. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (movie. Anime News Network:W Views Features chronological archives Jan 31 Interview: CloverWorks's Akira Shimizu and Yuichi Fukushima Jan 29 Interview: Up-and-coming J-Rock Group BRATS Jan 24 Carole & Tuesday: A Song of Refugees and Fire Jan 22 The Curious Case of Sally Amaki, the Bilingual Idol Jan 17 Interview: Guilty Kiss, A Love Live! Sensation & Fan-Made Obsession Jan 16 Hands-On and Interview: Granblue Fantasy Versus Jan 15 Who Writes Fate/Grand Order? Jan 13 Interview: RADWIMPS, The Beloved Musicians Behind Makoto Shinkai's Blockbuster Works Reviews alphabetical archives Our Dining Table GN Rascal Does Not Dream of Bunny Girl Senpai BR Jan 28 Made in Abyss: Dawn of the Deep Soul Jan 27 My Father is a Unicorn GN Jan 26 Goblin Slayer Novel 8 The Legends of Luke Skywalker: The Manga Jan 23 Which Hana? 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Registering is free, easy, and private. Discuss in the forum, contribute to the Encyclopedia, build your own MyAnime lists, and more. Have you seen this? want to / seen some / seen all Alternative title: Die Legende der Prinzessin Kaguya (German) El cuento de la princesa Kaguya (Spanish) Kaguya-hime no Monogatari (Japanese) La Leyenda de la Princesa Kaguya (Spanish) La Princesa Kaguya (Spanish) La storia della principessa splendente (Italian) Le Conte de la Princesse Kaguya (French) O Conto da Princesa Kaguya (Portuguese) かぐや姫の物語 (Japanese) 輝耀姬物語 (Chinese (Taiwan) Objectionable content: Mild Plot Summary: In an idyllic rural setting an old bamboo cutter and his wife raise a tiny girl found nestled within a glowing bamboo stalk along with a fortune in gold. As she approaches adulthood the bamboo cutter uses the fortune to purchase a villa in the capital, buy himself a title and employ tutors to transform the country girl—now given the name Kaguya—into a refined woman. News of her beauty brings powerful and wealthy suitors who compete for her hand in marriage, culminating in a proposal from the emperor. All the while Kaguya wishes that she and her family could return to their former life and to be reunited with her sweetheart, Sutemaru. Sooner or later, though, her true origins will make their own claim upon her. User Ratings: 299 ratings have been given [ details] Masterpiece: 82 votes (sub:57, dub:12, raw:4, others:9 6 Spanish subtitled 1 German dubbed 1 Finnish subtitled 1 Italian subtitled) Excellent: 91 votes (sub:65, dub:21, others:5 2 German dubbed 1 French subtitled 1 Italian subtitled 1 Spanish edited dub) Very good: 54 votes (sub:36, dub:13. 1, raw:1, others:3 2 German dubbed 1 French subtitled) Good: 41 votes (sub:25, dub:12, raw:2, others:2 1 Russian edited dub 1 French dubbed) Decent: 17 votes (sub:12, dub:5) So-so: 8 votes (sub:7. 1) Not really good: 2 votes (dub:1, sub:1) Worst ever: 1 vote (sub:1) Seen in part or in whole by 398 users, rank: 2241 (of 7863) Median rating: Excellent Arithmetic mean: 8. 415 (Very good. std. dev. 1. 5631, rank: 210 (of 7912) Weighted mean: 8. 427 (Very good. rank: 169 (of 7912) seen all: 8. 43) Bayesian estimate: 8. 391 (Very good. rank: 99 (of 6027) Running time: 137 minutes Production cost: 5, 000, 000, 000 Vintage: 2017-05-19 (Señal Colombia - Colombia) Premiere date: 2014-06-14 (Australia, Sydney Film Festival) Ending Theme: Inochi no Kioku" いのちの記憶) by Kazumi Nikaido Comment: As of August 2018, Princess Kaguya remains the most expensive Japanese movie (not just anime) of all time. Other articles: Show: 4 7 You can contribute information to this page, but first you must login or register Japanese staff Japanese cast Director: Isao Takahata Screenplay: Isao Takahata Riko Sakaguchi Music: Joe Hisaishi Original Concept: Isao Takahata Character Design: Kenichi Konishi Art Director: Kazuo Oga Animation Director: Kenichi Konishi Sound Director: Naoko Asari Director of Photography: Keisuke Nakamura Executive producer: Seiichiro Ujiie Producer: Yoshiaki Nishimura Accounting: Akio Ichimura Hiromi Itou Junko Ito Takayasu Itō Tomofumi Otsuka Administrative Planning Room: Kazumi Inashiro Advertising: Chihiro Tsukue Kazumi Kobayashi Mayu Naitou Nozomu Ito Setsuko Kurihara Shin Hashida Yumiko Nishimura Animation: Akiko Yamaguchi Asami Sodeyama Atsushi Tamura Ayako Hata Chiyomi Tsukamoto Daizen Komatsuda Ei Inoue Emi Kamiishi Hideki Hamasu Hiroyuki Morita Ikuno Yagi Kaori Hayashi   Kazutaka Ozaki Kumiko Kawana Kuniyuki Ishii Masako Sato Masashi Ando Megumi Kagawa Miwa Sasaki Norio Matsumoto (uncredited) Shigeo Akahori Shigeru Kimishima Shinji Hashimoto Shinji Otsuka Shinpei Kamada Shougo Furuya Shouko Nishigaki Shunsuke Hirota Takashi Kawaguchi Takayuki Gotan Takayuki Hamada Takuya Saito Tatsuzou Nishida Tomomi Kamiya Toshio Kawaguchi Yoshihiro Ōsugi Yosuke Jinbo Yuka Matsumura Yūko Tani Animation Design: Osamu Tanabe Animation Painting: Masaya Saito Art Photography: Miho Kawanishi Takeshi Ogawa Assistant Director: Akiko Matsuo Yuichiro Kido Associate producer: Naoya Fujimaki Ryoichi Fukuyama Seiji Okuda Auditing: Hirotaka Nakao Background Art: Ayumi Kugawa Katsu Hisamura Satoko Nakamura Shiho Sato Takashi Kurahashi Tatsuya Kushida Tomotaka Kubo Yohei Takamatsu Yumi Hosaka Casting: Hazuki Yamamura Kahori Sakai Keiko Ogata CG: Tomoya Nakajima Character Merchandise Development: Koichi Asano Mika Yasuda Naomi Atsuta Tomomi Imai Character Modeling: Osamu Tanabe Co-executive producer: Yoshio Ohkubo Color Management: Toshiki Yura Wataru Matsumoto Color setting: Yukiko Kakita Cooperation: Ai Kodama Brian Whitehead Cheng Xing Jin Chūkō Hoshi Daisaku Kawase Eri Tamura Fumiko Isomae Haruna Hirose Hideaki Furubayashi Hidemichi Ito Hideo Tanaka Hiroki Kikuno Hiroshi Miyashita Kana Kimura Katsuhiko Yoshida Keizo Yoshikawa Kenichi Yoda Kichiichiro Kashiwagi Kohei Ueno Koichi Katsushima Maho Mori Maiko Yahata Masahiro Shinoki Masaki Morita Masatake Kimata Michiko Nagai Miho Sada Mitsunori Shudo Miyuki Ito Mutsumi Fukushi Naho Kimura Naoya Moritani Nobue Saito Osamu Kawada Ryutaro Ozawa Saki Miyaoku Satoshi Matsushita Satoshi Nakano Seiichirō Sekine Shigeki Shimizu Shinji Goto Tadashi Setomitsu Takahiro Hirao Takeshi Yoshikawa Taketoshi Sado Takeyasu Koganezawa Takuo Murase Tamako Matsutouya Tomoe Iijima Tomoko Okada Tomomi Fukao Tomonori Satō Toshikazu Satō Toshio Ohtake Toshiyuki Takahashi Ushio Kadowaki Wataru Kakubari Yasuhiro Suzuki Yasuhisa Harada Yohei Taneda Yoko Terakoshi Yoshichika Sakamoto Yoshiki Sakurai Yoshito Ooyama Yoshiyuki Hashima Yume Arikawa Data Conform: Naoto Hosonuma Data Management: Daijiro Adachi Masashi Okoshi Digital Cinema Mastering: Miho Sugiyama Mizue Yamada Editing: Toshihiko Kojima Event Manager: Chiyoshi Tanaka Hiroshi Miyoshi Kenzo Ochiai Noriko Takami Ryoko Tsutsui Takayuki Aoki Financial Manager: Noriyoshi Tamagawa Foley Artist: Akihiko Okase Mizuki Itou Foley Editor: Natsuko Inoue Guzheng Performance: Xiao Qing Jiang In-Between Animation: Ai Takashi Akane Ōtani Asako Matsumura Aya Takahashi Ayaka Saitou Ayano Okitsu Azusa Fujita Azusa Sakuma Chie Nagano Dai Goto Eimi Tamura Etsuko Tamakoshi Hao Can Yuan Haruna Hashimoto Hinako Gotō Hiroko Tezuka Hisako Yaji Hitomi Shiroki Hitomi Tateno Jumi Izawa Kaori Fujii Kaori Itou Kaoru Yanagisawa Kumiko Tanihira Kumiko Terada Kyōka Chijiiwa Mai Nakazato Maiko Matsumura Makoto Oohara Mamiko Okada Mariko Yoshida Masakiyo Koyama Masako Akita Masami Nakanishi Masaru Okuwaki Masashi Ōmura Megumi Matsumoto Mi Kyung An Michiko Miyamoto Michiko Oda Mika Matsumura Miki Itou Misa Koyasu Mizuho Fukuda Moe Tanaka Naho Sekine Naoya Wada Nina Somekawa Nozomi Kawashige Reiko Mano Rie Eyama Rie Horinouchi Ryeong Hee Park Ryōsuke Mizuno Ryōsuke Murahashi Saeri Ogawa Satoko Shimoji Seiko Azuma Setsuya Tanabe Shin Ōba Shin Takemoto Shiori Fujisawa Shiori Hosaka Shouko Nagasawa Soon-Ha Hwang Sumie Nishido Takana Shirai Takeshi Ohkoshi Tomoko Miyata Tomomi Hamada Tomoyuki Kojima Tsubomi Ishihara Yaoi Kakihira Yohei Nakano Yoon-ji Kim Yoshie Endo Youko Tanaka Yū Horie Yu Matsuura Yu Yagi Yuka Hirata Yukari Furiya Yukari Yamaura Yuki Kamiya Yuki Sato Yukie Kaneko Yukie Yamamoto Yukiko Muroga Yuko Tagawa In-Between Check: Emi Matsunaga Emi Nakano Maiko Nogami Yuka Saitō Insert Song Composition: Isao Takahata Insert Song Lyrics: Isao Takahata Riko Sakaguchi Lab Coordinator: Yuriko Sato Lab Manager: Kazunori Nagasawa Model Animation: Masaya Saito Music Production: Maki Fujisawa Tetsuko Suzawa Yasuhiro Maeda Orchestra Conductor: Joe Hisaishi Overseas Promotion: Nao Amisaki Noriko Tsushi Satoko Takano Yan Wen Ma Overseas Promotion Manager: Jeffrey Wexler Mikiko Takeda Paint: Akemi Katou Akiko Shimizu Atsuko Ito Atsushi Okui Atsushi Tamura Ayako Kitamura Daiki Egusa Eiko Matsushima Emiko Okui Eri Yoshiki Erina Yamamoto Hayao Iwasawa Hidenori Shibahara Hiroaki Ishii Hiromi Takahashi Hitomi Kashihara Hitomi Yamase Junji Yabuta Junko Takeuchi Junya Saito Kanako Tajiri Kanako Takayanagi Kaori Kamata Katsuhiko Shiroto Kazuko Karube Keiko Itokawa Kumiko Mizoguchi Maki Ōmoto Maki Yamamoto Masafumi Inoue Michiko Saito Midori Saito Miki Kobayashi Miki Umezawa Misato Aida Miyuki Akamatsu Nana Takei Naoko Inohara Naoko Sasaki Naoko Sunahara Naomi Mori Natsumi Watanabe Norihiko Miyoshi Noriki Miyamoto Rie Furushiro Rie Kitazawa Rieko Umemura Sanae Seno Satomi Hatano Shinami Yoshikawa Sonoe Yoshida Takashi Saito Takeshi Nakamura Terumi Narita Tomoko Toki Tomoya Niimi Yoichi Senzui Yoko Chiba Yoko Wakabayashi Yoshimi Hashizume Yoshimi Shibata Youhei Nishiwaki Yui Itō Yuina Iizuka Yukari Hashimoto Yukari Kunou Yukie Tamura Yumi Fujiwara Yusaku Harada Yūsei Kashima Yuuki Komatsu Paint Check: Fumie Kawamata Kumi Nanjo Photography: Hisashi Akimoto Kazumasa Someya Kotaro Beppu Kouji Takahashi Miho Kawanishi Rumi Ishiguro Tomoyuki Shiokawa Yukiko Kaga Yuma Akasu Yusuke Okamoto Photography Assistant: Atsuko Okui (Assez Finaud Fabric) Atsuko Shibata (Assez Finaud Fabric) Kanae Ouchi (Assez Finaud Fabric) Kaneko Fujimaki (Assez Finaud Fabric) Megumi Tanaka (Assez Finaud Fabric) Rieko Koike (Assez Finaud Fabric) Ryō Itō (Assez Finaud Fabric) Tsubasa Takagi (Assez Finaud Fabric) Yasunao Kondo (Assez Finaud Fabric) Yoshiaki Kayaba (Assez Finaud Fabric) Piano Performance: Joe Hisaishi Planning: Toshio Suzuki Producer Room: Chiaki Okuda Chieko Tamura Nobuko Shiraki Shuhei Tadano Yōko Ihira Producer's Apprentice: Kazuo Kawakami Production: Koji Hoshino (Studio Ghibli) Production Administration: Daisuke Nishikata Minako Nagasawa Taisei Ishisako Toru Shinagawa Toshiyuki Kawabata Yoichiro Kugimiya Production Administration Manager: Shinsuke Nonaka Production Advancement: Akihiko Suzuki Aya Hashimoto Chihiro Okada Kazuyuki Shimada Kenji Imura Satoko Ohkubo Production Affairs: Kanako Aoki Mine Shibuya Production Committee: Akio Kobayashi (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Akitoshi Maeda (Dentsu) Asako Hio (d-rights) Ayako Dan (Walt Disney Japan) Daisuke Kadoya (NTV) Daizou Suzuki (d-rights) Hidetaka Kokubun (Walt Disney Japan) Hikaru Onoda (TOHO) Jun Okabe (KDDI) Keiko Miyazaki (NTV) Kimio Maruyama (NTV) Kino Arai (d-rights) Kinuko Yano (KDDI) Koichi Kawakami (KDDI) Kouji Kishimoto (Walt Disney Japan) Kouta Sugiyama (d-rights) Madoka Hosoya (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Makoto Takahashi (KDDI) Masami Takahashi (Walt Disney Japan) Masato Tachibana (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Mayumi Hirakata (NTV) Michio Yamamoto (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Minami Ichikawa (TOHO) Misato Kamei (Dentsu) Miyuki Takai (TOHO) Nao Ishii (Dentsu) Naohiro Kishi (KDDI) Naoki Iwasa (NTV) Naoto Hatakeyama (NTV) Paul Candland (Walt Disney Japan) Ryuichi Ikeda (Dentsu) San Kim (KDDI) Satoshi Chida (TOHO) Satoshi Suzuki (Dentsu) Shingo Arai (KDDI) Shinpei Ise (TOHO) Shuichi Machida (Dentsu) Taichi Ueda (TOHO) Takahiro Hirato (KDDI) Takashi Suga (KDDI) Takayuki Tsukagoshi (Walt Disney Japan) Tomoko Jō (NTV) Tooru Itabashi (d-rights) Toshihiro Komatsu (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Toshihiro Yamamoto (Dentsu) Toshinori Mori (NTV) Toshio Oomori (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Toshitake Amemiya (KDDI) Toshiya Takasaki (d-rights) Yoshikuni Murata (Hakuhodo DY Media Partners) Yoshio Takada (Dentsu) Yoshishige Shimatani (TOHO) Yukio Yamashita (Walt Disney Japan) Yutaka Ishikawa (Dentsu) Yuuko Muranaka (Walt Disney Japan) Production Cooperation: Kentaro Takahashi Production Desk: Toshio Yoshikawa Publicity: Aki Tsutagawa Aya Maruyama Fumino Watanabe Genji Sakai Hajime Murata Hiroshi Yajima Hiroyuki Orihara Kazue Tsukakoshi Kenichi Arao Masaru Yabe Michiyo Koyanagi Mieko Hara Rieko Matsuki Saori Ueda Shoichiro Saito Yukari Nishikawa Yukari Nomura Yukio Shinohara Publicity Producer: Akito Takahashi Tomoko Hosokawa Publishing: Hisanori Nukada Kyoko Konishi Michiko Hirabayashi Mutsushi Saitō Satoko Kitazawa Yuri Morita Publishing Manager: Chinami Tai Recording: Eihiko Ohno Recording Adjustment: Koji Kasamatsu Recording Assistant: Miki Nomura Shuji Suzuki Tsukasa Yokoyama Tsukuru Takagi Recording engineer: Suminobu Hamada Sound Effects: Koji Kasamatsu Tomoko Ohtsuka Sound Production Desk: Tamaki Furushiro Specially Appointed Scene Design: Yoshiyuki Momose Storyboard Assistant: Masako Sato Shinji Hashimoto Shinsaku Sasaki Studio Coordinator: Chiaki Tachikawa Sadaaki Nishinoo Satoru Murata Studio Engineer: Naoto Takeshima Supervising Manager: Yuichiro Mochizuki Supervision: Hikari Hayama Hiroyuki Saitou Hisayo Itou Jumi Yamamoto Keiko Shiroto Kiyoko Tsuge Maho Yasunobu Masahiro Suzuki Miyuki Ishii Miyuki Shimamiya Natsuki Ebisawa Saori Uchida Satomi Sasaki Shunichi Iwasaki Sueko Numazawa Tokuko Sato Tomomi Hagiwara Tsuneo Sawai Yukiko Miyasaka Yuuko Nomura System Management: Noriyuki Kitakawachi Shouji Makihara Yūgo Hayashi Technical Support: Shinichiro Koshi Shuho Kikuchi Theme Song Composition: Kazumi Nikaidō Theme Song Lyrics: Kazumi Nikaidō Theme Song Performance: Kazumi Nikaidō Trailer Production: Keiichi Itagaki 塗線作画: Ai Kaneko Akane Ōguchi Akari Takagaki Akemi Ueda Akiko Kumada Akiko Ohshima Akiko Taniguchi Akiko Teshima Akiyo Okuda Alexandra Weihrauch Anri Yamazaki Asami Ishikado Asami Yamaguchi Dai Misawa Eiji Yamamori Emi Hirota Emi Ohta Fumi Saraya Fumiki Yamada Hayao Kanou Hiroko Kando Hiromi Niwa Hiroto Fujii Hiroyuki Moriguchi Junya Sato Kaoru Higashiya Kayo Sakazume Kazunari Araki Kazuto Wakayama Ken'ichi Ōtomo Kenji Taketani Kenzō Yamazaki Konomi Satō Kōsuke Kobashi Kota Shimamura Maiko Ochiai Makiko Suzuki Makoto Yaguchi Mariko Matsuo Masaru Okuma Masato Ujibe Masayo Andō Megumi Tonegawa Miho Namerikawa Misaki Kikuta Mitsuki Chiba Miyuki Nagata Momoko Tamakoshi Mun Ryong Heo Nanako Egami Naoko Kawahara Rie Nakagome Risa Ogasawara Ritsuko Taniguchi Ryosuke Tsuchiya Ryōta Usui Sae Akama Saki Mieda Saori Hagita Satoshi Senba Satsuki Muramatsu Shinichiro Yamada Shiomi Yamada Shota Sugimoto Shuhei Fukuda Shuji Maruyama Takahiro Inoue Takahiro Ōkawa Teppei Okuda Tomoyo Nishida Yasumi Ogura Yasumi Tanaka Yasuo Ishii Yayoi Toki Yoriko Mochizuki Yoshie Noguchi Yoshimi Shizuka Yousuke Okuda Yu Okagaki Yu Fen Cheng Yui Ōzaki Yuichi Tajima Yuka Aono Yuka Matsumura Yuki Sato Yukie Watanabe Yukiko Kunitake Yuri Yagisawa 塗線作画検査: Kunoko Akiyama Aki Asakura as Kaguya Kengo Kora as Sutemaru Nobuko Miyamoto as Ouna Takeo Chii as Okina Atsuko Takahata as Sagami Hikaru Ijūin as Abe no Udaijin Isao Hashizume as Kuramochi no Miko Nakamura Shichinosuke as Mikado Ryudo Uzaki as Ootomo no Dainagon Shinosuke Tatekawa as Inbe no Akita Takaya Kamikawa as Ishitsukuri no Miko Tamaki Kojo as Isonokami no Chuunagon Tatsuya Nakadai as Sumiyaki no Roujin Tomoko Tabata as Menowarawa Yukiji Asaoka as Kitanokata Japanese companies Animation Cooperation: Anime Torotoro APPP BONES C2C CONNECT David Production Doga Kobo Kyushu Animation LIDEN FILMS (as Lidenfilms Osaka Studio) MAA Mopics Madhouse Magic Bus Nakamura Production Nippon Animation Oh! Production OZAWA DESIGN WORKS Pierrot Production I. G Project Team Sarah Studio 4C Studio Cockpit Studio Comet Studio Takuranke Tatsunoko Production The Answer Studio Co., Ltd. Vega Entertainment Wafū Animation Wish Yuhodo Animation Production: Studio Ghibli BG Scan: T2 Studio Casting: Queens Promotion Color Specification: T2 Studio Digital Lab: Imagica Distributor: TOHO Music Performance: Tokyo Symphony Orchestra Music Production: Wonder City Music Recording: Bunkamura Studio Muza Kawasaki Symphony Hall Paint Assistance: Animation Time Anitus Kōbe Eagle Nest Studio Gimlet Wish Photography: T2 Studio Photography Assistance: Assez Finaud Fabric. Production: Buena Vista Home Entertainment (Japan) Dentsu Inc. Hakuhodo DY Media Partners KDDI Mitsubishi Corporation Nippon Television Network Studio Ghibli TOHO Production Cooperation: T2 Studio Sound Production Assistance: Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum TOHO Post Production Center Toho Studio Toho Studio Services Tokyo TV Center Special Thanks: LAWSON The Yomiuri Shimbun Sponsoring: Eyeful Home KDDI Titles: Malin Post English cast English staff Translation: Ian MacDougall (Theatrical release) Executive producer: Frank Marshall Producer: Geoffrey Wexler Assistant To Mr. Marshall: Mary Radford Choir Director: Luana Jackman Credits: David Butterworth Sean Kelley Dialogue Editing: Suzanne Goldish Kaguya Choir: Aria Gunn Micah Lee Pearl Botts Summer Davis Legal Services: Janina Sinclair Penelope Glass Post-Production Supervision: James Lafferty Production manager: Laura Lopez Re-Recording Mixing: Mark Ettel Recording engineer: David Walsh David W. Barr Eric Lewis Script Adaptation: Mike Jones Special Thanks To: David Jesteadt Eric Beckman Robyn Klein Studio Teacher: Chavonne Long Sync Writer: Steve Kramer Talent Coordination: Sierra Leoni Titles: David Butterworth Sean Kelley Voice Casting: Holly Dorff Long Voice Direction: Jamie Simone Chloë Grace Moretz as Kaguya Darren Criss as Sutemaru James Caan as The Bamboo Cutter Mary Steenburgen as The Bamboo Cutter's Wife Beau Bridges as Prince Kuramochi Brian Leone as Villager Caitlyn Leone as Kaguya (young) Daniel Dae Kim as Great Counselor Otomo Dean Cain as The Mikado Emily Bridges as Kitanokata George Segal as Inbe no Akita Hynden Walch as Menowarawa James Marsden as Prince Ishitsukuri John Cho as Middle Counselor Isonokami Liam O'Brien as Ayabe no Uchimaro Lucy Liu as Sagami Michael Leone as Villager Oliver Platt as Lord Minster of Right Abe Andre Robinson Dave Zyler Elisa Gabrielli Holly Dorff Long Hope Levy Hudson Thames James Nardini John C. Storey Moosie Drier Newell Alexander Rosemary Alexander Warren Sroka English companies Distributor: GKids Madman Entertainment (Australia and New Zealand) Universal Studios (USA) Licensed by: GKids Payroll Services: Media Services Recording Studio: STUDIOPOLIS, Inc. French staff French cast ADR Director: Jean-Marc Pannetier Claire Baradat as Princesse Kaguya Achille Orsoni as Coupeur de Bambou Adeline Chetail as Servante Benjamin Bollen as Mikado Catherine Artigala as Vieille femme Catherine Desplaces as Ko Donald Reignoux as Sutermaru Hélène Otternaud as Femme du Coupeur de Bambou Narratrice Jérôme Cachon as Ishitsukuri Monique Nevers as Dame Sagami Patrice Dozier as Prince Kuramochi Pauline Brunner as Otsu Xavier Beja as Ministre Abe Yoann Sover as Couns Isonomaki Alban Thuilier Ambre Foubert Coralie Thulier Emma Garnet Francis Benoit Igor Chometowski Isabelle Desplantes Jaynelia Coadou Jean-Luc Atlan Julien Meunier Maïa Constantin Mailk Issolah Myrtille Richardot Nathalie Bleynie Patrice Melennec Patrick Bethune Pierre Baton Thierry D'Armor Tugdual Rio Victoire Villepin French companies (none) Spanish staff Spanish cast ADR Director: Eduardo Gutierrez (Spain dub) Dubbing Director: Fabián Mejía Translation: Ayako Kishi (Spain dub) ADR Script: Eduardo Gutierrez (Spain dub) ADR Engineer: Jesús Javier Sáiz Salso (Spain dub) Mix Engineer: Jesús Javier Sáiz Salso (Spain dub) Analiz Sánchez as Princesa Kaguya Cristina Yuste as Kaguya (Spain dub) Gerardo del Valle as Akita Patricia Bolaños as Lady Sagami Ricardo Bautista as Sutemaru Salvador Najar as Leñador de bambú Luis Mas as The Bamboo Cutter (Spain dub) Pilar Gentil as The Bamboo Cutter's Wife (Spain dub) Raúl Lara as Sutemaru (Spain dub) Alejandro Licera as Servant (Spain dub) Ángel Colomé as Craftsman (Spain dub) Darío López-Yarto as Child B (Spain dub) David Beteta as Musician (Spain dub) Eduardo Gutierrez as Prince Ishitsukuri (Spain dub) Enrique Cazorla as Akita (Spain dub) Enrique Jordá as Uchimaro (Spain dub) Eva Lorenzo as First Wife (Spain dub) Fran Jimenez as Counselor Isonokami (Spain dub) Gerardo del Valle as Isonokami Isabel Donate as Sagami (Spain dub) Isacha Mengíbar as Companion (Spain dub) Jos Gómez as Emperor (Spain dub) Juan Perucho as Minister Abe (Spain dub) María Julia Díaz as Narrator (Spain dub) Marta Marín as Child C (Spain dub) Mateo López-Yarto as Child A (Spain dub) Miguel Zúñiga as Prince Kuramochi (Spain dub) Nagore Germes as Moon Mandatary (Spain dub) Salvador Campoy as Counselor Ootomo (Spain dub) Vicente Gil as Charcoal Elder (Spain dub) Francisco Klee Manuel Pérez Roman Segovia Ruben Leon Spanish companies Broadcaster: Canal MAX (Latin America) Canal UCR (subtitled) Cinemax Latin America HBO (Latin America) HBO Latin America I-Sat (Latin America) Movistar Drama (Spain) Movistar+ Xtra (Spain) Señal Colombia (Colombia) Distributor: Babilla Ciné (Colombia, Theatrical; DVD and Blu-ray) Cinemark (Argentina; subtitled) Madness Films (AniFest 2015) Zima Entertainment Dubbing Studio: Perfect Sound (Spain dub) WG DVD Distribution: Babilla Ciné (Colombia) Internet Streaming: Movistar+ Spain) Netflix Señal Colombia (Colombia) Licensed by: Cinetopia (Chile, Argentina, Peru and Uruguay) Vértigo Films (Spain) Zima Entertainment (Mexico) Theatrical Releaser: Babilla Ciné (Colombia) Italian staff Italian cast Dubbing Director: Gualtiero Cannarsi Translation: Elisa Nardoni Sato Executive producer: Romina Franzini Dialogues: Gualtiero Cannarsi Dubbing Assistant: Sabina Razzi Mixing: Andrea Pochini Chiara Fabiano as Principessa Kaguya (bambina) Lucrezia Marricchi as Principessa Kaguya Ambrogio Colombo as Principe Kuramochi Carlo Valli as Okina Chiara Salerno as Moglie di Okina Flavio Aquilone as Sutemaru Giorgio Borghetti as Principe Ishitsukuri Rita Savagnone as Lady Sagami Anna Teresa Eugeni as Moglie del carbonaio Daniele De Lisi as Artigiano David Chevalier as Medio Consigliere Isonokami Dimitri Winter as Vetturino Domitilla D'Amico as Ancella Edoardo Benedetti as Hei Emidio La Vella as Takemiya Francesco Bulckaen as Mikado Gerolamo Alchieri as Inbe no Akita Gianluca Musiu as Viandante Gianluca Solombrino as Ayabe no Uchimaro Lorenzo D'Agata as Kou Luca Tesei as Otsu Ludovico Versino as Musicante Marco Guadagno as Ministro di Destra Abe Mirko Mazzanti as Capitano Pietro Biondi as Carbonaio Roberto Draghetti as Gran Consigliere Ootomo Serena Sigismondo as Ryo Italian companies Distributor: Lucky Red Dubbing: SEFIT-CDC Internet Streaming: Mediaset Infinity Sound: SEFIT-CDC German staff German cast ADR Director: Erik Paulsen Script: Erik Paulsen Translation: Thilo Mardaus Sarah Alles as Princess Kaguya André Hennicke as Prince Kuramochi Denise Gorzelanny as Narrator Dirk Bublies as Prince Ishitsukuri Kornelia Boje as Bamboo Cutter's Wife Nico Sablik as Sutemaru Sabine Falkenberg as Lady Sagami Uli Krohm as Bamboo Cutter Erich Räuker as Dainagon Otomo Friedel Morgenstern as Girl Gerrit Schmidt-Foß as Mikado Hans Hohlbein as Udaijin Abe Peter Groeger as Inbe no Akita Rainer Fritzsche as Chuunagon Isonokami Reinhard Scheunemann as Old Charburner Uwe Jellinek as Uchimaro German companies Distributor: Universum Anime Dubbing: Christa Kistner Synchronproduktion Portuguese staff Portuguese cast Dubbing Director: Luciene Andreotti Flora Paulita as Kaguya Caio Guarnieri as Sutemaru Cecília Lemes as Ouna (Bamboo Cutter's Wife) José Carlos Guerra as Okina (Bamboo Cutter) Affonso Amajones as Ishitsukuri no Miko Carlos Silveira as Lorde Akita Cassiano Ávila as Mikado César Emílio as Abe no Udaijin Lucas Gama as Isonokami no Chuunagon Nair Silva as Narrator Rosângela Mello as Me no Warawa Tatá Guarnieri as Kuramochi no Miko Walter Cruz as Ootomo no Dainagon Alna Ferreira Carmen Cozzi Dláigelles Riba Fernando Peron Glaucia Franchi Ricardo Vasconcelos Sidney Lilla Vanderlan Mendes Wallace Costa Walter Cruz Portuguese companies Distributor: California Filmes (Brazil) Outsider Films (Portugal) Dubbing Studio: Woodvídeo (Brazil) Internet Streaming: Looke Vivo Play Production: ETC Filmes This encyclopedia is collaboratively edited by the users of this site # A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Anime anthology.

Kaguyahime no monogatari müzikleri. Kaguya-hime no monogatari torrent.

 

Should be repurposed for a Zulu(or maybe Apache) festival. Or something ELSE THAT'S ACTUALLY WORTH CELEBRATING. I love the soundtrack. Kaguyahime no monogatari french. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya 2013 •   140 minutes Fantasy, Romance * Adaptation of the Japanese folk tale Taketori Monogatari (Tale of the Bamboo Cutter) also known as Kaguya Hime (Princess Kaguya. In an idyllic rural setting, an old bamboo cutter and his wife raise a tiny girl found nestled. More Kaguya-hime no Monogatari, Other Titles: かぐや姫の物語, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, The Tale of Princess Kaguya, Kaguyahime no Monogatari, Princess Kaguya Story Sub Genres: Slow When It Comes to Love, Place, Time, Earth, Space, Asia, Japan, Moon, Other Planet, Past, Historical, Heian Period, Adapted Into Japanese Movie, Speculative Fiction, Spirit Realm, Mono No Aware, Tales, Stand-alone Movie, Kaguya-hime, Folklore, Heaven, Japanese Mythology, Mythology, Drastic Change Of Life. more Air Date: 11/23/2013 Type: Movie Links: ANN, MAL, Official Website, Official Website, WIKIEN, WIKIJP, ALLCIN I've seen this 222 (59. 8% Ayakashi: Japanese Classic Horror (TV) Mushishi (TV) Hoohokekyo Tonari no Yamada-kun (Movie) Ookami Kodomo no Ame to Yuki (Movie) Houseki no Kuni (TV) Dojoji (Movie) Asience: Kami wa Onna no Inochi (TV) Furusato Saisei Nippon no Mukashibanashi (TV) Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi (Movie) Ibara-hime Mata wa Nemurihime (Movie) Ano Hi Mita Hana no Namae o Bokutachi wa Mada Shiranai. (TV) Kaze Tachinu (Movie) Natsume Yuujinchou (TV) Kumo no You ni Kaze no You ni (Special) Top anime with similar genre to  Kaguya-hime no Monogatari Friends ratings: BETTER TOGETHER Follow your friends to see their ratings and comments about this Anime Youre not logged in! If you dont have an account, go ahead and sign up. It takes like two seconds and its totally worth it. No ads when logged in Follow Anime you enjoy watching Get notifications when they air Share your library with friends Discover new Anime All TV, Anime & Movies in one place Log in Sign up.

If my DVD collection was to contain just one movie this would be it. WHY LIVE ACTION WHY. Dreams have taken flight... Farewell Masterpiece. Me: ARRRFGGHGHFDFXGFHCGJVKBLHKJKHJDGHF. Lie down, try not to cry, cries a lot. What english subs? Btw, beautiful visuals. Kaguya hime no monogatari watch online. This is my favorite movie it's so deep and has many hidden messages I wish more movies were made like this.

Nominated for 1 Oscar. Another 13 wins & 36 nominations. See more awards  » Learn more More Like This Animation, Drama Family 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 7. 7 / 10 X Due to 12 y. o. Anna's asthma, she's sent to stay with relatives of her guardian in the Japanese countryside. She likes to be alone, sketching. She befriends Marnie. Who is the mysterious, blonde Marnie. Directors: James Simone, Hiromasa Yonebayashi Stars: Sara Takatsuki, Kasumi Arimura, Nanako Matsushima 8 / 10 A love story between a girl who loves reading books, and a boy who has previously checked out all of the library books she chooses. Director: Yoshifumi Kondô Yoko Honna, Issey Takahashi, Takashi Tachibana 7. 4 / 10 A group of Yokohama teens look to save their school's clubhouse from the wrecking ball in preparations for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. Gorô Miyazaki Sarah Bolger, Chris Noth, Anton Yelchin Adventure 7. 6 / 10 The Clock family are four-inch-tall people who live anonymously in another family's residence, borrowing simple items to make their home. Life changes for the Clocks when their teenage daughter, Arrietty, is discovered. Bridgit Mendler, Amy Poehler, Will Arnett 8. 1 / 10 After her werewolf lover unexpectedly dies in an accident while hunting for food for their children, a young woman must find ways to raise the werewolf son and daughter that she had with him while keeping their trait hidden from society. Mamoru Hosoda Aoi Miyazaki, Takao Ohsawa, Haru Kuroki 7. 9 / 10 A young witch, on her mandatory year of independent life, finds fitting into a new community difficult while she supports herself by running an air courier service. Hayao Miyazaki Kirsten Dunst, Minami Takayama, Rei Sakuma Comedy 7. 3 / 10 A community of magical shape-shifting raccoon dogs struggle to prevent their forest home from being destroyed by urban development. Isao Takahata Shinchô Kokontei, Makoto Nonomura, Yuriko Ishida After helping a cat, a seventeen-year-old girl finds herself involuntarily engaged to a cat Prince in a magical world where her only hope of freedom lies with a dapper cat statuette come to life. Hiroyuki Morita Chizuru Ikewaki, Yoshihiko Hakamada, Aki Maeda A five-year-old boy develops a relationship with Ponyo, a young goldfish princess who longs to become a human after falling in love with him. Cate Blanchett, Matt Damon, Liam Neeson 7. 2 / 10 The life and misadventures of a family in contemporary Japan. Yukiji Asaoka, Tôru Masuoka, Masako Araki A young boy and a girl with a magic crystal must race against pirates and foreign agents in a search for a legendary floating castle. Anna Paquin, James Van Der Beek, Cloris Leachman Fantasy 8. 2 / 10 When two girls move to the country to be near their ailing mother, they have adventures with the wondrous forest spirits who live nearby. Hitoshi Takagi, Noriko Hidaka, Chika Sakamoto Edit Storyline An old man makes a living by selling bamboo. One day, he finds a princess in a bamboo. The princess is only the size of a finger. Her name is Kaguya. When Kaguya grows up, 5 men from prestigious families propose to her. Kaguya asks the men to find memorable marriage gifts for her, but the 5 men are unable to find what Kaguya wants. Then, the Emperor of Japan proposes to her. Written by Anonymous Plot Summary Plot Synopsis Taglines: A Princess' Crime and Punishment Motion Picture Rating ( MPAA) Rated PG for thematic elements, some violent action and partial nudity See all certifications  » Details Release Date: 23 November 2013 (Japan) See more  » Also Known As: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya Box Office Budget: JPY5, 000, 000, 000 (estimated) Opening Weekend USA: 54, 915, 19 October 2014 Cumulative Worldwide Gross: 24, 638, 337 See more on IMDbPro  » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs  » Did You Know? Goofs While the baby princess crawls to the cutter she tosses a piece of bamboo to the edge of the floor mat. In the reverse shot as she crawls back, it is missing. See more » Quotes The Princess Kaguya: singing] Go round, come round, come round. come round, oh distant time. Come round, call back my heart. Birds, bugs, beasts, grass, trees, flowers. Teach me how to feel. If i hear that you pine for me, i will return to you. See more ».

54 Best Kaguya Hime monogatari images, Princess kaguya, Studio ghibli, Ghibli

Like many others, I've been following Studio Ghibli for decades. I always found its stories to be mature, as well as fitting for younger audiences. Stories for adults with a child's heart. I also liked the way they -almost- always offered some hope, regardless how dramatic or even gloomy they could get.
Unfortunately, this tale is for mature audiences only, I'd say, and it's rather depressing, overall.
There's nothing wrong with the film per se; the animation takes a very traditional approach and it becomes even simplistic, separating itself vastly from most Ghibli productions. The storytelling can get dull for people who are not into drama, with its 2 hours and 17 minutes in length.
Besides, this movie lacks also a certain sense of movement which other Ghibli films had, mostly in the form of unapologetic action. The pace is quite tranquil, with one or two rushy moments, without reaching the peaks achieved in previous Ghibli films (and no real action.
I liked other Takahata movies, like Pom Poko, Only Yesterday, My Neighbors the Yamadas and Grave of the Fireflies (being the latest pretty grim, as well.
Alas, it's a movie for the taste of critics for sure. Pity that their tastes do not have anything to do with the youth, and the message Ghibli delivers to them in other films is lost here to a more mature and disenchanted audience.

Kaguya-hime no monogatari wiki


Finally Now on YouTube I sawed spirited away in Bloomington IL With brooke & my dad.
I'm yet to find an anime that I love, and The Tale of the Princess Kaguya isn't it. I just don't connect to ancient Japanese culture and all of its downsides are in the story. The character work is solid, but it's archetypal stuff and still nothing that digs deep in a relatable way. This is just a type of whimsy that I don't enjoy, and at 2 hours, it's more of a chore. But at least it's a pretty chore. No doubt you marvel at the animation, especially during the dramatic running sequences. The fluttering music tends to match the lightness of the visuals. I respect Takahata, as I do for Miyasaki, but his Graves of the Fireflies did nothing for me as well. Outside the man hours put into it, Kaguya is nothing special.
6/10.
Ah the gorgeous voice of Hanazawa Kana. I don't think I'll ever get tired of hearing her.
GUYS HELP IM CONFUSED THIS SUPPOSEDLY CAME OUT IN 2012, SOMEONE PLEASE EXPLAIN.

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Kaguya hime no monogatari warabe uta. In the movie they said damn more than one time. Kaguya-hime no monogatari full movie. The Tale of Princess Kaguya is based on the classic Japanese fairy tale "Tale of the Bamboo Cutter. Chances are you don't live in Japan and don't know this tale. Luckily the movie is told in a way that requires absolutely no previous knowledge so even people who don't know much about Japanese culture and folklore can enjoy this (in fact very Japanese) story. Though the original fairy tale was certainly intended for children, I'm not sure many children would enjoy this kind of movie in this age, so it's probably more of a pleasure for mature viewers who know what kind of story and storytelling to expect. Art & Animation – 10 The first thing you will notice about this work is its unusual artstyle. You can clearly see Isao Takahata here, but at the same time the sketchy style is something you will rarely find in animated works. It's more like a moving artwork. Ghibli movies are usually very expensive and very well animated, and this one is no exception (in fact it was the most expensive and most delayed work of the studio, and predicted to be unprofitable due to its high cost and low mainstream appeal from the beginning. Even if you are not a fan of the artstyle, some moments are undeniably breathtaking such as the Kaguya running scenes. The animation is definitely a pleasure for the eyes: Unique, positively artsy, very fairy-taleish, very Japanese and certainly beautiful. Sound – 9 The music was composed by Joe Hisaishi who usually only does the score for Hayao Miyazaki's movies. His orchestral style suits the atmosphere of the story very well. I particularly noticed the music in the first and the last part of the movie. It's also nice to see so many traditional Japanese elements in this score. Kaguya, for instance, plays the koto (a Japanese pluck instrument) but the traditional music is not limited to actual in-movie music. All in all Hisaishi did what he always does: He delivered a great score with some memorable tracks. The calm and beautiful ending song leaves you with a nice aftertaste after the end of the movie. The voice acting is also quite well done. There are many old people and children in this movie, and I was particularly happy that those children were actually voiced by real children. Thus conversations and laughter sound very natural. Kaguya's voice is very pleasant to hear, and her voice actress delivered a vivid performance, most notable in Kaguya's energetic moments. Story & Characters – 7 It is very hard to properly rate the story and the characters. Since the movie is based on a fairy tale, the story itself is fairly simple, and so are the characters. It is very easy to follow the events and naturally there are not many surprises or innovations. There is, however, lots of charme found in this kind of presentation. Isao Takahata was always very skilled in portaying the interactions between humans and daily human emotions and actions. You can witness all of this here as well. Though the characters are generally not very developed, it is easy to understand Kaguya's feelings and her colorful personality makes her memorable. The other characters act mostly according to her roles: The caring mother who understands Kaguya's feelings, the charing father who does everything to make Kaguya happy, not understanding what actually makes her happy. The children that act as her friends and family. The five nobleman – some not so noble – who woo her and fail. All of those characters are pretty stereotypical, but they do their job well and never wanted to do more. The story unfolds in a more or less predictable way, except for the end which might be a surprise, especially if you are more familiar with western folklore. The beginning was very executeddone: Kaguya's rapid development was portayed beautifully, as was her personality. In the second part of the movie the pacing is a bit slower – not much happens, actually –, but it gets better again toward the ending. Value – 9 "The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter" is a very famous Japanese fairy tale, and this movie is unique in many ways: It is most likely the most elaborate and expensive adaption of a Japanese fairy tale we have seen in animation movies so far. The artstyle deserves lots of praise and definitely makes the whole experience memorable. The storytelling itself, though there's basically no narration, captures the atmosphere of a classic fairy tale very well. Furthermore Isao Takahata is definitely an interesting director and this is his last work, so fans of his other movies should definitely watch The Tale of Princess Kaguya. Fairy tale adaptions used to be very common in the early age of animated movies, but lately Japan has produced few such works. This might be one of the last attempts to bring a classic tale to the big screens without modernizing it unnecessarily. Enjoyment – 7 I definitely enjoyed the beginning of the movie a lot. It got a bit tedious in the second part – there was too much repetition in the part involving the five wooers, and it was obvious how Kaguya felt from the beginning, so I didn't enjoy this part very much apart from some really well-animated scenes and some nice moments. The last part of the movie gets better, though – especially the little dreamlike romance scene towards the end was fantastic. Overall I enjoyed this movie, but it is very long (140+ minutes) and it definitely would not have hurt to remove or shorten a couple of scenes. Final verdict: Watch this movie if you want to see a well-animated, well-told classic Japanese fairy tale. The movie is beautiful in many ways, but don't expect a complex story, a typical Ghibli movie, a typical Takahata movie (what's that, anyway. or a typical anime movie at all. The emotional reaction you will feel will very much depend on how much you can sympathize with Kaguya. Though her emotions are very well depicted, there is a natural distance between the watcher and the fairy-tale characters, so even though there are heart-warming and sad scenes, they might not leave a huge impact on you.

Kaguya hime no monogatari full movie. Thanks You Hayao Miyazaki for making my childhood amazing #RESPECT. Kaguya hime no monogatari song lyrics. Kaguya hime no monogatari movie. Kaguya-hime no monogatari episode 1. I had to cry right now. I can't believe that this is Hayao Miyazaki's LAST film until he's retired. Chuyện công chúa Kaguya Poster phim tại Nhật Đạo diễn Takahata Isao Sản xuất Nishimura Yoshiaki Kịch bản Takahata Isao Sakaguchi Riko Cốt truyện Takahata Isao Dựa trên Nàng tiên trong ống tre Âm nhạc Hisaishi Joe Hãng sản xuất Studio Ghibli Phát hành Tōhō Công chiếu 23 tháng 11, 2013 Độ dài 137 phút Quốc gia Nhật Bản Ngôn ngữ tiếng Nhật Chuyện công chúa Kaguya ( かぐや姫の物語 Kaguya-hime no Monogatari. là một phim anime phát hành vào mùa thu năm 2013 của Studio Ghibli, kịch bản và đạo diễn bởi Takahata Isao. Phim được dựa trên truyện cổ tích Nàng tiên trong ống tre [1] 2] Cốt truyện [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Bộ phim kể về câu chuyện của nhân vật chính, công chúa Kaguya, từ khi cô còn ở hình dạng trẻ sơ sinh đến lúc trưởng thành, đồng thời cũng tiết lộ "tội lỗi" cô phạm phải từ trước khi bắt đầu sự kiện phim... Câu chuyện mở đầu với Okina - một ông lão làm nghề đốn tre để kiếm sống, bất ngờ bắt gặp Kaguya trong một cây măng phát sáng giữa rừng tre. Tin rằng đây là món quà trời ban, ông đã đem theo cô về nhà. Okina và vợ ông Ona sau đã quyết định nhận Kaguya (lúc bấy giờ vẫn gọi cô dưới cái tên "công chúa" làm con của họ. Sau đó Kaguya bất ngờ biến hình thành một bé gái sơ sinh và đồng thời Ona cũng nhận ra mình có thể cho con bú. Và cặp vợ chồng già này cũng nhận thấy sự lớn lên nhanh chóng của cô con gái mới nhận nuôi này. Kaguya tiếp tục lớn nhanh như thổi và cô được bạn bè trong làng đặt cho biệt danh là " Búp Măng. Sutemaru, người bạn lớn tuổi nhất của Kaguya trong đám trẻ trong làng đã nảy sinh tình cảm đặc biệt với cô. Miyatsuko tìm thấy rất nhiều vàng và quần áo đẹp trong một lùm tre giống như khi ông tìm thấy Kaguya. Ông coi chúng như một minh chứng cho nguồn gốc thần thánh của Kaguya và bắt đầu biến cô trở thành một công chúa thật sự. Ông quyết định chuyển nhà đến kinh thành, buộc Kaguya phải rời xa bạn bè. Kể từ đó, cô ở trong một căn nhà rộng lớn cùng với rất nhiều người hầu. Cô cũng được giáo dục để trở thành một công chúa thực thụ. Nhưng Kaguya cho rằng cuộc sống không phải là sự gò bó theo khuôn phép mà nên tràn ngập tự do và tiếng cười. Khi đến tuổi trưởng thành, Kaguya chính thức lấy danh vị "công chúa Kaguya" do vẻ đẹp của cô. Miyatsuko tổ chức một buổi lễ trưởng thành cho cô. Tại lễ kỷ niệm, Kaguya tình cờ nghe thấy vài người khách đang thì thầm rằng cha cô đã dùng tiền để biến cô từ một cô gái thôn quê trở thành một công chúa. Thất vọng, cô rời khỏi kinh thành và trở về ngọn núi, tìm Sutemaru và những người bạn khác, nhưng rồi cô phát hiện ra rằng họ đều đã dời đi. Kaguya ngất đi trong tuyết và khi tỉnh dậy, cô thấy mình vẫn đang ở bữa tiệc. Kaguya ngày càng trở nên xinh đẹp và được nhiều người cầu hôn. Có năm người đàn ông thuộc dòng dõi quý tộc kiên nhẫn đứng trước nhà cô, họ nói sẵn sàng làm bất kì điều gì để có được cô. Kaguya nói cô chỉ cưới người mang về cho cô báu vật huyền thoại mà cô nói đến. Có hai người cầu hôn đem về cho cô đồ giả. Người thứ ba hèn nhát bỏ cuộc, và người thứ tư cố gắng tán tỉnh cô với những lời lẽ dối trá. Khi người thứ năm chết vì đi tìm báu vật, Kaguya hoàn toàn suy sụp. Trong lúc đó, nhà vua để ý đến cô. Bị mê hoặc bởi vẻ đẹp của cô, ông bắt cô về làm vợ. Kaguya biến mất trước sự ngạc nhiên của nhà vua. Nhận ra mình đã quá ích kỉ, nhà vua từ bỏ mong muốn lấy Kaguya. Kaguya nhìn lên Mặt trăng, nước mắt chảy dài, cô cầu xin Mặt trăng hãy bảo vệ cô. Kaguya nói với bố mẹ rằng cô đến từ Mặt trăng. Khi còn sống trên Mặt trăng, cô đã cố tình phá luật, hy vọng sẽ được lưu đày đến Trái Đất để có thể trải nghiệm cuộc sống loài người. Khi nhà vua bắt Kaguya về làm vợ, cô khẩn cầu Mặt trăng giúp cô. Nghe thấy lời cầu nguyện, Mặt trăng nói sẽ đưa cô về trong lần trăng tròn tiếp theo. Kaguya thú nhận rằng cô đã gắn bó với Trái Đất nhưng vẫn miễn cưỡng ra đi. Miyatsuko nói sẽ không để Kaguya đi và bắt đầu tập hợp binh lính để bảo vệ cô. Kaguya trở về quê hương lần cuối. Cô nhìn thấy Sutemaru và nói với anh rằng cô đã từng rất hạnh phúc với anh. Sutemaru thề sẽ bảo vệ cô. Cả hai cùng chạy trên đồng cỏ và Kaguya bắt đầu bay. Tuy nhiên cô bị rơi xuống nước ngay sau đó. Sutemaru tỉnh dậy trên đồng cỏ nghĩ đó là một giấc mơ, trong khi Kaguya phải trở về cung điện. Vào đêm trăng tròn, những nàng tiên sà xuống từ Mặt trăng, nhưng Miyatsuko không thể làm gì. Một nàng tiên đưa cho Kaguya một chiếc áo choàng sẽ xóa hết ký ức về Trái Đất. Kaguya khẩn cầu nàng tiên hãy cho cô khoảnh khắc cuối cùng bên cha mẹ. Các nàng tiên nói rằng nếu không quên hết những ký ức về Trái Đất, Kaguya sẽ bị vấy bẩn khi trở về Mặt trăng. Kaguya từ chối, nói rằng cuộc sống trên Trái Đất đầy những điều tuyệt vời. Các nàng tiên quàng chiếc áo cho cô. Kaguya bay lên mặt Trăng, để lại Miyatsuko và vợ, cô nhìn lại Trái Đất lần cuối với dòng nước mắt tràn đầy. Lồng tiếng [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Asakura Aki. Kaguya-hime Kora Kengo. Sutemaru Chii Takeo. Ông lão Miyamoto Nobuko. Bà lão Takahata Atsuko. Sagami Tabata Tomoko. Menowarawa Shinosuke Tatekawa. Inbe no Akita Kamikawa Takaya. Ishitsukuri no Miko Ijūin Hikaru. Á bộ hữu đại thần Uzaki Ryūdou. Đại bạn đại nạp ngôn Shichinosuke Nakamura II. Mikado Hashizume Isao. Kuramochi no Miko Asaoka Yukiji. Kitanokata Nakadai Tatsuya. Sumiyaki no Roujin Quá trình sản xuất [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Studio Ghibli lần đầu tiết lộ thông tin Takahata Isao đang thực hiện một phim dài vào năm 2008. [3] Takahata sau đó thông báo tại Liên hoan phim Quốc tế Locarno lần thứ 62 rằng ông sẽ làm phim dựa truyện truyện cổ tích Nhật Bản "Nàng tiên trong ống tre. 4] Ngày 13 tháng 12 năm 2012, Studio Ghibli và nhà phân phối Tōhō xác nhận việc phát hành phim "Chuyện công chúa Kaguya. 5] Cùng trong tháng đó, Ikebe Shinichiro dự định sẽ đảm trách phần nhạc phim. Ngày 4 tháng 2 năm 2013, đoàn làm phim thông báo rằng Hisaishi Joe sẽ thay Ikebe phụ trách phần nhạc phim. Đây sẽ là lần đầu tiên Hisashi cộng tác với Takahata Isao và lần đầu tiên ông thực hiện nhạc phim cho đồng thời 2 phim của Studio Ghibli trong cùng một năm; phim kia là anime Kaze Tachinu của Miyazaki Hayao. [6] Ca khúc chủ đề phim là "Ký ức cuộc đời. いのちの記憶 Inochi no Kioku. trình bày bởi Nikaido Kazumi. Ngoài ra trong phim còn sử dụng hai ca khúc "Đồng ca. わらべ唄 Warabe Uta. và "Bài ca thiên nữ. 天女の歌 Tenjo no Uta. Phát hành [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Chuyện công chúa Kaguya ban đầu dự tính phát hành cùng thời điểm với phim "Kaze Tachinu" vào mùa hè năm 2013. [7] Tuy nhiên, tháng 2 năm 2013, đơn vị phát hành Tōhō thông báo rằng Kaguya sẽ bị lùi lịch đến mùa thu, nêu lý do là bảng truyện chưa hoàn tất. [8] 9] Tham khảo [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Liên kết ngoài [ sửa, sửa mã nguồn] Trang chủ anime (tiếng Nhật) Kaguya-hime no Monogatari tại từ điển bách khoa của Anime News Network Kaguya-hime no Monogatari tại Internet Movie Database.

How did you manage to ruin one of the most heartwarming films ever created. Takahata ustanın, karakalem ve pastel boya karışımı şeklindeki bu animesinin görselliği hoşuma gitti. Yaşamın, bazen sunduğu hediyelere karşılık insanların onun değerini anlayamamanın-koruyamamanın-şımarmanın karşılığında, verdiği hediyeyi nasıl tekr. Devamını gör. Takahata ustanın, karakalem ve pastel boya karışımı şeklindeki bu animesinin görselliği hoşuma gitti. Yaşamın, bazen sunduğu hediyelere karşılık insanların onun değerini anlayamamanın-koruyamamanın-şımarmanın karşılığında, verdiği hediyeyi nasıl tekrar geri alabileceği mesajını güzel bir masal ile gösteren, çok değerli ve naif bir film (10/10.

Kaguya hime no monogatari scene. Japan actually make really good live actions of their anime's / cartoons, so I am looking forward to this. Oh man, I cried so hard watching this film. I love the reality feeling he gives on his movies. In the theater I was in, no one left until the last note was played.  Everyone was busy reading the translated lyrics which made an amazing ending. Kaguya hime no monogatari sub indo. "Tale of the Princess Kaguya. かぐや姫の物語" and "Kaguya-hime no Monogatari" redirect here. For the Studio Ghibli film, see The Tale of the Princess Kaguya. "Taketori Monogatari" and "竹取物語" redirect here. For the 1987 film, see Princess from the Moon. Discovery of Princess Kaguya (depiction from the Edo period, late 17th century) The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter ( 竹取物語, Taketori Monogatari) is a 10th-century Japanese monogatari (fictional prose narrative) containing Japanese folklore. It is considered the oldest extant Japanese prose narrative [1] 2] although the oldest manuscript dates to 1592. [3] The tale is also known as The Tale of Princess Kaguya ( かぐや姫の物語, Kaguya-hime no Monogatari) after its protagonist. [4] It primarily details the life of a mysterious girl called Kaguya, who was discovered as a baby inside the stalk of a glowing bamboo plant. Narrative [ edit] Taketori no Okina takes Kaguya-hime to his home, Drawn by Tosa Hiromichi, c. 1600 One day, while walking in the bamboo forest, an old, childless bamboo cutter called Taketori no Okina ( 竹取翁, the Old Man who Harvests Bamboo" came across a mysterious, shining stalk of bamboo. After cutting it open, he found inside it an infant the size of his thumb. He rejoiced to find such a beautiful girl and took her home. He and his wife raised her as their own child and named her Kaguya-hime (かぐや姫 accurately, Nayotake no Kaguya-hime, Shining princess of the supple bamboo. Thereafter, Taketori no Okina found that whenever he cut down a stalk of bamboo, inside would be a small nugget of gold. Soon he became rich. Kaguya-hime grew from a small baby into a woman of ordinary size and extraordinary beauty. At first, Taketori no Okina tried to keep her away from outsiders, but over time the news of her beauty spread. Eventually, five princes came to Taketori no Okina's residence to ask for the beautiful Kaguya-hime's hand in marriage. The princes eventually persuaded Taketori no Okina to tell a reluctant Kaguya-hime to choose from among them. Kaguya-hime concocted impossible tasks for the princes, agreeing to marry the one who managed to bring her his specified item. That night, Taketori no Okina told the five princes what each must bring. The first was told to bring her the stone begging bowl of the Buddha Shakyamuni from India, the second a jeweled branch from the mythical island of Hōrai, 5] the third the legendary robe of the fire-rat of China, the fourth a colored jewel from a dragon 's neck, and the final prince a cowry shell born of swallows. Realizing that it was an impossible task, the first prince returned with an expensive stone bowl, hoping that Kaguya-hime would believe it to be real, but after noticing that the bowl did not glow with holy light, Kaguya-hime saw through his deception. Likewise, two other princes attempted to deceive her with fakes, but also failed. The fourth gave up after encountering a storm, while the final prince lost his life (severely injured in some versions) in his attempt. After this, the Emperor of Japan, Mikado, came to see the strangely beautiful Kaguya-hime and, upon falling in love, asked her to marry him. Although he was not subjected to the impossible trials that had thwarted the princes, Kaguya-hime rejected his request for marriage as well, telling him that she was not of his country and thus could not go to the palace with him. She stayed in contact with the Emperor, but continued to rebuff his requests and marriage proposals. That summer, whenever Kaguya-hime saw the full moon, her eyes filled with tears. Though her adoptive parents worried greatly and questioned her, she was unable to tell them what was wrong. Her behaviour became increasingly erratic until she revealed that she was not of this world and must return to her people on the Moon. In some versions of this tale, it is said that she was sent to the Earth, where she would inevitably form material attachment, as a temporary punishment for some crime, while in others, she was sent to Earth for her own safety during a celestial war. The gold that Taketori no Okina had been finding had in fact been a stipend from the people of the Moon, sent down to pay for Kaguya-hime's upkeep. Kaguya-hime goes back to the Moon As the day of her return approached, the Emperor sent many guards around her house to protect her from the Moon people, but when an embassy of "Heavenly Beings" arrived at the door of Taketori no Okina's house, the guards were blinded by a strange light. Kaguya-hime announced that, though she loved her many friends on Earth, she must return with the Moon people to her true home. She wrote sad notes of apology to her parents and to the Emperor, then gave her parents her own robe as a memento. She then took a little of the elixir of life, attached it to her letter to the Emperor, and gave it to a guard officer. As she handed it to him, her feather robe was placed on her shoulders, and all of her sadness and compassion for the people of the Earth were apparently forgotten. The heavenly entourage took Kaguya-hime back to Tsuki no Miyako (月の都; lit. "the Capital of the Moon. leaving her earthly foster parents in tears. The parents became very sad and were soon put to bed sick. The officer returned to the Emperor with the items Kaguya-hime had given him as her last mortal act, and reported what had happened. The Emperor read her letter and was overcome with sadness. He asked his servants, Which mountain is the closest place to Heaven. to which one replied the Great Mountain of Suruga Province. The Emperor ordered his men to take the letter to the summit of the mountain and burn it, in the hope that his message would reach the distant princess. The men were also commanded to burn the elixir of immortality since the Emperor did not wish to live forever without being able to see her. The legend has it that the word immortality, 不死 ( fushi) became the name of the mountain, Mount Fuji. It is also said that the kanji for the mountain, 富士山 (literally "Mountain Abounding with Warriors. are derived from the Emperor's army ascending the slopes of the mountain to carry out his order. It is said that the smoke from the burning still rises to this day. (In the past, Mount Fuji was much more volcanically active and therefore produced more smoke. ) Literary connections [ edit] Elements of the tale were drawn from earlier stories. The protagonist Taketori no Okina, given by name, appears in the earlier poetry collection Man'yōshū (c. 759; poem# 3791. In it, he meets a group of women to whom he recites a poem. This indicates that there previously existed an image or tale revolving around a bamboo cutter and celestial or mystical women. [6] 7] A similar retelling of the tale appears in the c. 12th century Konjaku Monogatarishū (volume 31, chapter 33) although their relation is under debate. [8] Banzhu Guniang [ edit] In 1957, Jinyu Fenghuang (金玉鳳凰) a Chinese book of Tibetan tales, was published. [9] In early 1970s, Japanese literary researchers became aware that "Banzhu Guniang" 班竹姑娘) one of the tales in the book, had certain similarities with The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter. [10] 11] Initially, many researchers thought that "Banzhu Guniang" must be related to Tale of Bamboo Cutter, although some were skeptical. In 1980s, studies showed that the relationship is not as simple as initially thought. Okutsu provides extensive review of the research, and notes that the book Jinyu Fenghuang was intended to be for children, and as such, the editor took some liberties in adapting the tales. No other compilation of Tibetan tales contains the story. [12] A Tibet-born person wrote that he did not know the story. [13] A researcher went to Sichuan and found that, apart from those who had already read "Jinyu Fenghuang" local researchers in Chengdu did not know the story. [14] Tibetan informants in Ngawa Tibetan and Qiang Autonomous Prefecture did not know the story either. [14] Legacy [ edit] The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter has been identified as proto- science fiction. Some of its science fiction plot elements include Kaguya-hime being a princess from the Moon who is sent to Earth for safety during a celestial war, an extraterrestrial being raised by a human on Earth, and her being taken back to the Moon by her real extraterrestrial family. A manuscript illustration also depicts a round flying machine that resembles a flying saucer. [15] See also [ edit] Big Bird in Japan The Tale of the Princess Kaguya Notes [ edit] "Japan: Literature" Windows on Asia, MSU, "17. A Picture Contest. The Tale of Genji. the ancestor of all romances) Katagiri et al. 1994: 95. ^ Katagiri et al. 1994: 81. ^ McCullough, Helen Craig (1990. Classical Japanese Prose. Stanford University Press. pp. 30, 570. ISBN   978-0-8047-1960-5. ^ Horiuchi (1997:345-346) Satake (2003:14-18) Yamada (1963:301-303) 田海燕, ed. (1957. 金玉鳳凰 (in Chinese. Shanghai: 少年兒童出版社. 百田弥栄子 (1971. 竹取物語の成立に関する一考察. アジア・アフリカ語学院紀要 (in Japanese. 3. 伊藤清司 (1973. かぐや姫の誕生―古代説話の起源 (in Japanese. 講談社. ^ 奥津 春雄 (2000. 竹取物語の研究: 達成と変容 竹取物語の研究 (in Japanese. 翰林書房. ISBN   978-4-87737-097-8. ^ テンジン・タシ, ed. (2001. 東チベットの民話 (in Japanese. Translated by 梶濱 亮俊. SKK. ^ a b 繁原 央 (2004. 日中説話の比較研究 (in Japanese. 汲古書院. ISBN   978-4-7629-3521-3. ^ Richardson, Matthew (2001. The Halstead Treasury of Ancient Science Fiction. Rushcutters Bay, New South Wales: Halstead Press. ISBN   978-1-875684-64-9. cf. "Once Upon a Time. Emerald City (85. September 2002. Retrieved 2008-09-17. ) References [ edit] Katagiri Yōichi, Fukui Teisuke, Takahashi Seiji and Shimizu Yoshiko. 1994. Taketori Monogatari, Yamato Monogatari, Ise Monogatari, Heichū Monogatari in Shinpen Nihon Koten Bungaku Zenshū series. Tokyo: Shogakukan. Donald Keene (translator) The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, ISBN   4-7700-2329-4 Japan at a Glance Updated, ISBN   4-7700-2841-5, pages 164—165 (brief abstract) Fumiko Enchi, Kaguya-hime" ISBN   4-265-03282-6 (in Japanese hiragana) Horiuchi, Hideaki; Akiyama Ken (1997. Shin Nihon Koten Bungaku Taikei 17: Taketori Monogatari, Ise Monogatari (in Japanese. Tōkyō: Iwanami Shoten. ISBN   978-4-00-240017-4. Satake, Akihiro; Yamada Hideo; Kudō Rikio; Ōtani Masao; Yamazaki Yoshiyuki (2003. Shin Nihon Koten Bungaku Taikei 4: Man'yōshū (in Japanese. ISBN   978-4-00-240004-4. Taketori monogatari, Japanese Text Initiative, Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library Yamada, Yoshio; Yamda Tadao; Yamda Hideo; Yamada Toshio (1963. Nihon Koten Bungaku Taikei 26: Konjaku Monogatari 5 (in Japanese. ISBN   978-4-00-060026-2. External links [ edit] Ryukoku University exhibition Tetsuo Kawamoto: The Moon Princess (translated by Clarence Calkins.

Princess Mononoke is outstanding.

Kaguya hime no monogatari full english sub

Based on the 10th century Japanese folktale called The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, Princess Kaguya, is a stunning piece of work. Delivering beautifully crafted characters and animation, and exquisitely painted watercolor backdrops. Like the pages of a beloved childrens book magically brought to life as the animators it seems, have poured their hearts and souls into the ink and paint that brought this film to life. It was a true pleasure to watch an animated film of this caliber, and I would enthusiastically include it in any discussion about Spirited Away, The Wind Rises, Ponyo and The Secret World of Arrietty. Though – and this is my only complaint – I did find the over two-hour running time a bit excessive. The film quickly establishes its themes, and then unfortunately labors on them during the 2nd act. The Tale of The Princess Kaguya is another great example of why animation isnt just for kids. This film expertly communicates complex emotional conflicts between its beautifully drawn lead characters. While never forgetting to entertain, and use a rich palette of colors and animation styles to properly do this ancient story justice. This movie is a testament to the power of hand-drawn cartoons, in that it requires the audience to unwittingly participate. Like the difference between a good book, and the movie adaptation, youre not given all the visual information in each frame. When Princess Kaguya runs away from home, all we really see are blurred fast-moving rough sketches of her white and red clothes, contrasting with the thickly drawn dark lines of the field around her. But the way its drawn, and the speed it moves, tells us a lot about her emotion state. We automatically fill in the blanks, and in doing so, connect with the story even more. That simple stroke of the pen can ignite an audiences imagination, and director Isao Takahata and his team exploit this perfectly to deliver a truly moving and beautiful film.

Kaguya hime no monogatari t-shirt. Kaguyahime no monogatari cda. Kaguyahime no monogatari soundtrack. Kaguya hime no monogatari watch movie. Coisa mais linda 😍😍😍😍😍😍😭. RIP Isao Takahata. YouTube. Studio Ghibli is a Japanese animation film studio founded in June 1985 by the directors * Hayao Miyazaki* and * Isao Takahata* and the producer * Toshio Suzuki. The company's logo features the character *Totoro* a large forest spirit) from Hayao Miyazaki's film * My Neighbor Totoro. It has its headquarters in Koganei, Tokyo. * Share your love of all things Ghibli...

Wow, he sounds like Coop from Kid vs Kat. I really love the movie, but i didn't get why Cloe Grace Moretz is in the cast, i mean, the original language of this movie is Japanese, so, i don't get it, does she know Japanese or she translate the movie for a English version, the she shouldn't be in the cast, nothing against her, but the cast should be the original, no the translate, in the other way if she does know Japanese, then its amazing, and should be a great fact which should be in the general description of the page where everybody can see it, if someone know this please let me know, it will be great if she have actually really does the original voice of the princes. Kaguyahime no monogatari song. OMG. I just watched the film on Blu-ray. It is SO BEAUTIFUL! THE ENDING MADE ME CRY IT'S THAT GOOD.

The Tale of the Princess Kaguya Japanese theatrical release poster Japanese かぐや姫の物語 Hepburn Kaguya-hime no Monogatari Directed by Isao Takahata [1] Produced by Yoshiaki Nishimura Screenplay by Isao Takahata Riko Sakaguchi  [ ja] Based on The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter Starring Aki Asakura  [ Wikidata] Kengo Kora Takeo Chii Nobuko Miyamoto Music by Joe Hisaishi Edited by Toshihiko Kojima Production company Studio Ghibli Distributed by Toho Release date 23 November 2013 Running time 137 minutes [2] Country Japan Language Japanese Budget 5 billion ( 49 million) 3] Box office 2. 5 billion ( 27 million) The Tale of the Princess Kaguya ( Japanese: かぐや姫の物語, Hepburn: Kaguya-hime no Monogatari, stylized as The Tale of The Princess Kaguya) is a 2013 Japanese animated fantasy drama film co-written for the screen and directed by Isao Takahata, based on the anonymous literary tale The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter and produced by Studio Ghibli for Nippon Television Network, Dentsu, Hakuhodo DYMP, Walt Disney Japan, Mitsubishi, Toho and KDDI, and distributed by Toho. The film features an ensemble voice cast that includes Aki Asakura, Kengo Kora, Takeo Chii, Nobuko Miyamoto, Atsuko Takahata, Tomoko Tabata, Tatekawa Shinosuke, Takaya Kamikawa, Hikaru Ijūin, Ryudo Uzaki, Nakamura Shichinosuke II, Isao Hashizume, Yukiji Asaoka (in a special appearance) and Tatsuya Nakadai. [4] 5] 6] 7] The film features the final film performance by Chii, who died in June 2012, and was the final film directed by Takahata, who died in April 2018. It was released in Japan on 23 November 2013, distributed by Toho. At the budget of US 49. 3 million, it is the most expensive Japanese movie to date. when. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature at the 87th Academy Awards. The production of the film was the subject of the feature-length documentary film Isao Takahata and His Tale of the Princess Kaguya. [8] Plot [ edit] A bamboo cutter named Sanuki no Miyatsuko discovers a miniature girl inside a glowing bamboo shoot. Believing her to be a divine presence, he and his wife decide to raise her as their own, calling her "Princess. The girl grows rapidly, causing her parents to marvel and earning her the nickname "Takenoko" Little Bamboo) from the other village children. Sutemaru, the oldest among Kaguya's friends, develops a close relationship with her. Miyatsuko comes upon gold and fine cloth in the bamboo grove in the same way he found his daughter. He takes these as proof of her divine royalty and begins planning to make her a proper princess. He relocates the family to the capital, forcing her to leave her friends behind. She finds herself in a mansion, replete with servants. She is also saddled with a governess who is tasked with taming her into a noblewoman. She struggles with the restraints of nobility, arguing that life should be full of laughter and struggle. When the girl comes of age, she is granted the formal name of "Princess Kaguya" for the light and life that radiates from her. Miyatsuko holds a celebration in commemoration of her naming. At the celebration, Kaguya overhears partygoers ridiculing her father's attempts to turn a peasant girl into a noble through money. Kaguya flees the capital in despair and runs back to the mountains, seeking Sutemaru and her other friends, but discovers that they have all moved away. She passes out in the snow and awakens back at the party. Kaguya grows in beauty, attracting suitors. Five men of noble standing court her, comparing her to mythical treasures. Kaguya tells them she will only marry whoever can bring her the mythical treasure mentioned. Two suitors attempt to persuade her with counterfeits. The third abandons his conquest out of cowardice, and the fourth attempts to woo her with flattering lies. When one of the men is killed in his quest, Kaguya falls into depression. Eventually, the Emperor takes notice of her. Taken with her beauty, he makes advances toward her, revolting her. Kaguya then demonstrates the ability to disappear at will, surprising the Emperor. Understanding that he has been too forward, the Emperor leaves. Kaguya reveals to her parents that she originally came from the Moon after it spoke to her. Once a resident there, she broke its laws, hoping to be exiled to Earth so that she could experience mortal life. When the Emperor made his advances, she silently begged the Moon to help her. Having heard her prayer, the Moon will reclaim her during the next full moon. Kaguya confesses her attachment to Earth and her reluctance to leave. Miyatsuko swears to protect Kaguya and begins assembling defensive forces. Kaguya returns to her hometown and finds Sutemaru, who vows to protect her. Kaguya demonstrates the ability to fly but loses it when she flies by the Moon. Sutemaru, who flew with her, wakes up later, thinking it was a dream. On the night of the full moon, a procession of celestial beings led by the Buddha descends from the Moon, and Miyatsuko is unable to stop it. An attendant offers Kaguya a robe that will erase her memories of Earth but she begs the attendant to grant her a last moment with her parents. The attendant, however, drapes the robe around her, and she appears to forget about her life on Earth. They leave, and Miyatsuko and his wife are distraught. Kaguya looks back one last time, and cries silently as she recognizes the love from her parents. Voice cast [ edit] Character Japanese cast [9] English dub cast Princess Kaguya Aki Asakura  [ ja] Chloë Grace Moretz Caitlyn Leone (young) Sutemaru Darren Criss The Bamboo Cutter Takeo Chii [a] James Caan The Bamboo Cutter's Wife / The Narrator Mary Steenburgen Lady Sagami Atsuko Takahata Lucy Liu Me no Warawa Tomoko Tabata Hynden Walch Inbe no Akita Tatekawa Shinosuke George Segal Prince Ishitsukuri Takaya Kamikawa James Marsden Lord Minister of the Right Abe Hikaru Ijūin Oliver Platt Great Counselor Otomo Ryudo Uzaki Daniel Dae Kim The Mikado Nakamura Shichinosuke II Dean Cain Prince Kuramochi Isao Hashizume Beau Bridges Middle Counselor Isonokami Tamaki Kojo John Cho ^ Yuji Miyake recorded additional dialogue for the bamboo cutter following Takeo Chii's death. [10] Production [ edit] As a child, Takahata read The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter. He recalled that he struggled to relate and sympathize with the protagonist; to him, the "heroines transformation was enigmatic" and that it "didnt evoke any empathy from [him. 11] In 1960, Takahata was preparing for a potential adaptation for his employer Toei Animation, which eventually was abandoned. [12] After rereading the tale, he realized the story's potential to be entertaining, as long as an adaptation allowed the audience to understand how Princess Kaguya felt. [11] 13] Studio Ghibli revealed that Isao Takahata was working on a feature-length film in 2008. [14] Takahata announced at the 62nd Locarno International Film Festival in 2009 that he intended to direct a film based on the anonymous Japanese literary tale The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter. [15] The Tale of the Princess Kaguya was financed by Nippon TV, whose late chairman, Seiichiro Ujiie, gave 5, 000, 000, 000 (approximately US 40, 000, 000) towards the project. [16] Ujiie loved Takahata's work, and pleaded with Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki to let Takahata make one more film. [17] Ujiie died on 3 March 2011, but not before being able to view the script and some of the storyboards. [18] To make sure the audience emotionally connected with the film, it was important to Takahata that viewers were able to "imagine or recall the reality deep within the drawings" rather than be distracted by a realistic art style. [19] He wanted to have people "recollect the realities of this life by sketching ordinary human qualities with simple props. 20] To assist with this vision, Osamu Tanabe provided the character designs and animation, and Kazuo Oga drew the watercolor backgrounds. [16] The release of The Tale of the Princess Kaguya was finally confirmed by Studio Ghibli and distributor Toho on 13 December 2012. [21] Soundtrack [ edit] In 2012, Shin-ichiro Ikebe was announced to write the film's score. However, in 2013, Joe Hisaishi replaced Ikebe as the composer. This is the first and only time that Hisaishi has scored a film directed by Isao Takahata. [22] The theme song "When I Remember This Life" was written and performed by Nikaido Kazumi. [23] 24] 25] The music from the film's original soundtrack was released on 20 November 2013. All tracks are written by Joe Hisaishi, except where noted. Track listing No. Title Length 1. "Overture" 0:53 2. "Light" 0:22 3. "The Little Princess" 1:15 4. "The Joy of Living" 1:01 5. "The Sprout" 2:19 6. "Li'l Bamboo" 2:06 7. "Life" 0:59 8. "Mountain Hamlet" 1:53 9. "Robe" 0:34 10. "Setting Out" 1:19 11. "Autumn Harvest" 0:39 12. "Supple Bamboo" 1:22 13. "Writing Practice" 0:47 14. "The Garden of Life" 0:25 15. "The Banquet" 1:22 16. "Despair" 1:07 17. "The Coming of Spring" 1:03 18. "Melody of the Beautiful Koto" 0:34 19. "Spring Waltz" 2:02 20. "Memories of the Village" 1:36 21. "The Nobles' Wild Ride" 1:29 22. "Devotion" 1:28 23. "Cicada Night" 1:12 24. "Mystery of the Moon" 0:48 25. "Sorrow" 1:00 26. "Fate" 1:17 27. "The City of the Moon" 0:28 28. "Going Home" 1:19 29. "Flying" 4:26 30. "The Procession of Celestial Beings I" 2:28 31. "The Parting" 1:07 32. "The Procession of Celestial Beings II" 0:57 33. "Moon" 1:49 34. "When I Remember This Life" Written and performed by Nikaido Kazumi [25] 5:42 35. "Koto Melody" 0:57 36. "Nursery Rhyme" 0:48 37. "Song of the Heavenly Maiden" 1:34 Release [ edit] The Tale of The Princess Kaguya was initially announced to be released simultaneously with The Wind Rises, another Ghibli film by Hayao Miyazaki in Japan in the summer of 2013, 26] which would have marked the first time that the works of the two directors were released together since the release of the films My Neighbor Totoro and Grave of the Fireflies in 1988. [26] However, in February 2013, distributor Toho announced that the release of Kaguya-Hime no Monogatari would be delayed to Fall 2013, citing concerns that the storyboards were not yet complete. [27] 28] On 12 March 2014, independent distributor GKIDS announced that it had acquired the US rights for the film and that it would release an English dub version produced by Studio Ghibli and Frank Marshall. [29] Chloë Grace Moretz is the voice of the title character in the English dub. It was released in select theatres in North America on 17 October 2014 and was also released on DVD and Blu-ray in Japan on 3 December 2014. [30] 31] The film was selected to be screened as part of the Directors' Fortnight section of the 2014 Cannes Film Festival. [32] Its North American première took place at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival during the festival's "Masters" program. [33] Reception [ edit] Box office [ edit] The film debuted at first place during its opening weekend in Japan, grossing  284 million ( US  2. 8 million. 34] By 2 February 2014, the film had grossed  2 313 602 733 (US22 613 153) at the Japanese box office. [35] The film went on to gross 2. 47 billion ( 25, 348, 933) in Japan. [36] Overseas, the film grossed  703 232 in North America, 37] and  969 920 in other territories, 38] for a worldwide total of 26, 980, 529. Critical reception [ edit] Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes assigned the film a score of 100% Certified Fresh" with an average rating of 8. 21/10 based on 92 reviews. The critics' consensus says, Boasting narrative depth, frank honesty, and exquisite visual beauty, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya is a modern animated treasure with timeless appeal. 39] In February 2014, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya placed 4th in both Kinema Junpo 's Best Ten and their Reader's Choice Awards. [40] David Ehrlich of The A. V. Club gave the film an A, deeming it "the best animated movie of the year. adding that it is "destined to be remembered as one of the revered Studio Ghiblis finest achievements. 41] Nicolas Rapold of The New York Times praised the artwork calling it "exquisitely drawn with both watercolor delicacy and a brisk sense of line. 42] Accolades [ edit] See also [ edit] The Kingdom of Dreams and Madness, a 2013 documentary about the making of the film List of films directed by Isao Takahata Princess from the Moon, a 1987 major live-action film based on The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter List of films with a 100% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, a film review aggregator website References [ edit. Kaguya-hime no Monogatari: Credit" かぐや姫の物語 クレジット (in Japanese. Archived from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014... PRINCESS KAGUYA [Subtitled. British Board of Film Classification. 22 January 2015. Archived from the original on 22 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015. ^ Ma, Kevin (23 July 2014. Pokemon defeats Ghibli at Japan box office. Film Business Asia. Archived from the original on 19 August 2014. Retrieved 25 July 2014... The Tale of The Princess Kaguya press kit" Press release. Paris: Wild Bunch International Sales. 2013. Retrieved 27 February 2019. ^ かぐや姫の物語 (2013. in Japanese. allcinema. Archived from the original on 4 December 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2015. ^ Ghibli Lists Jobs for Isao Takahata's Summer 2013 Film. Anime News Network. 21 November 2011. Archived from the original on 10 October 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2012. ^ Fischer, Russ (21 November 2012. Studio Ghibli Titles New Films From Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata; Grave of the Fireflies Picked Up For US Re-Release. Film. Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2012... Isao Takahata and His Tale of the Princess Kaguya. Wild Bunch International Sales. 2015. Retrieved 27 February 2019. ^ Character" かぐや姫の物語 登場人物. Kaguya-hime Monogatari (in Japanese. Archived from the original on 29 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2014. ^ 三宅裕司亡き地井武男さんへ恩返し 「かぐや姫の物語」に代役出演していた: 映画ニュース" in Japanese. 映画 6 December 2013. Archived from the original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved 16 May 2015. ^ a b Desowitz, Bill (23 December 2014. Immersed in Movies: Isao Takahata Talks 'The Tale of the Princess Kaguya' Swan Song. IndieWire. Retrieved 8 April 2019. ^ Hawker, Philippa (8 October 2014. The Tale of Princess Kaguya is Isao Takahata's first film in 14 years; is it also his last. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 8 April 2019. ^ Isao Takahata Talks The Tale of Princess Kaguya. gamesradar. 27 August 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2019. ^ Ghibli's Takahata, Goro Miyazaki Developing New Works. 1 February 2008. Archived from the original on 16 December 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2012. ^ Isao Takahata to Base Next Film on Taketori Monogatari. 12 August 2009. Archived from the original on 12 November 2012. Retrieved 28 October 2012. ^ a b Bradshaw, Nick (8 May 2018. Slow on the draw: Takahata Isao's long road to The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. Retrieved 9 April 2019. ^ Special Interview: Suzuki Toshio, Producer and Chairman, Studio Ghibli – Miyazaki Hayao and Takahata Isao Serving as the driver for two geniuses" Interview) 16. Interviewed by Shibuya Yoichi. 11 October 2013. ^ Loo, Egan (28 March 2011. NTV Chair/Anime Film Producer Seiichiro Ujiie Passes Away (Updated. Retrieved 9 April 2019. ^ Kamen, Matt (19 March 2015. Studio Ghibli's Isao Takahata on animating his final film. Wired UK. ISSN   1357-0978. Retrieved 9 April 2019. ^ Solomon, Charles (9 April 2018. Studio Ghibli co-founder Isao Takahata was a true poet of Japanese animation. Retrieved 8 April 2019. ^ ジブリ新作2作一挙公開!宮崎駿&高畑勲作品でジブリ史上初!. Cinema Today (in Japanese. 13 December 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2012. CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown ( link) "Takahata, Ghibli's Kaguya-Hime Now Lists Composer Hisaishi. 7 February 2013. Archived from the original on 9 February 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2013. ^ ジブリ新作『かぐや姫の物語』主題歌決定!現役僧侶の二階堂和美が大抜てき!. 23 May 2013. Archived from the original on 15 July 2013. Retrieved 15 August 2013. CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown ( link) "かぐや姫の物語 サウンドトラック. Oricon. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 7 May 2015. ^ a b "Nikaido Kazumi Official Website" in Japanese. Retrieved 27 February 2019. ^ a b "Ghibli Announces Miyazaki's Kaze Tachinu, Takahata's Kaguya-hime no Monogatari. Archived from the original on 3 January 2013. Retrieved 27 December 2012. ^ 高畑勲監督「かぐや姫」公開延期 「絵コンテ完成まだ」. Asahi Shimbun (in Japanese. 5 February 2013. Archived from the original on 7 April 2013. Retrieved 9 February 2013. ^ 高畑勲監督「かぐや姫の物語」公開が秋に延期! (in Japanese. Eiga. 4 February 2013. Archived from the original on 6 February 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2013. CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown ( link) Amidi, Amid (12 March 2014. GKIDS Acquires Takahata's 'The Tale of The Princess Kaguya' for US Distribution. Cartoon Brew. Archived from the original on 16 March 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2014. ^ Amidi, Amid (15 July 2014. Tale of The Princess Kaguya' Sets English-Language Voice Cast, October Release Date. Archived from the original on 18 July 2014. Retrieved 15 July 2014... The Tale of Princess Kaguya' Sets English-Language Voice Cast – /Film. Slashfilm. Archived from the original on 27 August 2014. Retrieved 5 September 2014. ^ Cannes Directors' Fortnight 2014 lineup unveiled. Screendaily. Archived from the original on 24 April 2014. Retrieved 26 April 2014. ^ a b "Isao Takahata's 'Princess Kaguya' to make North American première at Toronto film fest. The Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2014. ^ Blair, Galvin (25 November 2013. Studio Ghibli's 'The Tale of Princess Kaguya' Tops Japanese Box Office. The Hollywood Reporter. Archived from the original on 23 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2015. ^ Japanese Box Office, 1–2 February. 9 February 2014. Archived from the original on 25 February 2014. Retrieved 10 February 2014. ^ 2014. Eiren. Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan. Retrieved 31 March 2019. ^ The Tale of The Princess Kaguya. Box Office Mojo. Archived from the original on 10 April 2015. Retrieved 8 May 2015. ^ The Tale of The Princess Kaguya (2014) – International Box Office Results. Retrieved 31 March 2019. ^ The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2014. Rotten Tomatoes. Archived from the original on 22 March 2015. Retrieved 1 July 2019. ^ キネマ旬報2下旬決算特別号, pp. 80, 102. ^ Studio Ghibli delivers a new masterpiece with The Tale of Princess Kaguya. The A. Club. 16 October 2014. Archived from the original on 17 October 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2014. ^ Rapold, Nicolas (16 October 2014. The Tale of the Princess Kaguya. From Isao Takahata. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 27 October 2014. Retrieved 18 January 2015. ^ Blue Ribbon Nominees 2013. IMDb. 16 January 2014. Archived from the original on 7 July 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2014. ^ Ma, Kevin (21 January 2014. Great Passage, Pecoross top Mainichi Award. Archived from the original on 3 August 2014. Retrieved 21 January 2014. ^ Princess Kaguya Wins at 68th Mainichi Film Awards. 22 January 2014. Retrieved 22 January 2020. ^ APSA Nominees 2014. Archived from the original on 30 November 2014. Retrieved 8 October 2014. ^ Wind Rises, Madoka, Lupin vs. Conan, Harlock, Kaguya Earn Japan Academy Prize Nods. Archived from the original on 30 January 2014. Retrieved 16 January 2014. ^ Kinema Junpo Nominees 2014. Archived from the original on 3 July 2015. Retrieved 8 October 2014. ^ Palmarès et nominations du Festival de Cannes. Allo Ciné (in French. Archived from the original on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 8 December 2014. ^ Isao Takahata's 'The Tale of Princess Kaguya' Takes Top Prize at Fantastic Fest. 23 September 2014. Retrieved 2 October 2014. ^ Anima't. Retrieved 9 December 2014. ^ Mill Valley Fest nominees 2014. Archived from the original on 2 January 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2014. ^ Oslo Film Festival nominees 2014. Archived from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 7 December 2014. ^ Davis, Clayton (7 December 2014. Boston Society of Film Critics Winners – Boyhood Wins Big. Awards Circuit. Archived from the original on 7 April 2015. Retrieved 8 December 2014. ^ Davis, Clayton (7 December 2014. Los Angeles Film Critics Association Winners – Boyhood Pulls a Sunday Sweep. Retrieved 8 December 2014. ^ And The Winners Are. Chicago Film Critics Association. 15 December 2014. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 16 December 2014. ^ 2014 San Francisco Film Critics Nominations. San Francisco Film Critics Circle. 14 December 2014. Archived from the original on 14 December 2014. Retrieved 14 December 2014. ^ And The Winners Are. Toronto Film Critics Association. Archived from the original on 16 December 2014. Retrieved 16 December 2014. ^ Online Film Critics Society Awards nominations. OFCS. 7 December 2014. Archived from the original on 16 March 2015. Retrieved 9 December 2014. ^ The 87th Academy Awards: Winners & Nominees. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Archived from the original on 23 February 2015. Retrieved 6 March 2015. ^ 42nd Annual Nominees. Annie Award. Retrieved 1 December 2014. ^ Nugent, John. "Jameson Empire Awards 2016: Star Wars and Mad Max lead the nominations. Empire. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2016. ^ Rebecca Lewis for. "Mad Max: Fury Road leads the pack at the 2016 Jameson Empire Awards. Metro. Archived from the original on 27 January 2017. Retrieved 15 March 2016. External links [ edit] Official website (in Japanese) United States and Canada official webpage at GKIDS The Tale of the Princess Kaguya at Anime News Network 's encyclopedia The Tale of the Princess Kaguya at The Big Cartoon DataBase The Tale of the Princess Kaguya on IMDb The Tale of the Princess Kaguya at Metacritic The Tale of the Princess Kaguya at Box Office Mojo The Tale of the Princess Kaguya at Rotten Tomatoes.

His goodbye peice my heart is breaking it was my dream to work with him to help continue his legacy he is awe inspiring magical and artistically genius love the messages he puts in his movies. Isao Takahata has long been overshadowed by longtime colleague and Studio Ghibli cofounder Hayao Miyazaki. The younger man (Takahata is 78, Miyazaki 72) has had more and bigger hits, including his latest, the World War II-themed “Kaze Tachinu (The Wind Rises) ” while Takahatas last feature animation, the 1999 family comedy “Hohokekyo Tonari no Yamada-kun (My Neighbors the Yamadas) ” was a rare Ghibli box-office disappointment. And yet Takahata is every bit the anime master that Miyazaki has been widely proclaimed to be, if one with a different style and concerns. His Ghilbi films tend to be more realistic than Miyazakis, beginning with 1988s “Hotaru no Haka (Grave of the Fireflies) ” an unsparing drama about children struggling to survive in the destruction and chaos that enveloped Japan toward the end of WWII. It is the most emotionally devastating Japanese film I have ever seen, while being free of the cloying sentimentality that is a prerequisite for commercial tearjerkers here. So Takahatas latest and quite possibly last film, “Kaguya-hime no Monogatari (The Tale of Princess Kaguya) ” might seem to be a departure, since it is based on the oldest-known Japanese folk tale, which dates to the 10th century. Also, its gestation, eight years by the count of producer Yoshiaki Nishimura, was long even by Ghilbis relaxed standards, with Takahatas reluctance to commit being one factor, production delays another. But far from an uncomfortable fit or a labored effort, “Princess Kaguya” has the feel of a true Takahata film, from its unshrinking emotional fidelity to its sudden, exhilarating leaps into fantasy. Kaguya-hime no Monogatari (The Tale of Princess Kaguya) Rating 4. 5 out of 5 out of 5 Director Isao Takahata Run Time 137 minutes Language Japanese Opens Opens Nov. 23, 2013 The animation, with its combination of bold, dynamic strokes and delicate, lightly brushed colors, may initially look underdone compared with other Ghibli productions, with their lush backdrops and fine detailing, but as the story progressed, I found this more impressionistic style somehow suggestive of the storys origin in the most ancient of tales — and our common desires, fears and dreams. That tale is known to every Japanese, if not to the outside world, though its motifs are also found in Western fairy tales (“Thumbelina, ” “King Thrushbeard”. It begins with an old bamboo cutter, Okina (voiced by Takeo Chii) happening upon a strangely glowing bamboo in the forest and finding inside a tiny, perfectly formed girl (Aki Asakura. He takes her, cradled in his palms, to his wife Ouna (Nobuko Miyamoto) but the little creature soon morphs into a baby that the flummoxed couple decides to raise. The strangeness continues as the baby grows far faster than normal (in one brilliant, spooky sequence she quickly progresses from flailing limbs to a hesitant first step) while taking a laughing delight in the world around her. Okina finds more treasures in the bamboo, including gold nuggets and kimono meant for a princess — that is, for his pretty adopted daughter, who is called Takenoko (Bamboo) and is obviously destined for bigger and better things. Takenoko, however, is happy with the humble places and common people she knows, especially the leader of the neighborhood kids, the rugged, pure-hearted Sutemaru (Kengo Kora. Instead, her newly rich parents install her in a mansion, surround her with servants and have her trained in the ways of the aristocracy, from playing the koto to painting her teeth black. (The former she masters, the latter she indignantly rejects. This beautiful, accomplished, fully grown girl, now called Kaguya-hime (Princess Kaguya) attracts five well-born, ridiculously self-important suitors, but she rejects them all, even when they make seemingly miraculous efforts to meet her absurd demands. Finally the emperor, who is young, handsome and the most arrogant of all, tries to win her hand, but she spurns him as well — and reveals that she is from the moon and must soon return to the land of her birth. This is all pretty much from the folk tale, which raises the question of what, beyond their way of telling it, Takahata and his collaborators have brought to it. The films tag line, “A princess crime and punishment, ” offers a clue, while Takahata himself has said he wanted to explore what “crime” Princess Kaguya might have committed, since the original story is silent on that point. His exploration, though, has little to do with plot, everything to do with his heroines emotional and spiritual journey — and the way it ends. Not to enter spoiler territory, but the climax is a haunting, wrenching evocation of mono no aware — or as it is literally translated, the pathos of things. The basis of Japanese aesthetics since time immemorial, mono no aware is hard to define, but “The Tale of Princess Kaguya” brilliantly illuminates it with images of life at its transient loveliest, of parting in its terrible finality. There is a deep wisdom in this film, but a deep sadness too. If it is Takahatas farewell, its one that will have a long echo, just like his 1, 000-year-old source. Fun fact: Hayao Miyazaki collaborator Joe Hisaishi supplied the soundtrack, his first-ever for a Takahata film. The theme song, “Inochi no Kioku (Memory of Life) ” is sung by Kazumi Nikaido.

Kaguya hime no monogatari trailer. Title: Kaguya-hime no Monogatari English: The Tale of the Princess Kaguya Synonyms: Kaguyahime no Monogatari, Princess Kaguya Story Japanese: かぐや姫の物語 Type: Movie Total: 1 Status: Completed Aired: Nov 23, 2013 Genres: Fantasy, Historical Duration: 2 hr. 17 min. Rating: G - All Ages Summary: Deep in the countryside, a man named Okina works as a bamboo cutter in a forest, chopping away at the hollow plants day after day. One day, he discovers a small baby inside a glowing shoot. He immediately takes her home, convinced that she is a princess sent to Earth as a divine blessing from heaven. Okina and his wife Ouna take it upon themselves to raise the infant as their own, watching over her as she quickly grows into an energetic young girl. Given the name Kaguya, she fits right in with the village she has come to call home, going on adventures with the other children and enjoying what youth has to offer. But when Okina finds a large fortune of gold and treasure in the forest, Kaguya's life is completely changed. Believing this to be yet another gift from heaven, he takes it upon himself to turn his daughter into a real princess using the wealth he has just obtained, relocating the family to a mansion in the capital. As she leaves her friends behind to enter into an unwanted life of royalty, Kaguya's origins and purpose slowly come to light. [Written by MAL Rewrite] Videos.

 

 

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