

Mitsuha and Taki have never met, but when the frustrated country girl wishes of a life in the big city, they will forge a connection both unexplainable and unforgettable. In their dreams, the two swap lives, cultures and genders as they learn more about, and grow closer to, each other. What was once a shock becomes a joy-filled double life, but what will happen when they discover the red string of fate tying them together?BONUSPromotional TV special (21 minutes)Theme song by RADWIMPS (English ver.)Filmography of Makoto Shinkai (10 minutes)Promotional videosImage: UHD: 4K Ultra High Definition, Blu-Ray: 1080p, 16:9Audio: Japanese 5.1, English 5.1, English 2.0Subtitles: English Review: Brilliant. - Brilliant. Simply brilliant. Wasn't expecting to like this as much as the other animes by this director as wasn't sure about the storyline from what I'd heard, but it was fantastic. Lots of subtlety, humour, depth and layers of meaning. Superb animation. Want to give it many more stars than 5. Review: Great film, well worth watching - What a lovely story and the Anime was perfect. It was great for me as it was English voiced and had subtitles. Well worth watching.
| ASIN | B0CHMCVVTW |
| Best Sellers Rank | 3,499 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 62 in World Cinema (DVD & Blu-ray) 77 in Anime (DVD & Blu-ray) 1,566 in Blu-ray |
| Country of origin | United Kingdom |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (4,866) |
| Director | Makoto Shinkai |
| Item model number | ANI0930 |
| Language | Japanese |
| Media Format | 4K |
| Number of discs | 2 |
| Package Dimensions | 17 x 13.6 x 1.7 cm; 94 g |
| Release date | 9 Oct. 2023 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 52 minutes |
| Studio | Anime Ltd |
B**O
Brilliant.
Brilliant. Simply brilliant. Wasn't expecting to like this as much as the other animes by this director as wasn't sure about the storyline from what I'd heard, but it was fantastic. Lots of subtlety, humour, depth and layers of meaning. Superb animation. Want to give it many more stars than 5.
B**P
Great film, well worth watching
What a lovely story and the Anime was perfect. It was great for me as it was English voiced and had subtitles. Well worth watching.
M**Y
Brilliant, Lovely, Heartwarming, friendship & love, simply pure
Brilliant film, saw last year when it was in selected cinemas in the uk Love it Pre-ordered ages ago and received 2 days before official amazon release It’s an anime so before watching I recommend checking out the set up options, there’s 3: -English with English songs -English with Japanese songs -Japanese with English subtitles If you’re into subs, then watch the subtitled version If you’re like me and only like English, it recommend the one with Japanese songs as even though you (and I) won’t understand the lyrics, the Japanese song lyrics are just simply more beautiful and fit better Wish I knew this before playing the DVD All in all it’s a real heartwarming film and story about 2 people who’ve never met that (in the context of the film) start randomly body swapping that leads them to create better friendships with their friends and they will stop at nothing, even with impossible odds stacked against them to find each other! Again it’s a beautiful and lovely story that just melts your heart and I would recommend to anyone
M**B
A really great film
I bought this based on the other reviews, and don't think I can add anything useful about the details of the film. It is quite a complex storyline and it works best if you have some surprises - but I can confirm that this is a brilliant film. I watched it with my wife, who was prepared to be unimpressed by my love of Japanese animation, but we both ended up being swept into the story and enjoying it immensely. The animation is quite as usual in anime films, with beautiful landscapes and great personality but perhaps less good animation of the characters; this is not in any way a problem though. In my view, this is not in the class of films like 'Spirited Away', but at the top of the second league of anime films - highly entertaining, well worth a second viewing, and just delightful in every way.
R**R
A visually awesome animation with a bit of a flaw in the plot.
This film came highly recommended by my wife and daughter who are Japanese. They were happy to watch it again, which is unusual, as they don’t normally like to watch films twice. We watched it with the Japanese sound track and English subtitles. (I understand Japanese pretty well.) The main and support characters are all well done. The two MCs are attractive and believable as high school students. The animation quality is excellent. Of particular note, the way they act girlish or boyish in contrast to their body’s physical gender, when their minds are swapped into each other’s bodies. The scenery and general animation is also very good and there are some superb lighting effects. This is somewhat let down by a few very obvious digital animation scenes. I’ve got nothing against digital animation but, if it isn’t well filtered, it has a visual quality which is completely different to traditional cel animation. The contrast in this film was quite jarring. My worse complaint is the way the plot flies off into a badly explained time-jumping, parallel universe kind of situation after the comet hits the rural town where the girl MC lives. There’s some sort of plot in which the boy MC forgets about her, lives on for another three years, then goes back and resets the original disaster by some kind of dream quest. He then forgets about her again. The girl and her friends and family are saved, but it takes longer still until she turns up in Tokyo and finally the two MCs get together in the ending we all hoped for from the start. Maybe it’s me, but I just couldn’t figure out how all this worked in terms of timelines and so on, and it seemed like it hadn’t been thought through. That said, it’s still a really good animation and I certainly didn’t regret the time viewing it, and I will view it again to see if it makes more sense a second time.
A**E
Meine Bewertung bezieht sich ausschließlich auf den Kauf durch "Amazon Warehouse Deals" für dieses Steelbook. Achtet bitte unbedingt darauf, das ihr das Steelbook nicht dadurch kauft, denn ich bekam meines in einem dünnen Pappumschlag und was soll ich sagen, es war übersät mit Kratzern und für maximalen Spaß hat Amazon einen fetten sehr schwer zu lösenden (natürlich mit massig Rückständen) Aufkleber auf die Front geklebt, in der Größe von mindestens 3 Finger breit. Das Teil ging natürlich gleich wieder Retoure, da ich den Aufkleber im Leben nie hätte vollständig entfernen können udn die Kratzer gaben dem Ding dann dne Rest, also paßt gut auf, bevor ihr dieses vermeintliche Schnäppchen machen wollt.
F**D
As Hayao Miyazaki has gotten whiter of hair and older in age, the quest to find the next Miyazaki has steadily increased with mixed results for any anime directors so described. On the one hand to be publicly described as the “Next Miyazaki” is a great honor; on the other hand, it is also a stupefying burden, worst of all largely decided more by mere opinions than anything one can measure,.. with a single exception. The latest “Next Miyazaki”, Makoto Shinkai, earned his designation the old-fashioned way: by writing and directing the highest-grossing anime film of all time in 2016, actually beating the legendary Miyazaki himself for the first time in a long time, with “Your Name”. Though knowledge of Shinto and Japanese can make some things a good deal clearer, it was Shinkai’s genius to tell a story that doesn’t really require said knowledge; Americans and other foreigners should have no trouble grasping the main premises. After some decidedly interesting opening scenes (that will be more fully revealed when repeated and expanded later), “Your Name” opens with what seems to be Yet Another version of Freaky Friday : a boy living in Tokyo, Taki, and a girl living in the boondocks, Mitsuha, mysteriously find themselves switching bodies for a day, two or three times a week, and after realizing this, set some ground rules and leave each other notes on their cell phones and notebooks, sometimes even writing on each other’s skin, in order to cope with this mysterious problem. They also use their talents to help each other out: Mitsuha builds Taki’s potential relationship with the college student he has a crush on, Taki boosts Mitsuha’s popularity, and everything proceeds along very nicely. But there is a dark side looming, and the indicators can be seen more clearly upon rewatching. In a twist reminiscent of the first season-ending of Steins;Gate a truly horrific fate is coming, and soon Taki and Mitsuha are desperately trying to save over 500 lives,... including one of their own. The price for doing so is high, and the movie fades to what appears to be a sad end as the price for the miracle,... only to end with another miracle. “Your Name” was such a box office smash that it suddenly focused a huge amount of attention on the previously barely known Makoto Shinkai, and most people were astonished to learn that far from being his first film, “Your Name” was actually his eleventh, the seventh made available over here, though none before were anywhere close to being as successful. (“Your Name” earned over fifty times more than anything else he ever did.) And while none of these previous films were quite as good as “Your Name”, there was clearly genius at work in all of them, and they are certainly worth viewing. One thing that becomes clear upon doing so is that Makoto Shinkai is that rare thing, a short story writer rather than a novel writer, and that he has a tendency to cut too much that needs to be corrected, proven by the fact that he has later written 6 mangas and worked on 3 light novels based upon his animes and every single one of them is an improvement, ESPECIALLY in the additional scenes and much clearer endings. Anyway here is what you can find and see so far: She and Her Cat (1999) a short about a cat and his lady owner that made Makoto Shinkai a professional and got him a contract from CoMix Wave Films, available in three different versions (5, 3, and 1.5 minutes) on the same DVD with noticeable differences between the three. Voices of a Distant Star (2002) his breakthrough 25 minutes long CoMix Wave short about two young school children falling in love who are separated by an alien invasion; she is sent off to fight it, while he remains at home awaiting her cell phone messages, where the wait for light-speed transmission grows from 6 months, to a year, to 8 years. The movie ends with him after all this time preparing to enter the military and (hopefully) be reunited with her. It is another stunningly beautiful short story, showing bits and pieces of their lives. The Place Promised in our Early Days (2004) his first feature-length, 90 minutes long, the story of two middle school best friends who share a dream and love for a girl. The dream in this altered reality in which Japan has been divided between Hokkaido and the rest, between the USSR and the USA, is to build and fly a plane to a mysterious, impossibly tall tower on the island of Hokkaido, allegedly used by the Soviets for the exploration of alternate realities; the girl is fellow student Sayuri Sawatari that they are both in love with. However, her disappearance fractures their friendship and stops work on their plane, but three years later they are reunited by circumstances leading towards a world war. 5 Centimeters per Second (2007) his second feature, though of only 63 minutes in length, and arguably the original version of the love story used in "Your Name", though this one had an extremely sad ending instead of the extremely happy ending in "Your Name". Interestingly, as in so many other cases, Mr. Shinkai wrote a happier ending to the much-expanded manga version. Children Who Chase Lost Voices (2011) his third feature, 116 minutes long, and IMHO Makoto Shinkai’s biggest failure yet (I call it “Viewers Who Chase Lost Endings” for a reason), an attempt by a short story writer to do a Miyazaki style film, an epic adventure into a Hollow World about which it reveals almost nothing. Garden of Words (2013) his fourth feature (and most successful before “Your Name”) and at only 46 minutes in length, yet another short story about a couple of misfits, divided by age, but nevertheless drawn together by circumstances and weather until they are driven apart but with hope for the future. It is also notable for being much improved in the later written manga and as-yet-unseen light novel by Makoto Shinkai. Note: It is not uncommon for animators to briefly insert characters from previous films into later films (Miyazaki did this a lot) without necessarily needing to logically be considered connected to the originals, but there is a huge difference between something like that and the character of Yukari Yukino, a small character in “Your Name” who was also one of the two main characters in “Garden of Words”, with the same look, the same name, the same profession (literature teacher), and was portrayed by the same voice actress, Kana Hanazawa. What is significant about this, though unstated, is the presumed character arc of Yukari, who has gone from being saved by Takao Akizuki from being all but immobilized in her life and her career in “Garden of Words” to surviving a comet strike in “Your Name” thanks to the frantic efforts of Taki and Mitsuha. I wonder what she did and what she became as a result of it all? And I wonder if Makoto Shinkai will ever tell us? Note: The contents of the various versions are a little more complicated than usual so let me explain them. First, the Blu-ray of the movie contains a couple of special features, subtitled specials about the movie, not present on the DVD. Second, the three versions are set up like this: the DVD version contains only the DVD, the Blu-ray version contains both the Blu-ray and the DVD, and the Limited Edition version contains the Blu-ray, the DVD, and a couple of soundtrack CD’s: one containing all the BGM plus the 4 songs in English, and another containing only the 4 songs in Japanese.
N**A
世界観、画像、ストーリー、飽きることなく一気に見られる素敵な作品 モデルとされている地方、聖地巡りしてみたいですね
L**N
Très très joli coffret par alltheanime, relativement correct niveau prix, et surtout, excellent film de Makoto Shinkai avec cerise sur le gâteau, une magnifique BO des Radwimps. En bref, un beau coffret qui rend honneur à un film tout aussi beau.
C**S
Your Name is a brilliant movie that didn't need to be animated in order for it to be a success. I heard about it through anime circles and because everyone said that it was so brilliant I knew that I had to give it a shot. When I watched it I still wasn't sure exactly what to expect, but what I got was a story about two people who fell into each other's lives, and fell in love while still being faced with an insurmountable barrier keeping them separated. It's a story about being in your everyday life and being disappointed with how your life is going even as someone else might wish with all of their heart to have the boring things that you take for granted in their life. It is a story about the bittersweet feelings of love, and the empty feeling that you sometimes experience while you are waiting to find the person who will fill the hole in your heart. I am not so macho a guy that I can't admit that this movie made my cry. The characters feel real and the emotions, both good and bad, that they feel flood out from the screen and will grab your heart if you let them. The Limited Edition comes in a very nice and solid box with a foil finish. It also comes with a hard-back art-book which consists of a handful of pages of stills from the film, some of the promotional art that you can find on google and a couples of pages of sketches and design stuff. It's your standard limited edition art-book. More importantly, it comes with the two-disk "Bilingual" (English/Japanese) soundtrack by RADWIMPS. If you have already bought the two-disk bilingual soundtrack, then this will not be a selling point as the soundtrack here does not appear to have anything that was not available on the soundtrack that you can purchase separately. If you haven't already bought the soundtrack, you may be asking yourself "Is it worth it to spring for the limited edition?". The answer is that it probably isn't worth it if you aren't also interested in the art-book, and premium box. I did some price-hunting for you here, and at the time of this review, buying the standard edition, and the soundtrack itself, would cost you around $50 while the limited edition will cost you $75, so if you want to save yourself some money, or just aren't interested in the premium box and art-book, there are cheaper ways to go than the route that I took. If the shiny thick cardstock box, and artbook sound like they are worth $25 to you, then definitely spend the extra. If you have already purchased the soundtrack, then be aware that you are buying another copy of it when you buy the limited edition. It is a very beautiful soundtrack, and you might decide after thinking about it that it is worth it to have a second copy of it for some reason, but like I said, there doesn't appear to be anything on the soundtrack included in this collection that wasn't on the soundtrack that you could buy as itself.
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