Review of The Girl Who Leapt Through Time

Sarah

Staff
AUKN Staff
<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/2008-11-22girl who leapt through time.jpg">

<b>Review of The Girl Who Leapt Through Time by Sarah</b>

At one time or another in their lives, everyone has probably made the fervent wish, &lsquo;If only I could turn the clock back and do things differently&hellip;&rsquo; Makoto Konno &ndash; an ordinary high school girl &ndash; finds herself in exactly that situation when she suddenly acquires the ability to leap back through time. And her actions set in motion an extraordinary chain of events on what began as yet another ordinary school day: oversleeping; an errand to run for her mother after school; a test; practising baseball with her friends Kousuke and Chiaki&hellip;&nbsp;<br>
&lsquo;Time waits for no one,&rsquo; the enigmatic message Makoto notices chalked on the science lab blackboard just before she undergoes her life-changing experience, will return to haunt her. For it&rsquo;s only when chatting with her favourite aunt that Makoto begins to reflect on the possible outcomes of her time-leaping. Changing even one event in the past, however small, has consequences, and those unforeseen consequences may cause her the most unbearable heartache. As things spiral out of control, has she realized too late to prevent a tragedy occurring?&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;<br>
Although it deals with serious philosophical and metaphysical concepts, the film has plenty of light-hearted and amusing moments too. Makoto&rsquo;s first concerns when she understands what an extraordinary ability she has acquired are to leap back in time and get excellent results on her school test! And then there&rsquo;s the matter of saving the pudding which her sister Miyuki snaffled earlier&hellip;<br>
But as the mystery of why &ndash; and how &ndash;&nbsp; Makoto has suddenly acquired this extraordinary ability begins to be revealed, all manner of unforeseen consequences have already been set in motion. The answer to the mystery comes from an unexpected source and suddenly lifts the story into a wider dimension as she encounters another time traveller with a very personal and poignant mission.<br>
Although Makoto makes mistakes, it&rsquo;s impossible not to be rooting for her by the end of the film. And even though her leaps take her back in time, the film shows her growing in maturity, going forward into adulthood, beginning to make decisions about what she wants to do in life and who she wants to be.&nbsp;<br>
For a film about the nature of time and how it affects our lives, the timing of &lsquo;The Girl Who Leapt Through Time&rsquo; is pretty near pitch-perfect. Each little incident and plot revelation occurs at just the right moment, increasing the tension to an almost unbearable level. Based on a novel by Yasataka Tsutsui from 1965 (which has already been made into several live action versions) &lsquo;The Girl Who Leapt Through Time&rsquo; (&lsquo;Toki wa Kakeru Shoujo&rsquo;) is in fact, something of a sequel and has already won several international awards for director Mamoru Hosoda (who came from, I understand, Studio Ghibli) and his talented team.<br>
Visually, it&rsquo;s a treat, from the depictions of the bustling everyday street scenes of Makoto&rsquo;s home town to the breath-taking moments when Makoto makes her time-leaps. The quality of light that imbues each scene only adds to the realistic atmosphere, showing the changing times of day along the riverside as well as glorious cloudscapes. The atmosphere of high school in summertime is very convincingly evoked; you can almost smell the chalk dust and the chemical reek of the science labs. The character designs by Yoshiyuki Sadamoto (&lsquo;Neon Genesis Evangelion&rsquo; and &lsquo;FLCL&rsquo;) are distinctive and likeable, without being too detailed or realistic &ndash; a genuine strength, I think, in anime design.&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>
Understated yet deceptively simple, the music score by Kiyoshi Yushida is just right too, heightening moments of tension or emotion: strains of Bach float through school as a student practises the piano and recur when the wheels of time are set in motion. Less is definitely more here; if only other directors could use music so sparingly yet so effectively (i.e. Not All The Time).&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>
Thankfully, for the English dub, Bandai used the excellent Ocean Studios &ndash; and &ndash; even though I&rsquo;m unable to compare the dub cast with the Japanese originals (I should mention here that the review disc I watched contained just the English dub, with no original Japanese version or subtitles) all the main actors give sympathetic performances. Newcomer to anime Emily Hirst, in particular, captures Makoto&rsquo;s character perfectly. Chiaki, played by Andrew Francis (Dilandau in Escaflowne) and Kousuke, played by Alex Zahara (Lockon Stratos in upcoming &lsquo;Gundam 00&rsquo;) are also very convincing as Makoto&rsquo;s two closest school friends.&nbsp;
&nbsp;
<strong>In Summary</strong>
A moving, involving film that tackles a serious science fictional theme lightly yet utterly compellingly, and brings it to life with exquisite animation.
One not to miss!<br>
<b>Final score: 10 out of 10</b>

<b>Additional screencaps</b>

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2008-11-22Girl Who a.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2008-11-22Girl who bb.jpg">

<img src="http://www.animeuknews.net/img/uploaded/screens/2008-11-22Girl who d.jpg">
 
Oh i have heard about this, it does look like something quite spectacular

Oh lol that last frame you posted the part where it looks like she's about to head first into a train, (think i saw it in a AMV)
 
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This one is the DVD release of the year, seriously. I can't believe it's Hosoda's first film as director, either. The time-leaping never muddles the story and the comic timing is spot-on.

I remember being fortunate enough to see this at the Anime All-Nighter last May, and everyone in the audience was enthralled from start to finish. Get it on your christmas lists, folks! ^_^
 
Martin said:
This one is the DVD release of the year, seriously. I can't believe it's Hosoda's first film as director, either. The time-leaping never muddles the story and the comic timing is spot-on.

I remember being fortunate enough to see this at the Anime All-Nighter last May, and everyone in the audience was enthralled from start to finish. Get it on your christmas lists, folks! ^_^

Done and done! It sounds great.
 
I was one lucky guy to be able to see this in the big screen at the anime festval at the BFI. This movie is simply amazing and deserves every praise possible. I believe I didn't rate this movie higher, because I had to choose between rating this or 5cm per second ten out of ten and I liked 5cm more.
 
I also got to see this at the BFI (should have looked for you Chaos!) and it is a spectacular film.

5cm/sec was good, The girl who leapt through time was an order of magnitude better. I hope there is more to come like this.
 
I saw this a few weeks ago; It was spectacular.

The twist at the end was quite weird, yet strangely pleasing (I was a little upset, but after a while of thinking about it I decided I was happy that he was going to meet her again in the near future!)

Chijaki(?) was definitely my favorite character! He was pretty awesome, and being from the future and being a timetraveler makes him even more awesome!!!
 
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Project-2501 said:
I also got to see this at the BFI (should have looked for you Chaos!) and it is a spectacular film.

5cm/sec was good, The girl who leapt through time was an order of magnitude better. I hope there is more to come like this.
I thought it was the other way around. That must be the melodramatic south american side of me. I knew you were there, I actually saw your post later, too bad we couldn't arrange a meetup. I remember I was itching to speak about it to someone right after both movies =)
 
I saw this film on 35mm at the ICA earlier in the year, just to note that the A/V quality of those screenshots (i.e the DVD release) is just dreadful. I can't wait until the Blu-ray comes out!
 
The DVD doesn't look that bad, you're just a fussy bugger. Screenshots are what they are but when the pictures are moving it's **** hard to tell much difference.

I've been looking forward to this DVD being released for a long time but I canceled my preorder so I could get Persepolis. Might have to dip into my savings and see if I can afford it when it is released.
 
I watched this quite awhile back on my PC. I remember thinking it was a very good film, one of the best of an over-rated lot of anime films I've seen, but I still ended it feeling like it was receiving more praise than it deserved. Maybe I just don't like anime fioms very much?

It's worth owning on DVD. I'll be picking it up at some stage. But Sword of the Stranger is a better film, and I want it much more.

Sy said:
The DVD doesn't look that bad, you're just a fussy bugger. Screenshots are what they are but when the pictures are moving it's **** hard to tell much difference.

What I was thinking. Whenever I see MelonMan's posts about video quality an image of a spoiled brat, who grew up in a house with a 40" screen, enters my mind. DVD quality is fine in the eyes of most people.

Just be happy you don't have to put up with "awful" video quality and an annoying slight case of doube vision.
 
Also, when you take a screengrab, you wind up with the compressions artefacts and posterizing of your software thrown into the mix. It's representative, but not exactly the same as the image that you will see on your TV.

I use PowerDVD, which screengrabs in Bitmap format. If I want to upload to a site, I can either put the whole thing up, 2 Meg of it, or I convert to JPG, which will be abou 75-100 k.

Those of us on metered Internet will go for Option B.
 
I wanted this on blu-ray too but eventually decided I didn't care enough and ordered the DVD. Hopefully it will eventually arrive :roll:

Never seen it before but I can tell from miles away that I'll love it. The only movies I tend to enjoy are very quirky (or by Satoshi Kon) but TGWLTT looks just right.

On the videophile discussion I have very sensitive vision (I can't actually watch plasma TVs or projectors because it messes my head up being able to see the colours refreshing constantly) and do find DVDs tend to look a bit rubbish sometimes - having said that I often overlook it as a fan of retro and/or low budget shows. This one doesn't look too bad from the shots though, and I think it will be fine on my main setup. PC applications do show up the flaws a lot more than watching on a TV.

R
 
I read something about DVDs automatically being upscaled to the resolution of the monitor when played on a PC. I'm guessing that's true since I always see lots more grain on dark colours when watching a DVD on my PC.
 
Aion said:
I read something about DVDs automatically being upscaled to the resolution of the monitor when played on a PC. I'm guessing that's true since I always see lots more grain on dark colours when watching a DVD on my PC.

I also turn on very aggressive software deinterlacing on my PC (which my TV setup doesn't have a problem with to begin with) and it does seem to make the picture a lot muddier on the PC. Probably different between people and their applications. My TV is physically much bigger than my PC screens but handles the scaling so much more gently too - probably due to the closer resolution going by what you heard.

R
 
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