Escaflowne (film)
Escaflowne | |
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The original Region 2 DVD cover, released in Japan by Bandai Visual on April 25, 2001.
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Directed by | Kazuki Akane |
Produced by | Masahiko Minami Minoru Takanashi Masuo Ueda Toyoyuki Yokohama |
Written by | Kazuki Akane Ryota Yamaguchi |
Starring | Maaya Sakamoto Tomokazu Seki Jōji Nakata Mayumi Iizuka Minami Takayama Kōji Tsujitani Shinichirô Miki Ikue Ootani Kappei Yamaguchi |
Music by | Yoko Kanno Hajime Mizoguchi Inon Zur |
Cinematography | Kazunori Okeda |
Production
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Distributed by | Victor Entertainment (Japan) Funimation Entertainment (US) |
Release dates
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Running time
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98 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | $94,060[1] |
Escaflowne (Japanese: エスカフローネ Hepburn: Esukafurōne?), also released under the title Escaflowne: A Girl in Gaea, is a 2000 anime fantasy film produced by Sunrise and animated by studio Bones. Directed by Kazuki Akane, the film is a re-telling of the 26-episode anime television series The Vision of Escaflowne. While the plot of the film has some similar elements to the original television series, the characters differ in varying degrees from the television counterparts, with many completely redesigned and bearing little resemblance to the originals. The world of Gaea has a more Asian design than the heavily European influenced television series.[2]
The film was licensed for Region 1 release by Bandai Entertainment, which gave the film a theatrical release on January 25, 2002. A soundtrack and two drama CDs have also been released in Japan by Victor Entertainment in relation to the series.
Plot
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Hitomi Kanzaki is plagued by sleepiness and experiences very unusual and strange dreams. She is depressed and wants nothing more than to disappear. After leaving her only friend, she is suddenly transported, while inside the Dragon Armour, to a new and mysterious world, Gaea. Once there she is declared the "Winged Goddess", but is confused and can't understand anything. After a while she discovers there is a battle for the Black Dragons dynasty between Prince Van and his brother Lord Folken. A battle in which she is called to play an important role.
Voice cast
- Maaya Sakamoto as Hitomi Kanzaki
- Kelly Sheridan as English dub voice of Hitomi
- Tomokazu Seki as Van
- Kirby Morrow as English dub voice of Van
- Jōji Nakata as Folken
- Paul Dobson as English dub voice of Folken
- Mayumi Iizuka as Yukari / Sora
- Willow Johnson as English dub voice of Yukari
- Sylvia Zaradic as English dub voice of Sora
- Minami Takayama as Dilandau
- Andrew Francis as English dub voice of Dilandau
- Kōji Tsujitani as Jajuka
- Scott McNeil as English dub voice of Jajuka
- Shinichirô Miki as Allen
- Brian Drummond as English dub voice of Allen
- Ikue Ōtani as Merle
- Jocelyn Loewen as English dub voice of Merle
- Kappei Yamaguchi as Shesta
- Trevor Devall as English dub voice of Shesta
- Jūrōta Kosugi as Dryden
- Michael Dobson as English dub voice of Dryden
- Takashi Matsuyama as Nukushi
- Brian Dobson as English dub voice of Nukushi
- Aki Takeda as Millerna
- Venus Terzo as English dub voice of Millerna
- Tōru Ōkawa as Gaddes
- Ward Perry as English dub voice of Gaddes
Production
Escaflowne varies greatly from the original The Vision of Escaflowne series. With character re-designs by Nobuteru Yūki, the film focuses on the relationship between Van and Hitomi and their personal issues. The characters themselves are also given different personalities, with the film Hitomi changing from a cheerful girl in love to a depressed, suicidal schoolgirl who is suffering from self-induced feelings of loneliness and alienation.[3] Van is also depicted as being more lonely and emotionally reserved, as well as being far more aggressive and willing to slay any perceived enemies than his more pacifistic series counterpart.[citation needed]
Although the Vision of Escaflowne series had been produced by Sunrise, the animation for the film was handled primarily by studio Bones, a company founded by a number of ex-Sunrise staff. It was the first Bones feature film production. Studio co-founder Hiroshi Ōsaka and character designer Nobuteru Yūki split the animation director duties, with Ōsaka heading up production at Bones. Some of the film's action sequences were assigned to the studio's animators as talent showcases, notably including Yutaka Nakamura (who animated nearly a minute and a half of the opening sword fight without assistance).
The soundtrack was, as with the Vision of Escaflowne series, composed mostly by Yoko Kanno in collaboration with Hajime Mizoguchi.
Release
The first European presentation was on January 19, 2001, during the Future Film Festival in Bologna (Italy).[citation needed] The North American theatrical premiere was on January 25, 2002, in select cities, including Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Dallas, Chicago, and Vancouver.[citation needed] The North American television premiere was September 10, 2005, on the Cartoon Network programming block Adult Swim, after airing on [adult swim] on demand.[citation needed]
Home media
Bandai Visual released the film to DVD in a two-disc limited edition set on April 25, 2001. Packed in a limited edition art box, the release included a 36-page booklet on history of the film, as well as on-disc interviews with staff and cast and the theatrical trailers and television commercials.[4] The film was released to Blu-ray disc on January 28, 2008.[5]
Formerly licensed by Bandai Entertainment, Escaflowne was first released to Region 1 DVD on July 23, 2002, in "Standard" and "Ultimate" editions. The Ultimate Edition included premium packaging, the CD soundtrack, an exclusive Maaya Sakamoto music video, interviews from the theatrical premiere events, and interviews with the staff and cast. On September 13, 2005, the film was re-released as part of Bandai's "Anime Legends" line, including many of the extras from the Ultimate Edition, including the CD soundtrack and interviews. The film was given another re-release on February 6, 2007 under Bandai's "Anime Movie Classics" label. Unlike the "Anime Legends" release, this version uses the same cover art and CD as the original standard DVD release. Bandai Entertainment also included the Ultimate Edition release of the movie in its 2004 "Perfect Collection" DVD set of the original Vision of Escaflowne anime series.[6] Bandai released a Blu-ray version of the film on October 20, 2009.[7] At Otakon 2013, Funimation Entertainment had announced that they have rescued both The Vision of Escaflowne and the movie and will be re-released in 2015.[8]
- Soundtrack
The Escaflowne OST was released on July 5, 2000 and contains twenty-six tracks, including the movie's full opening and ending themes.[5][9] Yoko Kanno and Hajime Mizoguchi composed and produced the movie's musical themes and backgrounds. Vocal performers include Maaya Sakamoto, Shanti Snyder, Midori, Children of Adom — Vocals and the Warsaw Chorus.
In North America, the soundtrack was released with the Ultimate Edition Region 1 DVD release on July 23, 2002 and with the "Anime Legends" re-release on September 13, 2005. The CD has not, however, been given an individual release.
- Drama CDs
Victor Entertainment released two drama CDs: Escaflowne Prologue 1: Earth and Escaflowne Prologue 2: Gaea were both released on October 21, 2000 and originally broadcast as part of the Bunka Hoso radio show.[5][10][11] Both drama CDs are out-of-print in Japan.
References
- ↑ Escaflowne at Box Office Mojo
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External links
- 2000 films
- Japanese-language films
- Film articles using image size parameter
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles using small message boxes
- Articles with unsourced statements from February 2008
- 2000 anime films
- 2000s fantasy films
- Animated fantasy films
- Bandai Entertainment anime titles
- Fantasy adventure films
- Fantasy anime and manga
- Animated films based on animated series
- Funimation Entertainment
- Mecha anime and manga
- Japanese fantasy films
- Japanese films
- Science fiction action films
- The Vision of Escaflowne