What Is Your Name



What S In A Name Poem

Your Name

This article is about the film. For the novel, see Your Name (novel). For the soundtrack album, see Your Name (album). For the 2010 song by Swedish House Mafia and Pharrell Williams, see One (Swedish House Mafia song).
Your Name.
Japanese theatrical release poster
Japanese君の名は。HepburnKimi no Na wa.LiterallyYour Name. Directed byMakoto ShinkaiProduced by
  • Noritaka Kawaguchi
  • Genki Kawamura
Screenplay byMakoto ShinkaiStarringMusic byRadwimpsCinematographyMakoto ShinkaiEdited byMakoto Shinkai
Productioncompany
Distributed byToho
Release date
  • July 3, 2016 (2016-07-03) (Anime Expo)
  • August 26, 2016 (2016-08-26) (Japan)
Running time
107 minutes[1]CountryJapanLanguageJapaneseBox office
  • ¥25.03 billion (Japan)[2]
  • $359.9 million (worldwide)[3][4]

Your Name. (Japanese: 君の名は。, Hepburn: Kimi no Na wa.) is a 2016 Japanese animated romantic fantasy drama film written and directed by Makoto Shinkai, and produced by CoMix Wave Films. The film was produced by Noritaka Kawaguchi and Genki Kawamura, with music composed by Radwimps. Your Name tells the story about Taki, a high school boy in Tokyo and Mitsuha, a high school girl in a rural town, who suddenly and inexplicably begin to swap bodies. The film stars the voices of Ryunosuke Kamiki, Mone Kamishiraishi, Masami Nagasawa and Etsuko Ichihara. Shinkai's eponymous novel was published a month before the film's premiere.

Your Name was distributed by Toho. It premiered at the Anime Expo 2016 convention in Los Angeles, California on July 3, 2016, and in Japan on August 26, 2016. It was praised for its animation, complex narrative, musical score, and emotional weight. The film was also a major commercial success, with a total gross of $359 million, becoming the highest-grossing anime film and Japanese film of all time, the fourth highest-grossing film of all time in Japan, the eighth highest-grossing traditionally animated film, and the 14th highest-grossing non-English film worldwide. The film won the 49th Sitges Film Festival, the 2016 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards, and the 71st Mainichi Film Awards for Best Animated Feature Film, as well as receiving a nomination for the 40th Japan Academy Prize for the Best Animation of the Year. The film was followed by Weathering With You in 2019, in which the characters of Taki and Mitsuha reappear. An American live-action remake is currently in development.

Plot

A school girl Mitsuha Miyamizu lives in the fictional town of Itomori in Japan's mountainous Hida region. She is bored with the country life, and wishes to be a handsome boy in her next life. She begins to switch bodies intermittently with Taki Tachibana, a high school boy in Tokyo, when they wake up. They communicate by writing messages on paper, their phones, and sometimes on each other's skin. Mitsuha causes Taki to develop a relationship with his coworker Miki, while Taki causes Mitsuha to become popular in school.

One day, Taki, as Mitsuha, accompanies her grandmother and sister to leave the ritual alcohol kuchikamizake, made by Mitsuha, as an offering at the shrine on a mountaintop outside the town. The shrine is believed to represent the body of the village guardian god who rules human experiences and connections. Mitsuha's latest note tells Taki about a comet expected to pass Earth on the day of her town festival.

The next day, Taki wakes up in his body. After an unsuccessful date with Miki, he tries to call Mitsuha but cannot reach her, and the body switching ends. He decides to visit Itomori, but he does not know the town's name, and his memories of it are fading while Mitsuha's messages have disappeared. A restaurant owner in Hida finally recognizes Itomori from Taki's sketch and tells him when the comet unexpectedly split into two, the larger piece kept moving, but the smaller one crashed onto Earth and destroyed the town. Taki finds Mitsuha's name in the records of fatalities and discovers from the date of the disaster their timelines were separated by three years.

Taki goes to the shrine to drink Mitsuha's bottle, hoping to reconnect with her body and warn her of the comet strike. Through a vision, Taki discovers that Mitsuha, having fallen in love with him, had met his past self while trying to meet him personally. He wakes in her body on the morning of the town festival. Mitsuha's grandmother deduces what is going on and she tells him the body-switching is part of the Miyamizu family history as caretakers of the shrine. He convinces Mitsuha's friends, Tessie and Sayaka, to help evacuate the town by cutting the power and broadcasting a false emergency alert, but the plan fails. He realizes that Mitsuha must be in his body at the shrine and goes back to find her.

Mitsuha wakes up in Taki's body at the shrine. When Taki reaches the shrine as the sun sets they sense each other's presence, but are separated by three years. However, when twilight falls,[note 1] they return to their own bodies and meet. They attempt to write each other's names on their hands so they will remember each other, but twilight passes and Mitsuha disappears before she can write hers.

As Mitsuha races back to convince her father about evacuating the town, her memories of Taki start to fade, and finds Taki wrote "I love you" on her hand instead of his name. The comet piece crashes to Earth, destroying the town. Taki wakes up in his own time at the shrine, remembering nothing.

Five years later, Taki has graduated from university and is searching for a job. He senses he is missing something important, and learns that the inhabitants of the town survived by following the mayor's order. One day, Taki and Mitsuha see each other when their trains draw parallel, and are compelled to disembark and search for one another, finally meeting on a staircase. They initially start semi-awkwardly walking away, until Taki uneasily asks Mitsuha if he had met her before, and Mitsuha relievingly replies she felt the same way: their connection reestablishing, they shed tears of happiness, and simultaneously ask for their names.

Voice cast

Character Japanese[5] English[5][6]
Taki Tachibana (立花 瀧, Tachibana Taki) Ryunosuke Kamiki[7] Michael Sinterniklaas
A high school boy in Tokyo. He spends his days with his friends and has a part-time job in an Italian restaurant. He is short-tempered but well meaning and kind, and aspires to become an architect.
Mitsuha Miyamizu (宮水 三葉, Miyamizu Mitsuha) Mone Kamishiraishi[7] Stephanie Sheh
A high school girl who is dissatisfied with her life in town. She has a strained relationship with her father and is embarrassed by his often open displays of control, as well as her part as a miko in rituals for the family shrine, with kuchikamizake, an ancient traditional way of making sake involving chewing rice to intake yeast for fermentation.
Miki Okudera (奥寺 ミキ, Okudera Miki) Masami Nagasawa[8] Laura Post
A university student and one of Taki's friends. She has feelings for Taki, when Mitsuha is in his body. She is more commonly referred to as Ms. Okudera (Okudera-senpai) by colleagues.
Hitoha Miyamizu (宮水 一葉, Miyamizu Hitoha) Etsuko Ichihara[8] Glynis Ellis
The head of the Miyamizu[note 2] family shrine in Itomori[note 3], and the grandmother of Mitsuha and Yotsuha. She is the master of making kumihimo.
Katsuhiko "Tessie" Teshigawara (勅使河原 克彦, Teshigawara Katsuhiko) Ryo Narita Kyle Hebert
One of Mitsuha's friends. He is a construction machinery and equipment expert, due to his father insisting he learn the trade. He is generally referred to as "Tessie".
Sayaka Natori (名取 早耶香, Natori Sayaka) Aoi Yūki Cassandra Morris
One of Mitsuha's friends. She becomes nervous in the broadcast club in high school that vehemently denies her attraction to Tessie.
Tsukasa Fujii (藤井 司, Fujii Tsukasa) Nobunaga Shimazaki Ben Pronsky
One of Taki's friends. He worries about Taki whenever Mitsuha embodies him.
Shinta Takagi (高木 真太, Takagi Shinta) Kaito Ishikawa Ray Chase
One of Taki's friends. He is optimistic.
Yotsuha Miyamizu (宮水 四葉, Miyamizu Yotsuha) Kanon Tani[8] Catie Harvey
Mitsuha's younger sister. She believes Mitsuha is somewhat crazy, but loves her despite the situation. She participates in both traditions.
Toshiki Miyamizu (宮水 俊樹, Miyamizu Toshiki) Masaki Terasoma Scott Williams
The estranged father of Mitsuha and Yotsuha, and Futaba's husband. He used to be a folklorist who came to town for research. He is very strict and jaded from events that occurred in his life. Toshiki became the town's mayor, after abandoning the family shrine.
Futaba Miyamizu (宮水 二葉, Miyamizu Futaba) Sayaka Ohara Michelle Ruff
The late mother of Mitsuha and Yotsuha, and the wife of Toshiki.
Yukari Yukino (雪野 百香里, Yukino Yukari) Kana Hanazawa[9] Katy Vaughn
A literature teacher who says the word, "Kataware-doki" (meaning twilight). She appeared in Shinkai's previous film The Garden of Words.
Mr. Teshigawara (勅使河原, Teshigawara) Chafurin
Tessie's father and rich construction company owner.
Tanaka, Suzuki and Saito (田中, 鈴木 と 斉藤, Tanaka, Suzuki to Saito)
Taki's co-workers, who are jealous with the latter.

Production

In Makoto Shinkai's proposal sent to Toho in September 14, 2014, the film was originally titled Yume to Shiriseba (夢と知りせば, If I Knew It Was a Dream), derived from a passage in a waka, or "Japanese poem", attributed to Ono no Komachi.[10] Its title changed to Kimi no Musubime (きみの結びめ, Your Connection) and Kimi wa Kono Sekai no Hanbun (きみはこの世界のはんぶん, You Are Half of This World) before becoming Kimi no Na Wa.[11]

Inspiration for the story came from works including Shūzō Oshimi's Inside Mari, Ranma ½, the Heian period novel Torikaebaya Monogatari, and Greg Egan's short story The Safe-Deposit Box.[12] Shinkai also cited Interstellar (2014) by Christopher Nolan as an influence.[13]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Film locations of Your Name.

While the town of Itomori, one of the film's settings, is fictional, the film drew inspirations from real-life locations that provided backdrop for the town. Such locations include the city of Hida in Gifu Prefecture and its library, Hida City Library.[14]

The planning of Your Name was done in Toon Boom Storyboard Pro preproduction and storyboarding software.[15][16]

Many locations in Your Name were based on real-life locations. From left to right: Suga-jinja in Shinjuku, Shinano-machi station pedestrian bridge and Yotsuya Station.

Music

Main article: Your Name (album)

Yojiro Noda, the lead vocalist of the Japanese rock band Radwimps, composed the theme music of Your Name. Director Makoto Shinkai requested him to compose its music "in a way that the music will (supplement) the dialogue or monologue of the characters".[17] Your Name features the following songs performed by Radwimps:

  • "Yumetōrō" (夢灯籠, Yumetōrō, lit. "Dream Lantern")
  • "Zenzenzense" (前前前世, Zenzenzense, lit. "Past Past Past Life")[17]
  • "Sparkle" (スパークル, Supākuru)[18]
  • "Nandemonaiya" (なんでもないや, Nandemonaiya, lit. "It's Nothing")[17]

The soundtrack of the film was well received by both audiences and critics alike and is acknowledged as being one of the factors behind its success at the box office.[17] The film's soundtrack was the runner-up in the "Best Soundtrack" category at the 2016 Newtype Anime Awards, while the song "Zenzenzense" was the runner-up in the "Best Theme Song Category".[19]

Release

World map showing countries and regions where the movie was released (green)

The film premiered at the 2016 Anime Expo convention in Los Angeles, California on July 3, 2016, and later was released theatrically in Japan on August 26, 2016. The film was released in 92 countries.[20][21][22] It was released in China by Huaxia Film Distribution on December 2, 2016.[23] In order to qualify for the Academy Awards, the film was released for one week (December 2–8, 2016) in Los Angeles. The film was released in Australian cinemas on limited release on November 24, 2016, by Madman Entertainment in both its original Japanese and an English dub.[24] Madman also released the film in New Zealand on December 1, 2016.[25] The film was also released in the United Kingdom on November 18, 2016, distributed by Anime Limited.[26] The film was released in North American theaters on April 7, 2017, distributed by Funimation.[27]

Home media

Your Name was released in 4K UHD Blu-ray, Blu-ray, and DVD on July 26, 2017, in Japan by Toho Pictures. The release was offered in Regular, Special, and Collector's editions.[28] FUNimation announced on July 1 at Anime Expo 2017 that the film would be released on Blu-ray and DVD by the end of 2017 but did not specify a date.[29] At Otakon 2017, they announced they are releasing the movie in both Standard and Limited Edition Blu-Ray + DVD Combo Packs on November 7, 2017.[30][31]

In its first week, the Blu-ray standard edition sold 202,370 units, Limited First Pressing sold 125,982 units and the special edition sold 94,079 units.[32] The DVD Standard Edition placed first, selling 215,963.[33] Your Name is the first Anime to Place 3 BD Releases in Top 10 for 2 straight weeks.[34] In 2017, the film generated ¥6,532,421,094 ($59,157,621) in media revenue from physical home video, soundtrack and book sales in Japan.[35]

Reception

Box office

Your Name's revenue (red) accounts for 10% of Japan's 2016 box office revenue.[36]
Japan's top five box office movies in 2016 (billion yen):[36]
  Your Name: 23.56
  Shin Godzilla: 8.25
  Zootopia: 7.63
  Finding Dory: 6.83

Your Name became a huge commercial success, especially in Japan,[37] where it grossed ¥23 billion (~US$190 million). The film achieved the second-largest gross for a domestic film in Japan, behind Spirited Away, and the fourth-largest ever, behind Titanic and Frozen.[38] It is the first anime not directed by Hayao Miyazaki to earn more than $100 million (~¥10 billion) at the Japanese box office.[21] It topped the box office in Japan for a record-breaking 12 non-consecutive weekends. It held the number-one position for nine consecutive weekends before being toppled by Death Note: Light Up the New World in the last weekend of October. It returned to the top for another three weeks before finally being dethroned by Hollywood blockbuster Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.[21][39][40]

The success of the film also extended beyond Japan. In China, it became the highest-grossing Japanese film in the world's second-largest movie market on December 17, 2016.[41] It has grossed $81.3 million in China and is the highest-grossing 2D animated film in the country.[42] Its opening screened in over 7,000 theaters. It made an estimated $10.9 million on its opening day from 66,000 screenings and attracting over 2.77 million admissions, the biggest 2D animated opening in the country.[43][44] It also held the record for the highest-grossing non-Hollywood foreign film in China, up until it was surpassed by two Indian films Dangal and Secret Superstar in May 2017 and February 2018 respectively.[45][46]

It is the highest-grossing Japanese film in Thailand, with ฿44.1 million ($1.23 million).[20] As of December 26, the film has grossed US$771,945 in Australia.[47] and US$95,278 in New Zealand.[48] On a December 20 blog post, the Australian distributor Madman stated that the film had made over $1,000,000 AUD in the Australian box office alone before closing its limited release run.[49] The film was number-one on its opening five days in South Korea, with 1.18 million admissions and a gross of $8.2 million,[50] becoming the first Japanese film since Howl's Moving Castle to reach number one in the country.[51]

Critical response

On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 97%, based on 111 reviews, and an average rating of 8.23/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "As beautifully animated as it is emotionally satisfying, Your Name adds another outstanding chapter to writer-director Makoto Shinkai's filmography."[52] On Metacritic, the film has a score 79 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[53]

Mark Schilling of The Japan Times gave the film a rating of 4 out of 5 and praised the film's animation for its "blend of gorgeous, realistic detail and emotionally grounded fantasy".[8] However, he criticized the film's "over-deliver[y]" of "the comedy of adolescent embarrassment and awkwardness" and its ending for being "To the surprise of no one who has ever seen a Japanese seishun eiga (youth drama)".[8]

Reception outside of Japan was also very positive.[37][54] Mark Kermode called the film his ninth favourite film to be released in the United Kingdom in 2016.[55] US reviews were mostly positive. The New York Times described it as "a wistfully lovely Japanese tale",[56] while The Atlantic said it was "a dazzling new work of anime".[57] Conversely, The Boston Globe had a mixed opinion of the film, saying that it was "pretty but too complicated".[58] Mike Toole from Anime News Network listed it as the third-best anime film of all time.[59] John Musker and Ron Clements, directors of the Disney animated films The Great Mouse Detective, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, Hercules, Treasure Planet, The Princess and the Frog, and Moana, praised the film for its beauty and uniqueness.[60]

Despite the praise he received, Shinkai insisted that the film is not as good as it could have been: "There are things we could not do, Masashi Ando [Director of animation] wanted to keep working [on] but had to stop us for lack of money ... For me it's incomplete, unbalanced. The plot is fine but the film is not at all perfect. Two years was not enough."[61]

Accolades

List of awards and nominations
Year Award Category Recipient(s) Result
2016 49th Sitges Film Festival[62] Best Animated Feature Length Film Your Name Won
60th BFI London Film Festival[63] Best Film Nominated
18th Bucheon International Animation Festival Best Animated Feature Special Distinction Prize Won
Best Animated Feature Audiences Prize
29th Tokyo International Film Festival[64] Arigato Award Makoto Shinkai
6th Newtype Anime Awards[19] Best Picture (Film) Your Name
Best Soundtrack Runner-up
Best Theme Song Category ZenZenZense
41st Hochi Film Award Best Picture Your Name Nominated
29th Nikkan Sports Film Award Best Film
Best Director Makoto Shinkai Won
2016 Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards[65] Best Animated Film Your Name
Women Film Critics Circle 2016[66] Best Animated Female Nominated
2017 20th Japan Media Arts Festival[67] Grand Prize of Animation Division Won
44th Annie Awards[68] Best Animated Feature — Independent Nominated
Outstanding Achievement, Directing in an Animated Feature Production Makoto Shinkai
21st Satellite Awards[69] Best Animated or Mixed Media Feature Your Name
71st Mainichi Film Awards Best Animated Film Won
59th Blue Ribbon Awards Best Film Nominated
Best Director Makoto Shinkai
Special Award Your Name Won
Academy Awards[70][71] Best Animated Feature Your Name Shortlist(no official nomination)
40th Japan Academy Prize Excellent Animation of the Year Your Name Won
Animation of the Year Nominated
Director of the Year Makoto Shinkai
Screenplay of the Year Won
Outstanding Achievement in Music Radwimps
36th Anima Festival[72] Audience Award for Best Animated Feature Your Name
11th Seiyu Awards Best Actor Ryunosuke Kamiki
Best Actress Mone Kamishiraishi
Synergy Award Your Name
11th Asia Pacific Screen Awards[73] Best Animated Feature Film Nominated
7th AACTA Awards[74] Best Asian Film
San Francisco Film Critics Circle Awards 2017[75] Best Animated Feature
2018 44th Saturn Awards[76] Best Animated Film
Crunchyroll Anime Awards Best Film Won

Adaptations

Books

Further information: Your Name (novel)

Your Name is a Japanese novel written by Makoto Shinkai. It is a novelization of the animated film of the same name, which was directed by Shinkai. It was published in Japan by Kadokawa on June 18, 2016, a month prior to the film premiere.[77] By September 2016, the novel had sold around 1,029,000 copies.[78] An official visual guide was also released. The novel sold over 1.3 million copies, while the novel and visual guide sold over 2.5 million copies combined.[79]

Live-action film

On September 27, 2017, producer J.J. Abrams and screenwriter Eric Heisserer announced that they were working on a live-action remake of Your Name to be released by Paramount Pictures and Bad Robot Productions, alongside the original film's producers, Toho, who will handle the film's distribution in Japan.[80][81][82][83][84][85] The film is being written by Eric Heisserer, who revealed that the Japanese right holders want it to be made from the western point of view.[86] In February 2019, Marc Webb signed on to direct the remake. The film will be about a young Native American woman living in a rural area and a young man from Chicago who discover they are magically and intermittently swapping bodies.[87]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Kataware-Doki," the word Taki and Mitsuha use, is turned from "kawatare-doki," an old Japanese word meaning twilight. "Kawatare" (彼は誰) literally means "Who is he/she?"; "kataware" also has the same sound as a word meaning one of the couple (片割れ). In old Japan, people believed that supernatural occurrences were possible at twilight.
  2. ^ 宮水, lit. "shrine water"
  3. ^ 糸守, lit. "thread guard"

References

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  54. ^ "Japan body-swap fantasy is China cinema hit". December 19, 2016 – via www.bbc.com.
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