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Gegege no Kitaro (Blu-ray) (Movie) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) Blu-ray Region A

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Gegege no Kitaro (Blu-ray) (Movie) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)

YesAsia Editorial Description

Mizuki Shigeru's beloved manga series Gegege no Kitaro has seen numerous small and big screen adaptations since the 1960s, but this latest 2007 film is without a doubt the most visually stunning effort yet. Directed by Motoki Katsuhide (Drugstore Girl) with a screenplay from Habara Daisuke (Hula Girls), Gegege no Kitaro is set in a delightful world populated by Japanese folklore creatures called yokai, demon spirits with supernatural powers. Yokai come in many shapes and forms and the film brings them to life in a fanciful fusion of CG, animation, and live-action, with everything from cat spirits to walking eyeballs roaming through ancient forests and modern Japan. The special effects were handled by Centro Digital Pictures, whose previous credentials include Kill Bill, Kung Fu Hustle, and Shaolin Soccer. Equally impressive is the cast, with Wentz Eiji of WaT, who proved his acting chops in Captain Tokio, stepping into the title role of Kitaro and Inoue Mao (Hana Yori Dango) playing his human love interest, a new role written especially for the film. They appear alongside an all-star line-up that includes Oizumi Yo, Tanaka Rena (Waiting in the Dark), Nakamura Shido (Be With You), You, and Koyuki (The Last Samurai).

In modern-day Japan, the worlds of the human and the yokai often collide, and usually not in the most pleasant of manners. Half-human and half-yokai, one-eyed Kitaro (Wentz Eiji) lives in Gegege Forest with his bickering friends Nezumi Otoko (Oizumi Yo) and Neko Musume (Tanaka Rena) and his eyeball father, and he dedicates his time to maintaining peace between humans and yokai. When a magical ball of power ends up in the wrong hands, Kitaro must recover it or both worlds could fall into grave danger.

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Technical Information

Product Title: Gegege no Kitaro (Blu-ray) (Movie) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version) 鬼太郎 (Blu-ray) (真人電影版) (英文字幕) (日本版) 鬼太郎 (Blu-ray) (真人电影版) (英文字幕) (日本版) ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 ブルーレイディスク【Blu-ray Disc】 Gegege no Kitaro (Blu-ray) (Movie) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)
Artist Name(s): Tanaka Rena | Nishida Toshiyuki | Muroi Shigeru | Koyuki | Tanonaka Isamu | Inoue Mao | Hashimoto Satoshi | Wentz Eiji | Hazama Kanpei | Tani Kei | Nakamura Shido | Oizumi Yo | Toshishige Tsuyoshi 田中麗奈 | 西田敏行 | 室井滋 | 小雪 | Tanonaka Isamu | 井上真央 | Hashimoto Satoshi | Wentz 瑛士 | 間寬平 | 谷啟 | 中村獅童 | 大泉洋 | 利重剛 田中丽奈 | 西田敏行 | 室井滋 | 小雪 | Tanonaka Isamu | 井上真央 | Hashimoto Satoshi | Wentz 瑛士 | 间宽平 | 谷启 | Nakamura Shido | 大泉洋 | Toshishige Tsuyoshi 田中麗奈 | 西田敏行 | 室井滋 | 小雪 | 田の中勇 | 井上真央 | 橋本さとし | ウエンツ瑛士 | 間寛平 | 谷啓 | 中村獅童 | 大泉洋 | 利重剛 | YOU Tanaka Rena | Nishida Toshiyuki | Muroi Shigeru | Koyuki | Tanonaka Isamu | Inoue Mao | Hashimoto Satoshi | Wentz Eiji | Hazama Kanpei | Tani Kei | Nakamura Shido | Oizumi Yo | Toshishige Tsuyoshi
Director: Motoki Katsuhide 本木克英 本木克英 本木克英 Motoki Katsuhide
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Blu-ray Region Code: A - Americas (North, Central and South except French Guiana), Korea, Japan, South East Asia (including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan) What is it?
Release Date: 2008-07-02
Publisher Product Code: PCXC-50004
Language: Japanese
Subtitles: English, Japanese
Country of Origin: Japan
Disc Format(s): Blu-ray
Publisher: Fuji TV
Other Information: Blu-ray Disc
Shipment Unit: 1 What is it?
YesAsia Catalog No.: 1011035746

Product Information

タイトル:ゲゲゲの鬼太郎: ブルーレイディスク【Blu-ray Disc】
出演:ウエンツ瑛士/井上真央/田中麗奈/大泉洋/間寛平/小雪/中村獅童/谷啓/田の中勇/利重剛/橋本さとし/YOU/室井滋/西田敏行
監督:本木克英

ウエンツ瑛士を鬼太郎役に迎え、最先端VFXを駆使して贈る、待望の実写劇場版!

【この商品はBlu-ray Discソフトです。対応プレイヤー以外では再生できませんのでご注意ください。】

"ゲゲゲの森"で仲間たちとのんびり暮らす鬼太郎のもとに、ある日、一通の手紙が届けられた。それは恐るべき魔力を秘めた"妖怪石"をめぐる、大事件のはじまりだった。"妖怪石"を手に入れたのは、実花と健太という人間の姉弟。そんな2人に、やがて"妖怪石"のパワーを手に入れようとする邪悪な妖怪たちが、次々に襲い掛かってくる。鬼太郎は2人を助けるものの、"妖怪石"を盗んだ張本人にされてしまい…。

日本の妖怪たちを世界に広めた人気漫画家・水木しげるが生み出した、 子供から大人まで誰もが愛する国民的ヒーロー"ゲゲゲの鬼太郎"。1965年に「週刊少年マガジン」に登場し、1968年にはTVアニメ化がスタート。2007年4月からはTVアニメ・シリーズ第5弾が放送され、日本中に妖怪ブームを巻き起こした。
本作は、ウエンツ瑛士を鬼太郎役に迎えて贈る、待望の実写劇場版。海外のクリエイターにも多大な影響を与えた原作コミックの魅力を十二分に生かしながら、最先端VFXを駆使したエンタテインメント作品が繰り広げられていく。監督は、「釣りバカ日誌」シリーズの本木克英。田中麗奈が猫娘に扮するなど、豪華キャストの共演も話題になった。

■映像特典:未公開場面集/特報「ゲゲゲの鬼太郎 千年呪い歌」
■音声特典:本木監督&石塚プロデューサーによるコメンタリー(聞き手:軽部アナウンサー)

テクニカル・インフォメーション
:カラー
画面:ビスタ/1080p HD
言語/音声:日本語:DTS-HD(6.1chサラウンド)/日本語:DOLBY TRUE HD(6.1chサラウンドEX)/解説:DD(ステレオ)

その他の情報
製作年:2007
著作権:(C)2007 ゲゲゲの鬼太郎フィルムパートナーズ
備考:Blu-ray Disc専用ソフト/片面二層
日本小売価格:¥4700

Additional Information may be provided by the manufacturer, supplier, or a third party, and may be in its original language

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YumCha! Asian Entertainment Reviews and Features

Professional Review of "Gegege no Kitaro (Blu-ray) (Movie) (English Subtitled) (Japan Version)"

June 27, 2008

Ah, the dilemmas of adapting a well established animated character to live-action. While the filmmakers no longer have to develop the main characters since they've been known for decades, they also have to leave things unchanged in order to satisfy the fans. Created in 1959, Gegege No Kitaro is probably the most beloved yokai character in mainstream Japanese culture, but it took almost 40 years for Fuji Television to bring its characters to live-action. To pull it off, Fuji teamed up with Hong Kong's Centro Digital for the 700 cgi shots required to put all the monsters and supernatural powers onscreen. However, despite all the money the film earned during its theatrical release, newcomers will end up wondering what the hoopla was all about.

Rather than introducing everyone all over again, director Katsuhide Motoki and screenwriter Daisuke Habara (who, intriguingly enough, alternates between comic adaptations like this and character dramas like Hula Girls) simply structures the film as another episode of the cartoon. That means you're already supposed to know that Kitaro (pop star Eiji Wentz) is a half-yokai, half-human trying to maintain peace between the yokai world and the human world by protecting the latter from the former. You're also supposed to know that his father is in the form of a talking eyeball, his best friend/nemesis is the sneaky Ratman (Yo Oizumi), and he has to constantly refuse the advances of Cat Girl (Rena Tanaka). This time, the live-action film adds two obligatory young human characters for Kitaro to protect: Kenta (Ruka Uchida) and his older sister Mika (Mao Inoue).

The plot is fairly pedestrian: Ratman stumbles onto a stone under a shrine for the Heavenly Fox (apparently all other foxes are evil) and tries to pawn it without knowing what it is. However, the stone corrupts anyone who comes upon it, and it also unleashes an evil fox that has the power to destroy the world. Tempted by the power of the stone, Kenta and Mika's father steals it and hands it to Kenta for safekeeping, before he gets arrested for the theft. Kitaro, who previously helped Kenta get rid of a few monsters, now has to find the evil stone, or he will be held responsible for its theft. Even more, he must find the stone before the evil foxes can get to Kenta.

It's fairly obvious that the plot for Kitaro is simply an excuse to show off lots of cgi monsters. In addition to the original characters, the filmmakers add several other well-known yokai characters from folk legend, forcing Centro to work overtime to keep things visually interesting. However, like Takashi Miike's The Great Yokai War, Kitaro is made for a family audience. That means the scariest thing the monsters can do are perform lots of back flips or shoot out hundreds of silver darts that never actually hurt anyone. That's OK, since the original Kitaro cartoons are more adventurous than scary in tone. But when the fate of mankind hinges on getting a kid to give up something he's carrying the whole damn time, there's needs to be more dramatic tension to things interesting, even if the film is aimed at just kids.

The cast also does little to help. Most of the supporting cast is appropriately over-the-top, with Yo Oizumi having the most fun trying to act as much like Ratman as possible. However, lead Eiji Wentz fails to bring any of the mischievous charm of the original character into live-action. Since Wentz has years of performing experience, this disparity in skill versus result can only be explained by ill-conceived casting. Kitaro is supposed to be a 300-year-old spirit in a child's body, so seeing a twentysomething half-Japanese pop idol in the role doesn't just challenge credibility, it's flat-out jarring.

But in family entertainment, no one really watches the acting, so Kitaro is really not that bad for what it is. It has imaginative monsters, brisk pacing, good-looking special effects, and even a clean idol as its lead. The film also gets bonus points assuming that you recognize all the original characters. However, that's also where one can be disappointed. Since the filmmakers made the film specifically for the millions of people who grew up with these characters, those unfamiliar with the yokai world would not only be somewhat confused at who's who, but also may find Kitaro to be surprisingly tame. Still, that doesn't mean the film isn't enjoyable. In a world where franchises are "re-imagined" constantly by giving them a darker edge to appeal to older audiences, it's almost refreshing to see filmmakers go back to an old-fashioned approach in adapting a popular story. It may not be a very good film, but Kitaro is competently made family entertainment, and seems to enjoy being so.

By Kevin Ma

This original content has been created by or licensed to YesAsia.com, and cannot be copied or republished in any medium without the express written permission of YesAsia.com.

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