![]() ![]() Its anime adaptation is created by the hands of Brain’s Base, a studio made out of former Tokyo Movie Shinsha employees despite their unfamiliar-sounding name, you might have heard of some of their more significant works such as Baccano!, Durarara!!, My Teen Romantic Comedy SNAFU and the above-mentioned Natsume’s Book Of Friends. Hotarubi No Mori E, also known by its English title Into the Forest of Fireflies’ Light, premiered on 17 September 2011, taking as its source a single-volume manga from July 2002 written by award-winning author Yuki Midorikawa, who after writing this would go on to release Natsume’s Book Of Friends, another manga and anime duet based on a similar premise to this, a year later to similar levels of success. Something about the song’s composition, its inspiring, comforting lyrics combined with the fluid visuals from the anime struck a chord with me, and needless to say, my curiosity about this film was piqued even more, enough to see it last summer.Ī tale about a girl and her dank forest buddy My initial experience of this film came from a very famous AMV titled “you can be king again”, named after the eponymous 2012 song by British singer Lauren Aquilina, which to this date has amassed more than 150 million views and over 140,000 comments. ![]() In contrast, there’s Hotarubi No Mori E a film that lasts only 44 minutes, but rests on a linear premise and focuses on single character relationship that even its detractors can admit to how followable it is. In preparation for last week’s post, I had to read Alexandre Dumas’ The Three Musketeers and was surprised at how verbose and detailed some of the chapters were, that one would have to wade through it in order to figure out what exactly was the main premise of it. ![]() Some anime movies are just so simple, yet so profound that they can tell a story better than a single novel could. ![]()
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