How long is the movie akira
I may have to view it again to really get it. Watch, love and thankyou for reading. Teen, 14 years old Written by Sees Little March 29, Had useful details. Teen, 15 years old Written by Justin Rivera December 23, A Poetic Masterpiece. Katsuhiro Otomo's visually magnificent modern anime epic is quite possibly one of the most mature animated films of all time, carrying themes regarding evolution, the lack of limits on modern science, and the origin of life and the universe.
But just because it's animated doesn't mean it's for younger kids. This film is amazingly violent, at some points the violence is borderline nightmarish. We're talking loss of limbs, people exploding, people being crushed, people being shot, people losing large amounts of blood, a person having half of his face blown off, the infamous mutation scene that takes place toward the end of the film, and the list goes on and on.
It's so violent it's shocking. I've seen much worse but it's still pretty graphic. The language is pretty salty, but barely any uses of "f--k" or "s--t. Teen, 15 years old Written by The game breakdown August 30, Good anime pales in comparison to the manga. This anime is good, it has a good story and great animation, but it is very flawed. Many people have already talked about how good this anime is, so I will point out it's problems instead.
The biggest problem with this anime is that it's story is very condensed, the reason for this is that it is based on a manga that is over 2, pages long, and the movie's length is 2 hours. The other big problem is that it left out the best characters in the manga, and the good characters that they left in had every good quality taken out of their personality.
Now that I have discussed the quality of this movie, I will discuss the offensive content within. Throughout the course of the movie, many people are crushed, disintegrated, dismembered and shot. Teen, 13 years old Written by AzulDemonio July 26, Absolute Classic With Some Disturbing Scenes Akira is one of the greatest pieces of art to have ever been created, and that is shown with its film adaptation. It gifted western audiences with their first real taste of anime, and changed the way people saw film forever.
Akira follows the story of Kaneda and Tetsuo, two gang members and best friends, who get caught up in Neo-Tokyo's experiments with the power of gods.
It tells the story of betrayal and power, with very shakespearean storytelling. Toward the end of the film the imagery used to represent the key message does get very intense, and at times quite disturbing.
I'd say that it all depends on what you're child has seen in the past that decides whether they're ready for this, but ultimately the main reason for its high age rating is that the story itself is very confusing, and might just bore younger viewers. Its a classic that needs to be seen, but depends on the maturity of the viewer. This title contains: Positive Messages.
Revolutionary sci-fi anime has more disturbing imagery than violence. I can definitely agree with CSM that this movie introduced anime to the U. What I cannot agree on is their rating for it. Yes, there's a fair amount of violence guns, motorcycle crashes, gangs, blood, riots, ect. And yes there is brief female toplessness, but like CSM pointed out, it's in a non-sexual but violent connotation. However, the main things parents should be concerned about are Tetsuo's disturbing hallucinations after he becomes possessed by Akira some long time fans may disagree on how I summarized that but I've only seen this film once.
It starts with a scene where he lands on his hands and knees and all of a sudden, his guts spill out of his body in Tetsuo's mind. This happens for a split second but it's still shocking. There's also the aforementioned "stuffed animals" scene and a VERY disturbing mutation scene To provide more specifics would be a major spoiler.
It's too much for young teens, but older teen and adult anime fans will really enjoy this movie. Personally, I would recommend getting the 25th Anniversary Blu-Ray rerelease.
Great Movie, has some mature themes I saw this movie not long ago. It was great, I think that older teens would understand it better. Teen, 14 years old Written by Nirvana Samurai January 29, If thought that Ghost in the Shell was explicit in violence that's nothing compared to Akira This review Teen, 14 years old Written by Evil S. July 3, My 2nd favorite Film of all time This film Is a classic and a gem for any animation fan.
Teen, 15 years old Written by Captain dickhead October 21, A secret military project endangers Neo-Tokyo when it turns a biker gang member into a rampaging psychic psychopath who can only be stopped by a teenager, his gang of biker friends and a gro Read all A secret military project endangers Neo-Tokyo when it turns a biker gang member into a rampaging psychic psychopath who can only be stopped by a teenager, his gang of biker friends and a group of psychics.
A secret military project endangers Neo-Tokyo when it turns a biker gang member into a rampaging psychic psychopath who can only be stopped by a teenager, his gang of biker friends and a group of psychics. Kiyoko : The future is not a straight line. It is filled with many crossroads. There must be a future that we can choose for ourselves. Sign In. Play trailer Animation Action Drama. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Akira: 25th Anniversary Edition. Photos Top cast Edit.
Mitsuo Iwata Kaneda as Kaneda voice. Nozomu Sasaki Tetsuo as Tetsuo voice. Mami Koyama Kei as Kei voice. Michihiro Ikemizu Inspector as Inspector voice …. Yuriko Fuchizaki Kaori as Kaori voice. Takeshi Kusao Kai as Kai voice. Kazumi Tanaka Army as Army voice. Yukimasa Kishino Assistant as Assistant voice …. Tatsuhiko Nakamura Takashi as Takashi voice. More like this. But in a film, you get to combine this all into one. The art director looked at it and declared it impossible. But then, Akira had a budget of 1.
All part of the Tokyo scene that surrounded me. In Akira, I projected these elements into the future, as science-fiction. Halfway through, the colonel character brings about a military coup, echoing an actual failed insurrection in The adults in Akira carry out cruel medical experiments on children, recalling Japanese war crimes.
Akira also anticipates the recent evolution of Hollywood comic-book movies. Akira further foreshadows some of the TV show Heroes, such as the season one set-piece where a radioactive man goes uncontrollably nuclear. Akira also anticipates certain Hollywood comic-book films in its overstuffed plot.
The film compresses hundreds of manga pages, originally published over several years, into two dazzling but very confused hours of animation. Subplots and support characters are truncated or plain forgotten: plot points are vague, even contradictory. More than any sci-fi film since Blade Runner, it hurls the viewer into the middle of a world that bleeds from the screen in multiple hinted backstories. The action scenes are a blend of bloody carnage and information overload. The first 15 minutes serve up in rough order the end of the world, a new metropolis, rioting students, biker thugs in high-speed chases, and paranormal beings fleeing from sinister men in black, the whole heady montage overlaid with TV news reports and dog-food commercials.
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