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2014 film by Shigeharu Takahashi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Yo-kai Watch: The Movie, released in Japan under the name Yo-kai Watch: Tanjō no Himitsu da Nyan!,[lower-alpha 1] is a 2014 Japanese animated fantasy adventure film directed by Shigeharu Takahashi and Shinji Ushiro as part of the Yo-kai Watch franchise.[3][4] The film was released on December 20, 2014 in Japan.[3] It was followed by Enma Daiō to Itsutsu no Monogatari da Nyan!, released on December 19, 2015.[5]
Yo-kai Watch: The Movie | |||||
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Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | 映画 妖怪ウォッチ 誕生の秘密だニャン! | ||||
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Directed by | Shigeharu Takahashi Shinji Ushiro | ||||
Screenplay by | Yoichi Kato | ||||
Story by | Animation Real Life | ||||
Based on | Yo-kai Watch by Level-5 | ||||
Produced by | Kiyofumi Kajiwara Makoto Wada Izumi Furusawa Yukari Hayakawa Junichi Yanagihara | ||||
Starring | Haruka Tomatsu Tomokazu Seki Etsuko Kozakura Romi Park Yuki Kaji | ||||
Cinematography | Tatsumi Yukiwaki | ||||
Edited by | Emi Onodera | ||||
Music by | Kenichiro Saigo | ||||
Production company | |||||
Distributed by | Toho[1] | ||||
Release date |
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Running time | 97 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese | ||||
Box office | $99.5 million[2] |
The plot is the same as Yo-kai Watch 2, but with some changes. One night, the evil Yo-kai duo Kin and Gin steal the Yo-kai Watch from Nate Adams to help their master Dame Dedtime prevent humans and Yo-kai from being friends. He then encounters the Yo-kai Meganyan, who tells him that Yo-kai are real. He and the crew head to Nate's grandmother Lucy Loo Adams, encounter a shadow and chase it, but to no avail. Meganyan returns, asking to pull out the cork in his body—the cork that suppresses his energy. Nate decides not to pull it out, and asks Jibanyan & Whisper to pull it out for him, but to no avail. Nate pulls it out, and he and the crew get covered in pink smoke. He finds help from the Yo-kai Hovernyan - and uses a time stone to take Nate, Whisper, and Jibanyan back in time 60 years to when the Yo-kai Watch was first invented by Nate's own grandfather Nathaniel Adams while he was a kid. Dame Dedtime gets word of this, and tries a plan to push the human world farther from the Yo-kai world. Together, the two boys battles against Dame Dedtime and her Wicked Yo-kai minions to save the world of the past from her evil plans and recover the Nate's Yo-kai Watch.
Character | Japanese voice actor | English voice actor |
---|---|---|
Nathan "Nate" Adams (Keita Amano) | Haruka Tomatsu | Johnny Yong Bosch |
Whisper | Tomokazu Seki | Joey D'Auria |
Jibanyan | Etsuko Kozakura | Alicyn Packard |
Nathaniel Adams (Keizō Amano) | Romi Park | Meyer DeLeeuw |
Hovernyan (Fuyunyan) / Darknyan | Yūki Kaji | Johnny Yong Bosch |
Darknyan | Brent Pendergrass | |
Meganyan (Dekanyan) | Johnny Yong Bosch | |
Buchinyan | Etsuko Kozakura Tomokazu Seki |
Alicyn Packard Joey D'Auria |
Dame Dedtime (Tokio Ubaune) | Kataoka Ainosuke VI | Alicyn Packard |
Kin and Gin | Vanilla Yamazaki Mika Kanai |
Melissa Hutchison Jenn Wong |
Lucy Loo Adams (Yukiko "Yukippe" Amano) | Hisako Kyōda (old) Haruka Shimazaki[6] (young) |
Jenn Wong |
Robonyan | Naoki Bandō | Joey D'Auria |
Shogunyan (Bushinyan) | Etsuko Kozakura | Alicyn Packard |
Komasan | Aya Endō | Melissa Hutchison |
Walkappa (Nogappa) | Masahito Yabe | |
Kyubi | Ryoko Nagata | |
Tattletell (Bakuroba) | Chie Sato | |
Blazion (Melamelion) | Yuko Sasamoto | Brent Pendergrass |
Roughraff (Gurerurin) | Naoki Bandō | |
Noway (Murikabe) | Toru Nara | |
Manjimutt (Jinmenken) | Naoki Bandō | Paul Greenberg |
Happierre (Honobono) | Masahito Yabe | |
Dandoodle (Ikemenken) | ||
Aaron Adams | Tōru Nara | Brent Pendergrass |
Lily Adams | Ryoko Nagata | Alicyn Packard |
Katie Forester (Fumika "Fumi-chan" Kodama) | Aya Endō | Melissa Hutchison |
Edward "Eddie" Archer (Kanchi Imada) | Chie Sato | Brent Pendergrass |
Barnaby "Bear" Bernstein (Gorota "Kuma" Kumashima) | Toru Nara | Paul Greenberg |
Master Nyada | Ken Shimura | Joey D'Auria |
Bronzlow (Do) | Masahito Yabe | Paul Greenberg |
The film's score was written Kenichiro Saigo.
The film was announced in July 2014 on CoroCoro Comic.[4] The first trailer was released in August[7] and another trailer was released in October.[8] A second film was announced in November.[9] A story tie-in to the film was included in the video game Yo-kai Watch 2: Shinuchi, released on December 13.[10] A manga of the film, illustrated by Noriyuki Konishi, was released in December, reaching the 30th place on the weekly chart with 32,561 copies sold on its first week,[11] and selling 261,145 copies by its fifth week.[12]
The Blu-ray and DVD were released on July 8, 2015, with both reaching the number-one place on the animation rankings, with 14,090 and 84,932 copies sold, respectively.[13][14] By its 13th week, the DVD had sold 128,810 copies.[15]
In September 2016, it was revealed via the Fathom Events website that the movie would be screened one time only on October 15, in select cinemas across the United States. Attendees received an exclusive Hovernyan medal at the screening.[16] It was released on Netflix on December 1, 2016 in the United States before leaving the service on March 3, 2021.[17] Its DVD was released on May 19, 2020, nearly four years after its theatrical release. the film was distributed by Wild Bunch in France, 01 Distribution In Italy, Buena Vista International in Turkey, Selecta Vision in Spain and Universal Pictures in some countries.
The film set a new record for Toho for advance ticket sales, with 721,422 sold by October 26,[9] reaching 840,000 by late November[18] and more than 1 million by mid-December.[19]
The film was number-one on its opening weekend, with ¥1.629 billion,[20] a record for a Japanese film, previously held by Howl's Moving Castle.[21] reached ¥5 billion by its third weekend,[22] ¥6.54 billion by the fourth weekend[23] and ¥7 billion by the sixth weekend.[24] The film grossed ¥7.8 billion ($73,623,258) at the Japanese box office, where it was the highest-grossing domestic film of 2015.[25]
Overseas, the film grossed ₩1.98 billion ($1.69 million) upon its opening in South Korea,[26] and went on to gross ₩3,888,698,100 ($3,437,804) there.[27] The film also grossed $257,343 in the United States and Canada, and $1,715,393 in France, the United Arab Emirates, and Thailand.[2] The film grossed a total of $99.5 million worldwide.[2]
Kotaku's Mike Fahey described the movie as keeping the humor of the TV show even in its highest dramatic stakes.[28] Anime News Network reviewer James Beckett liked the humor, but was bothered by the pacing issues. He gave it a B grading.[29]
Rotten Tomatoes gave the film an 80% with average rating of 6.6/10 based on 5 critics reviews.[30]
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