Background

Suzume

2022

7.6 /10 IMDb
122 Duration
Director: Makoto Shinkai
Cast: 原菜乃華 ,松村北斗 ,深津絵里 ,...
Language: Japanese
Country: Japan

A modern action adventure road story where a 17-year-old girl named Suzume helps a mysterious young man close doors from the other side that are releasing disasters all over in Japan.

Read full story →

Top Cast

原菜乃華

原菜乃華

Actor

松村北斗

松村北斗

Actor

深津絵里

深津絵里

Actor

染谷将太

染谷将太

Actor

伊藤沙莉

伊藤沙莉

Actor

花瀬琴音

花瀬琴音

Actor

花澤香菜

花澤香菜

Actor

二代目 松本白鸚

二代目 松本白鸚

Actor

神木隆之介

神木隆之介

Actor

Ann Yamane

Ann Yamane

Actor

Akari Miura

Akari Miura

Actor

上田燿司

上田燿司

Actor

Support This Page

If you like this content, you can support the site or share this movie with friends.

Donate / Support

Help keep the site running — any contribution is appreciated.

Share This Movie

Send the movie page to friends or share it on social networks.

Support

Link Not Working? Here’s What to Do

If you face any issues with the button, leave a comment mentioning the movie name. We will respond with the link shortly (within 5–10 minutes).

User Reviews & Comments

Leave a Reply

C
Chris Sawin
18 Apr 2023

With a compelling story, jaw-dropping animation and impressive action sequences, _Suzume_ is a contender for Makoto Shinkai’s most thrilling and enjoyable film to date. It’s an uninterrupted adventure with relentless twists and turns and no brakes. You’ll easily fall in love with the film’s rich and detailed animation, not to mention the jazzy and stylish score provided by rock band Radwimps and composer Kazuma Jinnouchi that would make even Yoko Kanno envious. Suffice to say, _Suzume_ is a dazzling rabbit hole of animation and charm. **Full review:** https://boundingintocomics.com/2023/04/18/suzume-review-a-dazzling-rabbit-hole-of-animation-and-charm/

C
CinemaSerf
16 Apr 2023

"Suzume" is cycling to school one morning when she encounters a strange young man who asks her for directions to the nearest ruin! She sends him off in the direction of a dilapidated complex and continues her journey. Gradually, though, she begins to wonder who he was and what he was up to. Quickly, she races to find him and encounters a door - sitting in the middle of a wet patio. She opens it to see another world on the other side. If she crosses the threshold, though, it becomes her own world with the other world, well, still on the other side... On the ground she notices a small carving. It looks like a cat, hang on - it is a cat - and suddenly all hell breaks loose as a giant worm tries to enter her world through the door. Luckily, her wanderer, "Souta", had also found the door and together they close it and lock it with a magical key. He explains that there are loads of these portals around the Earth and it is his job as a "closer" to keep them shut else the planet will be destroyed. Now, back to the cat. It seems that it has a special purpose here, and when it appears to curse "Souta" - turning him into a yellow, three-legged child's chair (that previously belonged to "Suzume") we find their investigations take on a bit of a comical effect as they rush from door to door chasing the open wormholes and the cat - all while slowly discovering that they might be falling in love. It's quite fun for the first half hour with plenty of action, a bit of humour with the hobbling wooden seat and as we establish the story and the characters. Thereafter, though, I found this to be a little too repetitive with the story recycling itself a bit too often. There are a few extra characters drafted in - her aunt, with whom she lives, and a lady who runs a bar who takes her in for the night - but they don't really add very much to what is essentially a short story stretched out for two hours that could easily have been shorter and more condense. The production is colourful and the standard of animation throughout is bright and vivid, and I did quite enjoy it - but as a story it really lacks substance as it progresses to it's eventual close. To be fair, that denouement is not as predictable as you might have thought and it tests the mettle and the affections of all concerned as many of the assumptions that we (had all) made as the story developed become questionable. By that stage, though, I had sort of lost interest in "Suzume" as a lead character.