

Wolf Children
おおかみこどもの雨と雪
Hana, a hard-working college student, falls in love with a mysterious man who attends one of her classes though he is not an actual student. As it turns out, he is not truly human either. On a full moon night, he transforms, revealing that he is the last werewolf alive. Despite this, Hana's love remains strong, and the two ultimately decide to start a family. Hana gives birth to two healthy children—Ame, born during rainfall, and Yuki, born during snowfall—both possessing the ability to turn into wolves, a trait inherited from their father. All too soon, however, the sudden death of her lover devastates Hana's life, leaving her to raise a peculiar family completely on her own. The stress of raising her wild-natured children in a densely populated city, all while keeping their identity a secret, culminates in a decision to move to the countryside, where she hopes Ame and Yuki can live a life free from the judgments of society. Wolf Children is the heartwarming story about the challenges of being a single mother in an unforgiving modern world. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Hana, a hard-working college student, falls in love with a mysterious man who attends one of her classes though he is not an actual student. As it turns out, he is not truly human either. On a full moon night, he transforms, revealing that he is the last werewolf alive. Despite this, Hana's love remains strong, and the two ultimately decide to start a family. Hana gives birth to two healthy children—Ame, born during rainfall, and Yuki, born during snowfall—both possessing the ability to turn into wolves, a trait inherited from their father. All too soon, however, the sudden death of her lover devastates Hana's life, leaving her to raise a peculiar family completely on her own. The stress of raising her wild-natured children in a densely populated city, all while keeping their identity a secret, culminates in a decision to move to the countryside, where she hopes Ame and Yuki can live a life free from the judgments of society. Wolf Children is the heartwarming story about the challenges of being a single mother in an unforgiving modern world. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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TK8878
June 27, 2016
Review in brief: While Wolf Children is soothing and has some interesting ideas, putting more than a little thought into what's happening on-screen can easily throw your mind out of the aesthetic cradle the movie builds as you realize just how silly and simple the whole thing is. Considering the clear effort to make this movie a poignant fantasy about a struggling family, it can safely be said that it’s not trying to be either of those things. Review in full: I'll start by saying that this isn't going to be the sort of review that's trying to scorn the movie or "expose" it asbeing terrible or whatever. Rather it will be an analysis of my own experiences with it, why I had them, what I thought about them, and if you're likely to have similar experiences with it or not. I won't spoil anything either, though I believe the synopsis at the top of the page does in fact spoil the first third of the movie to a notable degree. Don't read it if you haven't already. My first viewing of this movie was in a group. As the movie started, me & my friends came to expect something charming yet emotionally serious in large part due to how much the early scenes suggested this. Indeed, the entire movie has a rather calm atmosphere about it (even during more dramatic moments) thanks to the tranquil art style and soundtrack. However, there is a certain event early on that will likely make or break the movie for you depending on how you look at it. I won’t spoil it here because I believe witnessing it spoiler-free is an integral part of the intended viewing experience, but it’s suffice to say that it’s the first key event in the plot; it’s what allows the rest of the movie to happen at all. If you don't think about it too much you'll likely see it as an unusual yet romantic scene, but if you apply what you've been told so far about werewolves and how they work in this story then it can easily lead to a number of major questions as to how and why it's happening like this. As the movie goes to the next few scenes, it takes on more of a "slice of life" approach to things, only with time-skips that can jump over a year or more of time. If you've been taken into the movie’s aura of calmness it will flow along smoothly, but if you've already begun asking questions (as my friends and I had been) then two things will become apparent: the answers the movie suggests don't line up with what's actually been said and the "slices" of life are more like rough chunks considering the time-skips. In essence, a visible split between the story and its presentation appears. At this point the entire group I was in had lost our suspension of disbelief, thanks to our questions and the unfitting answers we found. For a short while the movie's calmness began making people dose as they lost interest, until we started joking at the events & dialogue to follow. We weren't watching Wolf Children anymore, rather it had become Wolf Children Impromptu Abridgment. I had to re-watch the movie later to analyze it seriously, but the damage had been done. The movie would continue it's slow yet jumpy "chunks of life" approach for much of its remainder, and while the idea was interesting, the execution never brought said idea to its fruition in either of my viewing experiences. Aside from Hana & Yuki (who were flawed, but in an appreciable & human way) the characters didn't receive much development, and some of their reactions to important events were jarring in the sense that they weren't very realistic reactions for the characters involved. The movie doesn’t attempt to explain why a werewolf would decide that the downtown of a major Japanese city is an acceptable hunting ground, or why a child’s claim that they were attacked by a wolf inside a school (what with wolves being extinct in Japan) wouldn’t raise serious questions. Doing so would only point out how poorly thought-out these events are. The result is a sense that everyone is either exceptionally shallow or somewhat crazy. I wouldn't say it was the story's fault per se, but rather the plot as it was executed. In a story focusing on people growing up and deciding how they feel about the world and their place in it, the plot’s emphasis was not put on the characters but rather the events they found themselves in. There’s a word for this type of plot; melodrama, and while I’d argue that melodrama is simply a tool that has a distinct purpose in storytelling, Wolf Children is a stark example of its overabundance and misuse in the modern day. The beauty of the visuals and the fitting & tranquil music tie into this, and are easy to get lost in, but if you think about it for more than a few moments while it's all happening then the detachment between story and presentation becomes clear, leaving you with something pretty yet bland. Verdict: If you are the sort of person who can shut off your brain, then this movie will take you away to a whimsical place. If you can't (or refuse to) stop thinking, then you may see this place for the well-painted box it really is, and your questions won't reveal all that much outside of it. As the latter, I can’t say I enjoyed Wolf Children at all, despite the obvious effort made by its producers to be more than a simple box. If you're the former, then you may find much more enjoyment in this piece.
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literaturenerd
March 1, 2017
Overview: This is one of my older reviews that I have re-written to hopefully not get removed this time. Story and characters: This part of the review contains SPOILERS!!!!!! The story begins with a Japanese college student named Hana. One day, she spots a cute boy in her class who doesn't attend the college, but sits in on the classes anyway. She immediately falls in love with him and follows him around like a puppy! He finally begins talking to her, but he is fairly laconic, which of course makes him even more desirable. Eventually he decides to confess to her that he is a werewolfand transforms in front of her. This does not faze her AT ALL. In fact, she has sex with him on the spot while he is in his wolf form! Thankfully, it quickly cuts off-screen because this is a kids movie! The Werewolf dude (who is never named) calmly explains that werewolves can transform whenever they want, but many untrue myths have been spread about them. I have a question for this film. If werewolves can perfectly control their transformations and live peacefully among humans then WHY is this guy supposedly the last werewolf?! How could the humans have hunted them down if they can control when they transform?! This doesn't make any fucking sense and is never even addressed. We the audience are just supposed to swallow this crap! Back to the story, Hana gives birth to 2 children, but tragedy strikes when the unnamed Papa Wolf is struck and killed by a car while in his wolf form. A fucking WEREWOLF is killed by a car. I respect the right to creativity, but if you want to use werewolves in your story, you should keep at least SOMETHING of the traditional lore. Werewolves in all media have an extremely high healing factor and can only be killed by: injuries made by silver, complete decapitation, or old age. Nothing else will kill a werewolf and this has been the rule since early 1700s Germany! Now that Hana is a single mother, she decides to keep the kids isolated because she fears they will transform in front of people. However, the welfare workers come by to see why the children haven't been vaccinated, so Hana moves to the country where the government isn't able to find her. Just go with it. She buys an old dilapidated house that has been abandoned for decades, but quickly repairs it all by herself...because apparently she is an absolute expert in carpentry. Just go with it. Hana learns farming from an adorably cranky old man and raises her kids in the country. Eventually they wish to attend school and Hana lets them as long as they promise not to transform. Hana's daughter decides to live her life as a human, and her son decides to live a VERY lonely life in the forest as the last surviving wolf in Japan. Hana is totally OK with this decision and ends the movie happily reflecting on her time together with her kids. Art and animation: This movie was VERY well animated. I appreciate the fact that it looks cute! Wolf Children also does include a few heartwarming and adorable scenes. Does that make this movie a masterpiece? No. In the 1990s, the big rivalry in kids movies was between Disney and Fox Animation Studio largely dependent on one guy named Don Bluth. Don was absolutely beloved in the 1980s for his masterful trilogy: Secret of NIMH, An American Tale, and Land Before Time. In the 1990s, Bluth abandoned trying to tell good stories and focused entirely on making his movies as cute as possible. These include: Thumbelina, A Troll in Central Park, and The Pebble and the Penguin. In the 1990s, critics lauded the Disney movies for their amazing stories and characters while absolutely SHITTING on everything Don Bluth touched. I don't think he made a movie after 1990 that didn't win multiple Razzie awards. Overview: Wolf Children is EXACTLY like watching a 1990s Don Bluth movie, yet people on MAL act like Tolstoy himself wrote it, and it was drawn by Michelangelo! This movie is fairly cute, but it isn't that good guys! I'm sorry I had to be the one to say this, but a critic SHOULD try give honest opinions, not just bend to popular dogma. If you are older than 8 years old, I really wouldn't bother watching this movie. There are honestly MUCH better movies you could be watching.
-Hotaru_
March 10, 2013
"The moment a child is born, the mother is also born. She never existed before. The woman existed, but the mother, never. A mother is something absolutely new." ~ Rajneesh Can one anticipate the future? The struggles, the joys, the pain? It may be a mystery because we humans have to learn from our past mistakes and try to continuously improve ourselves. Motherhood is one of these things, never regretting, only moving forward, that is the only way. Ookami Kodomo no Ame to Yuki is one of these rare animes who come once a year or more, to remind us why webecame so enchanted by animes in the first place. *The following review may contain some spoilers* The movie opens with the introduction of a University student named Hana. The main character's name has in itself a great semnification, her father named her that because she was born on the day the cosmos flowers in their backyard bloomed naturally, without being planted. Her father then thought he will raise his child to have a smile as beautiful as a flower, that won't fade away. This also symbolises the journey of the character, that overcomes difficulties with a positive mind, even when inside, she suffers.One day, at one of the University's classes she notices a young man who seems estranged, otherworldly. She then starts to interact with him,even though reclutant at first, he gradually warms up to her. On one of their walks, she tells him the reason her father named her, adding that at his funeral she didn't cry, but smiled instead. The young man finds it normal,since he understands that Hana tried her best to be strong. Thinking he cannot hide it anymore,"Ookami" (the young man) reveals that he is a descendent of a long forgotten clan who were able to transform into wolves. The legend became reality,but suprisingly,Hana accepted Ookami's true nature,showing that her love for him is without limits. After a while,Hana becomes pregnant with a child. The first born Yuki, was a girl who was born on a snow day,hence "yuki" meaning snow. The second born follows shortly, a boy named "Ame", who was born on a rainy day,"ame" meaning rain. They live happily, until one day, when Ookami doesn't come back home.And so begins Hana's struggles with her not quite normal children, learning the difficulties of not only raising two kids alone as a young,single mother, but also dealing with the strange nature of her half-human,half-wolf children. The story is quite simple in itself, yet mesmerizing in its message and emotional impact on the viewers. Story : 9 The art resembles quite a lot Toki wa Kakeru Shoujo's art, since it has the same studios: Madhouse Studios, FUNimation Entertainment etc. and the same talented director, Hosoda Mamoru. The art is beautiful in its fluid,soft animation style. The colors are variated, from the bright scenes of nature to the dim ones on a eerie, rainy day. The characters design is eye-pleasing and more similar to the real people than most animes.The strongest point of the art is the stunning depiction of the movie's various landscape,ranging from the rendering of suburban Tokyo,to Japan's countryside and to the mountain's deep forests. The change of landscapes helps the viewers along Hana's journey. Art: 9 The soundtrack fits perfectly every scene in this movie, encompassing the atmosphere. The seyiuus do a marvelous work in this anime,especially the two young seiyuus who voice the children Ame and Yuki, showing great promise, with the skills of a professional and natural talent. Some scenes in this anime are heart-breaking, so the music is at times sorrowful,but at the same time soothing and comforting. Sound: 9 The characters may as well be the show's strongest point. This two hour movie had more character development than most 26 episodes animes. The main characters,Hana and her two children, Ame and Yuki undergo a constant methamorphosis. At the beginning, Hana is a young girl who lives by herself,only having to worry about mundane day-to-day problems. All that changes when she meets her soul mate Ookami. She finds a hidden world from ours, where men who transform into wolves do exist. After Ookami disppearence, she finds herself alone, taking care of her supernatural children.Hana breaks free from her chrysalis,gradually maturing into a responsible,strong woman who faces any difficulties for the sake of her children. The two children are completely different from each other, Yuki is an energetic, curious, restless, playful girl, bustling with life.Her brother being the total opposite of her, having a weak constitution,and an introverted, withdrawn and fearful personality. When they move to the country side, Ame's reaction is reclusive to the change, fearing the wide, open spaces and the variety of wild animals. Yuki however rejoices at the thought of living so close to the wild life. In a twist of fate, their roles are being reversed after Ame's accident, and Yuki's going to school, transforming Ame into a more adventurous spirit,as well as a wild life admirer. Noticing her interests are unlike her classmates, and afraid of rejection, Yuki begins to restrain herself, becoming more like them. The depiction of the change in the children is wonderful, their choices in life separate the two siblings in time. Ame embraces his wolf nature, while Yuki chooses the human life style. Both choose to walk different paths from each other, which is heart-breaking but at the same time helps the character's development. Even supporting characters are interesting and have their own charm, such as Souhei and the grumpy old farmer. It is fascinating to see the staggering growth of the characters during a two hour movie. Characters : 10 It has been a while since I enjoyed every minute of an anime like this, it has been a wonderful experience, that re-awakened in me the pure joy of watching a story unfold. Enjoyment: 10 Overall: 9.2
5camp
November 13, 2012
The story starts with a rather plain looking college girl and her romantic adventures with this dashingly attractive young man. It turns out that he’s a wolf-man, but the lady doesn’t care because golly, he really is quite a catch. Besides, wolves are cool, so it could be worse. He could be an uncool animal like a sea-cucumber man. They have kids together but raising them in the big city is a bit of a pain, especially since they keep turning into wolves when they get annoyed. So they move to the countryside and start a new life there. It is one half about thetrials and wonders of raising children and providing them with the environment in which they can thrive, and one half about gosh darn isn’t the countryside and nature wonderful. Its closest comparison would be Totoro, what with the family with two kids moving to the countryside away from the smelly city. The mother in Wolf Children is really quite an extraordinary character in how determined and admirable her attitude towards life is. The trials she goes through in order to raise her children the best she can is the main focus of the movie. The kids do lead a fairly happy-go-lucky life under her, ditching off school to wander around the forest, but it comes under the main theme of providing an environment in which your children can pursue any goal they wish. It all has a very strong focus on family values, and it comes across as all being rather hopeful and inspiring. In fact, maybe a bit too much… Here is where I reveal that I am a horrible human being, because I found the aggressively maudlin tone overbearing. Particularly the opening 15-20 minutes of the movie with the relationship between the mother and the wolf dude. It laid on the sap way too thick. It reminds of those movies that are made entirely to win Oscars, with their overly sentimental tone. The way these movies try to draw emotion become almost robotic in their predictable nature. Wolf Children doesn’t have a single twist that isn’t even remotely surprising. That obviously doesn’t preclude it from being good, but it is a nice way of demonstrating how much it plays to this same factory-churned heart-tugging attempts. There are parts to this movie I do genuinely like. The interaction between the two kids when they’re still young is charming as hell, particularly in how they formed opposite personalities in the way siblings do. The older child runs around and lot and is very charismatic, while the younger brother is quiet and withdrawn. It’s rather like myself and my younger sister, where videos of us would be her sitting around reading books patiently while I run around in the background screaming about Sonic the Hedgehog. Wolf Children perfectly captured that boundless energy and curiosity that children have. But the other parts that I might otherwise have liked are fed through this maudlin machine and flip around to be too sentimental. The struggle the mother has to go through to get a garden working is really overdone, or more specifically the part where it says how wonderful the people of the countryside are. Not a message I’m opposed to by any means, but it comes off as way too overblown emotionally. The final part in the movie with what the younger brother eventually decides suffers from the same problem. I won’t spoil, but this is a really huge part of the movie that marks a massive emotional decision on his part and his mother’s, which they still somehow manage to overstate. I would like the movie to let me experience these emotions myself, not to have it smashing me over the head with a saucepan yelling “ISN’T THIS TRAGIC? LOOK AT HOW EMOTIONAL THIS IS! CRY DAMNIT!” I wouldn’t say it’s a bad movie. There was never a stage when I wanted to leave the cinema and visit a trendy coffee shop instead. But the way the movie smashed repeatedly about how emotional everything was paradoxically left me feeling even more indifferent towards the film.
MysticNano
May 11, 2021
[contains Spoilers] So I made this account specifically for writing this review, it will be my first review so bear with me! It will be a little long, but it might save 2 hours of your precious time! First of all, before I watched this movie I had great expectations, seeing this high score, great reviews, I thought that I was going to watch a masterpiece but no, this probably was a piece of something else! Art is fine, not bad, and it actually might be the only thing I liked There are some well drawn scenes and landscapes sound is meh since all tracks sounds the same Now Let'smove to the important things : the plot and the massive lack of character development! The story starts with hana, a very ordinary college girl, nothing really special about her and nothing special will be given about her through the whole movie And she isn't a special case, all characters in this movie won't be given any kind of back stories. and not just that, her character doesn't suit her actions too, she doesn't have a wild character, she is actually a little shy. So That normal college girl spots a calm cool looking guy sitting in a lecture, when she tries to talk to him he tells her that he isn't a student in a very shady way! Nothing creepy about it! In fact, it was never explained what is he doing in the college! Hana keeps chasing that cool looking guy around until he finally starts hanging out with her, and someday he decides to tell her his secret , but what is it? He transformes in front of her into a wolf! and she doesn't even scream or feel scared! I wouldn't really care if she had characteristics that fits that but how come that a very normal college girl doesn't feel a little scared when she sees a werewolf? Not just that , here comes the other shock, she has sex with him in his wolf form! I don't know from where should I start, the fact that he didn't transform into human while doing this? Or the fact that she did this? How should this be a cute love story? Let's move on to the cool wolf guy, you might wonder why don't I mention his name, guess what? he was never given a one! She didn't call him with his name once! Somehow that guy is supposed to be a main character but also somehow we don't learn anything about him, literally nothing except he just had a little difficult childhood! No back story, no emotions, just a plain character. The guy says that werewolves aren't like those rumors and they can actually control their transforms and live normally among humans but somehow all werewolves are killed and that cool looking guy is the last one! Why were the werewolves killed if they can live like normal people? No one knows! Back to the story Hana the college girl gets pregnant, and she gives birth in her apartment alone with the guy, no hospital no doctor, and no neighbours too! How couldn't they hear her while giving birth? It doesn't matter! Isn't it wonderful giving birth to a werewolf while you're still in college! Well you might expect to see that college girl face some difficulties now or have some anxiety, nope! She actually decides to give birth again! But here when tragedy happens, the wolf guy dies, we should sympathize of course, but how if all of this actually happened in the first 15 minutes? And to a character that is so plain? how did the wolf guy die ? It was never shown! how did hana go to college? Where are her parents? These questions weren't answered either. So now we have hana the single mother, she doesn't know what to do with her wolf children, the government tries to check on her children, they aren't vaccinated, what does hana do? She moves to a nearby countryside where the government won't somehow be able to find her! And buys an old broken house, You might wonder how does she have any money it is the wolf guy was saving money, enough money to feed a family and buy a house! And somehow too she fixes it with a hammer and some wood because she is a super-powered mother. She is also capable of taking care of two childs alone! Throughout all of this, Hana doesn't show any signs of frustration! The next 40 minutes of the movie move so damm slowly! Now let's talk a little about the wolf children personalities: We see that yuki the daughter has a wild character, she moves a lot, she is naughty and gourmand On the other hand we have ame the son, has a weak body, doesn't eat much and shy and in one scene he tells his mother that he doesn't want to be a wolf Somehow, these roles will be switched! Without any true arcs, The boy will be the wild and strong one and will fight for living in the woods while the girl will become obedient and she will hate being a wolf because she hurt a classmate for no logical reason except stupidity of course, And I can't see this as anything except a stupid stereotype :"boys are wild, girls are shy" (the story of the classmate that yuki hurt) Yuki meets a boy in class, the boy tells her that she smells like fur, she gets so damn frustrated for no reason, the boy tries to talk to her again so she transforms and scratches his ear almost making him deaf! The boy's mother arrives, she seems truly worried about her son and she scolds hana for her daughter's actions. Back to the movie The movie keeps moving in a ridiculously slow pace and SUDDENLY everything is thrown at your face! During a storm, Hana chases her shitty son ame that decided to leave his mother in the middle of the storm and go and live in the forest, not giving a damn care about his mother, hana keeps chasing him instead of going to get her traped daughter in the school because of the storm, yuki the daughter, is trapped in school with the boy she hurt, yuki wonder where is the boy's mother so he tells her that she is getting married and doesn't care about him at all! Yuki somehow feels encouraged and a how's him her wolf form and everything is solved. During these forceful emotional scenes, Hana is almost eaten by a bear, she falls off a cliff too and faints! Then her shitty son finally finds her in woods, he picks her up and guess what? he dumps her outside the forest, ready to leave again not giving a damn care about his wounded mother, hana wakes up and she sees her son dumping her, she cries for 3 seconds and somehow accepts it! The boy doesn't even come back to hug her or anything! Oh did I mention that she dumped her daughter in the school in a middle of a storm? Things go on, the boy doesn't seem to ever come back again, he just howls from time to time to tell his mother that he is alive, and done! Oh did I mention that her daughter eventually dumped her too? Yes the two wolf children left their beloved mother alone in the old big house! What a beautiful family! This how the writer gives depth and makes character arcs! This is the movie! I don't know how did this movie get this high score and reviews , there are much better movies with less score and a lot of criticism for minor things. And I still don't know how is this an emotional movie, you literally can't feel anything towards any character except anger for their stupid actions and decisions since they are shallow and plain. My storytelling is even better than the movie itself!
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