Napping Princess
Napping Princess: The Story of the Unknown Me | |||||
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Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | ひるね姫 〜知らないワタシの物語〜 | ||||
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Directed by | Kenji Kamiyama | ||||
Screenplay by | Kenji Kamiyama | ||||
Produced by |
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Starring |
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Cinematography | Hiroshi Tanaka | ||||
Music by | Yoko Shimomura | ||||
Production company | |||||
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures Japan | ||||
Release dates |
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Running time | 111 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese | ||||
Box office | $4.58 million (Japan) |
Napping Princess: The Story of the Unknown Me (ひるね姫 〜知らないワタシの物語〜, Hirune Hime: Shiranai Watashi no Monogatari) is a 2017 Japanese animated fantasy adventure film. It was produced by Signal.MD, written and directed by Kenji Kamiyama, and stars Mitsuki Takahata.[6] It was released in Japan by Warner Bros. Pictures on March 18, 2017.[7][8][9] An English dubbed version was released in the United Kingdom on August 16, 2017, and in the United States a month later. The theme song for the film is a cover of The Monkees' "Daydream Believer" performed by lead actress Mitsuki Takahata.[10]
Plot
[edit]Napping Princess takes place in two concurrent settings: a near-future Japan, and Heartland, a fantastical realm. The main character, Kokone Morikawa, has strange dreams of Heartland while taking naps. In these dreams, Heartland is a society entirely revolving around cars; the King's castle is a car factory, and his subjects all come to it to make a constant stream of new cars. His daughter, Ancien (who appears as a younger Kokone), has a "magic tablet" computer she uses to give life to various machines: notably, a blue toy dog named Joy, and a motorcycle named Heart. The king disapproves of Ancien bringing Heart to life, however, and confiscates her tablet and Heart and orders Ancien to be confined to her tower. Additionally, the society of Heartland is under threat from a gigantic monster of molten metal called the Colossus. The king builds giant robots to face the Colossus. Ancien, spying a motorcycle-driving subject of the king's named Peach, decides to ally with him and seek to defeat the Colossus together with him, while the king's chief adviser Bewan plots against the king and Ancien alike.
In normal Japan, Kokone is finishing up her school term, considering where to go to college, and reconnecting with old friend Morio who has returned from Tokyo from his first year in college. Kokone lives with her single father Momotarō; her mother perished in an accident while Kokone was still young, and Kokone complains that her father never told her much about her mother. Momotarō is an eccentric car mechanic and has a jacket similar to Peach's, a blue stuffed dog, a motorcycle, and a cracked tablet, all similar to the ones seen in Kokone's dreams. The situation takes a turn for the worse when Momotarō is unceremoniously arrested three days prior to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and accused of stealing the car company Shijima Motors' secrets. A suited figure who looks identical to the Heartland king's evil adviser visits the Morikawa home, and is overheard to be searching for both the tablet and Kokone. Via text message from jail, Momotarō warns his daughter not to trust the adviser, who is named Watanabe. The message includes a picture of a younger Momotarō, his wife, and Watanabe. With Morio's help, Kokone evades Watanabe and his men and recovers the stolen tablet and bear doll, driving away in the family's motorcycle. They also discover a business card for Isshin Shijima, the chairman of Shijima Motors, and consider visiting him for help after Kokone is told that her mother, Ikumi, was the daughter of the chairman. The two take a nap in the motorcycle, visit Heartland where they dream of the motorcycle soaring through the sky, and are surprised to find on waking up that the motorcycle has driven itself to Osaka overnight before running out of gas. Kokone's attempts to contact her father via the tablet seemingly fail, but surprisingly enough, the "magic" seems to work in the real world when a request to the tablet's e-Heart chat for train tickets results in an attendant giving them paid-for Shinkansen tickets to Tokyo. There, Kokone seeks an audience with the chairman, while Morio learns that mechanics from Shijima Motors were the ones who saw Kokone's message and had bought the tickets for the pair. The mechanics explain that after the chairman's daughter had a falling out with her father and eloped with Momotarō, they used this chat to keep in contact with Momotarō, who had been continuing his wife's self-driving car programming and research. Ikumi had run a project researching self-driving car technology years ago, but Ikumi's father, as chairman, refused her proposal at the time.
Kokone has a final dream of Ancien and Peach's adventures, but unlike earlier dreams, Kokone appears as a separate bystander rather than as Ancien. Ancien seeks to empower one of the giant robots with her magic tablet over the objections of the captain. While the empowered robot engages with the Colossus, the captain turns off the engines. Ancien frantically attempts to reignite the engines, but falls off the robot. Peach keeps her in his grip, but she loses her grasp. Appearing now as Ikumi (rather than a young Kokone), she swears to help out Peach one last time, then falls to her death and cracks the tablet's glass. Kokone understands that the bedtime stories she was told as a young girl of "Ancien and the Magic Tablet" by her father that she has been dreaming of were actually stories of her mother. Now, Shijima Motors has changed course and wants to use the once ignored technology to impress the world during the Olympics with self-driving cars, hence Watanabe's frantic hunt for the tablet. Kokone, prominently carrying Ikumi's old bear doll Joy, finds Chairman Shijima, who talks of his regrets. The action shifts to Heartland, where Bewan/Watanabe detains Kokone. He describes his plan to overthrow the King via letting the King's giant robots fail, and then to prominently save the kingdom with his own giant robot. The King orders Watanabe arrested, while Peach enters the remaining robot to do battle with the Colossus, which Kokone empowers with the tablet. Watanabe manages to emit a "curse" from his cell phone to sabotage the robot, and the kingdom is briefly engulfed in flames. Regardless, Peach and Kokone are able to prevail over the Colossus, albeit via flying into space and crashing back to Heartland. In the real world, Kokone and her father Momotarō are now stuck in the rafters of the building while Watanabe is carried off, and Momotarō is holding onto Kokone just as Peach once had for Ancien. The people beneath, and the self-driving motorcycle Heart, in seeming fulfillment of Ikumi's claim to be there for the family one more time when it is most needed, are able to drag a giant balloon into place; as the family falls, they hit every banner to slow their descent, and survive the fall thanks to the balloon. A safe Kokone, seeing the company's motto on the banners explains that her name must have been based on the company's motto, a combination of "heart" (kokoro) and "wing" (hane).
During the credits, scenes of Momotarō and Ikumi's courtship, and the original tests of her software, are shown.
Cast
[edit]Character | Japanese voice actor | English voice actor[11] |
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Kokone Morikawa/Ancien | Mitsuki Takahata[12] | Brina Palencia |
Morio | Shinnosuke Mitsushima[12] | Chris Niosi |
Ichiro Watanabe/Bewan | Arata Furuta[12] | Lex Woutas |
Momotarō Morikawa/Peach | Yōsuke Eguchi[12] | Doug Erholtz |
Isshin Shijima/King | Hideki Takahashi[12] | Paul St. Peter |
Joy | Rie Kugimiya[13] | Colleen O'Shaughnessy |
Kijita | Tomoya Maeno[12] | Wayne Grayson |
Sawatari | Wataru Takagi[14] | Mike Pollock |
Production
[edit]The soundtrack for Napping Princess was composed by Yoko Shimomura, known for her work in video game music such as the Kingdom Hearts series, Final Fantasy XV, Parasite Eve, Radiant Historia, and the Mario & Luigi series.[15] GKIDS released the English dub on Blu-Ray and DVD in North America on January 30, 2018.[16][17]
Spin-off
[edit]A short animated spin-off film,[18] Ancien and the Magic Tablet: Another Princess was made available on the Japanese version of streaming service Hulu to build anticipation for the movie release.[19][20] It was released on March 10, 2017.[21] It was also released on DVD.
Reception
[edit]In its first weekend of the Japanese release, Napping Princess was the 9th highest earner, and made ¥162 million (equivalent to roughly US$1.4 million).[22] In North America in limited release, the film grossed US$48,200.[23]
It was nominated at the 45th Annie Awards for Best Animated Feature—Independent. It was also one of five nominees for the 2018 Japan Academy Film Prize for Animation of the Year.[24]
References
[edit]- ^ "NY Int'l Children's Film Fest to Show N. American Premiere of Hirune Hime/Ancien and the Magic Tablet Anime Film". Anime News Network. January 19, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "Napping Princess aka Ancien and the Magic Tablet UK Cinema Release This Summer". Anime News Network. March 20, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "Purple Plan to Open Kenji Kamiyama's Napping Princess Film in Singapore, Malaysia". Anime News Network. April 20, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "Napping Princess aka Ancien and the Magic Tablet Listed for August 18". Anime News Network. May 16, 2017. Retrieved May 20, 2021.
- ^ "AnimeFest to Host Ancien and the Magic Tablet Anime Film's Main Staff Members". Anime News Network. February 2, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "Kenji Kamiyama's Hirune Hime Anime Film Reveals Teaser Poster, March 2017 Release". Anime News Network. July 12, 2016. Retrieved August 28, 2016.
- ^ "ひるね姫 知らないワタシの物語". eiga.com (in Japanese). Retrieved August 28, 2016.
- ^ Chapman, Paul (October 30, 2016). "'Hirune Hime' Director Kenji Kamiyama Speaks at Waseda University". Crunchyroll. Retrieved November 11, 2016.
- ^ "高畑充希が主人公名義で主題歌「デイ・ドリーム・ビリーバー」歌う/映画『ひるね姫』". moviecollection. 2016-11-24. Retrieved 2016-12-08.
- ^ "Hirune Hime Film's Trailer Previews Cover of The Monkees' 'Daydream Believer' Song". Anime News Network. November 24, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
- ^ "UK's Anime Limited Reveals Napping Princess English Dub Cast". Anime News Network. Retrieved 2017-10-22.
- ^ a b c d e f "Kenji Kamiyama's Hirune Hime Anime Film Adds 5 Cast Members". Anime News Network. November 8, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
- ^ "Rie Kugimiya Cast in Kenji Kamiyama's Hirune Hime Anime Film". Anime News Network. November 11, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
- ^ "Hirune Hime Film Casts Wataru Takagi as Sado". Anime News Network. December 5, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
- ^ Kingdom Hearts' Yoko Shimomura Composes Music for Hirune Hime Anime Film
- ^ Kamiyama, Kenji (30 January 2018), Napping Princess, Universal Studios Home Entertainment, retrieved 2018-01-30
- ^ Kamiyama, Kenji (30 January 2018), Napping Princess, Universal Studios Home Entertainment, retrieved 2018-01-30
- ^ "Ancien and the Magic Tablet Film Gets Anime Short in March". Anime News Network. February 8, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "『ひるね姫』スピンオフ「エンシェンと魔法のタブレット」 3月より配信決定".
- ^ "「エンシェンと魔法のタブレット」Dvdレンタルは4月5日開始 もうひとつの「ひるね姫」".
- ^ "Ancien and the Magic Tablet 2-Part Anime Short Debuts on March 10". Anime News Network. March 6, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
- ^ "『シング』アニメ激戦区を制して1位!実写版『3月のライオン』も初登場:映画週末興行成績|シネマトゥデイ".
- ^ "Napping Princess Box Office Mojo Listing". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 16, 2017.
- ^ "Japan Academy Film Prize (41st)".
External links
[edit]- Official website (in Japanese)
- Napping Princess (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Napping Princess at IMDb
- 2017 films
- 2010s adventure films
- 2017 anime films
- 2017 drama films
- Japanese animated adventure films
- Japanese animated drama films
- 2010s children's adventure films
- 2010s children's animated films
- Children's drama films
- Drama anime and manga
- Japanese adventure drama films
- Japanese animated science fiction films
- Japanese science fiction drama films
- Signal.MD
- Warner Bros. films
- Films set in 2020
- Animated films set in the future
- Films about virtual reality
- Films about dreams
- Animated films set in Japan
- Films directed by Kenji Kamiyama