Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey | |
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![]() Film Poster | |
Directed by | Tsutomu Shibayama |
Based on | Doraemon Long Stories: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey by Fujiko F. Fujio Pro |
Produced by |
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Starring | |
Music by | Katsumi Hori[1] |
Production companies | |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
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Running time | 84 minutes (1h 24m) [1] |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | $27.9 million |
Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey[lower-alpha 1] is a 2004 Japanese animated science fiction disaster film, based on the 24th and very final and last volume of the same name of the Doraemon Long Stories series. Directed by Tsutomu Shibayama, the film premiered in Japan on March 6, 2004. film also marks the 25th anniversary of the Doraemon television series on TV Asahi and the 25th Doraemon feature film. It is also the very final and last Doraemon film to be a counterpart of the 1979 Doraemon anime and include the original cast.
Plot
An elderly dog goes to a time machine, which he plans to use to drive to the future so he can meet with "someone" who gives him a kendama. However, the machine encounters "temporal turbulence" and goes haywire and the dog is regressed back to his infant state, eventually found by a researcher cat. In the present day, Nobita finds a stray dog drowning in a river while playing with Gian and Suneo by the riverside. Feeling sorry for the dog, he decides to take it home by hiding it in a "kennel on the wall" and names it Ichi (originated from "One", which is a homophone of the sound of a barking dog in Japanese), and secretly feeds it and plays with Ichi with his kendama to find. Soon after, he also adopts a stray cat named Zubu (or wet in Japanese, due to the discovery of it in a rainstorm). Eventually, Nobita's mother gets suspicious and checks in on Nobita's room.
To avoid being caught with Ichi and Zubu, he and Doraemon travel through The Anywhere Door to the Mountains, but accidentally finds more stray dogs and cats endangered by deforestation. With so many pets, Nobita and his friends decide to send them back in time, 300 million years ago, where there was no other living beings around. After using the Ray of Evolution to allow them to operate a food-making machine, they depart, with Nobita promising Ichi that he will return later. However, when they try to visit them the next day (from their point of view), they encountered a time-space anomaly, sending them crash landing 1,000 years after their original time-destination; to their surprise, they found out the dogs and cats have overused the Ray of Evolution which makes them evolved enough to form a civilized society that rivaled those of Future Society.
As the time machine is broken, they have to wait until it can be fixed. In the meantime, they explore the society, where they meet with a group of teenage thieves: Bulltaro, Duk, Chiko, and the leader, Hachi. Nobita is certain that Hachi is really bow bow Ichi in disguise, despite the difference in time. Nobita and his friends accompany the thieves in infiltrating an amusement park, where they believe is the location where the thieves' parents are held prisoner. Using a drill, the group arrives at a room containing a time machine, but the group is attacked by the guards and separated; Doraemon is stunned and taken by the guards while the rest are taken prisoner. Meanwhile, the government predicts a cluster of asteroids that will collide with Earth and to evacuate the citizens, they order chunks of Noradium, materials capable of building spacecraft to be sent to the government, but they are stolen by Nekojara, a treacherous high-ranking official.
Doraemon awakes to meet with Nekojara, who explains that he plans to use a Noradium-powered time machine to travel to the future so he can take revenge against humans for abandoning unwanted animals using the "devolve" function on the Ray of Evolution as written in a prophecy book written by his ancestor, Zubu. He manages to trick Doraemon to fix the ray after threatening to kill Shami, an idol cat who Doraemon falls in love with, who is actually his underling. After being freed from prison, the others stage a mission to rescue Doraemon and take the Noradium back. Doraemon manages to break the Ray of Evolution and escapes from the machine with Shami (whom Nekojara abandons) while Nobita and Hachi successfully stop the time machine from functioning. However, a meteor hits the machine and sinks it, rendering the Noradium unusable.
Hachi is also sent underwater and as Nobita rescues Hachi from drowning, Hachi learns that he is in fact Ichi and is the elderly dog shown in the beginning of the film. He remembers that he had stored a Nobita-shaped statue built purely by Noradium. The group takes the statue and delivers it to the government, destroying Nekojara's time machine and captures him and his underling along the way. The government successfully build several spacecraft and quickly evacuate the citizens right before the asteroids fall. As Nobita departs along with his friends in the repaired time machine, he bids Ichi farewell.
Cast
Character | Voice |
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Doraemon | Nobuyo Ōyama |
Nobita Nobi | Noriko Ohara |
Shizuka Minamoto | Michiko Nomura |
Takeshi "Gian" Goda | Kazuya Tatekabe |
Suneo Honekawa | Kaneta Kimotsuki |
Hachi/Old Ichi | Megumi Hayashibara Osamu Saka |
Chiko | Hitomi Shimatani |
Duk | Tomokazu Seki |
Bulltaro | Hisao Egawa |
Shami | Mika Kanai |
Nekojara | Shigeru Izumiya |
Nyago | Toshio Furukawa |
President | Tōru Ōhira |
Zubu | Yūko Mizutani |
Hachi's Mother | Keiko Han |
Tama | Nana Yamaguchi |
Nekojara's soldiers | Shin Aomori Shinya Ōtaki |
Secretaries | Kenichi Ogata Bin Shimada |
Advisor | Jun'ichi Sugawara |
Attraction Presenter | Shinichiro Ohta |
Policemen | Yuu Shimaka Kōzō Mito |
Fish Vendor | Takashi Taguchi |
Nyako | Yūko Satō |
Anchorman | Noritsugu Watanabe |
Nobita's Mom | Sachiko Chijimatsu |
Nobita's Grandma | Akiko Takamura |
Gian's Mama | Kazuyo Aoki |
Release
The film was released in Japan on March 7, 2004.
Reception
Doraemon: Nobita in the Wan-Nyan Spacetime Odyssey grossed a total of $3,755,037 in its opening week in Japan.[3] It was the second highest-grossing film in Japan in its opening week, only being beaten by The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.[3] The film grossed a total of $26,114,674 in Japan.[4]
Notes
Footnotes
- 1 2 3 4 Galbraith IV 2008, p. 431.
- ↑ English translation as shown on an official website for the 25th anniversary of the movie franchise.
- 1 2 "Japan Box Office: March 6–7, 2004". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
- ↑ "Nobita no Wan Nyan Jikûden (2004)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
Bibliography
- Galbraith IV, Stuart (2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-1461673743.