5/11/2023 0 Comments 5 cm persecond![]() ![]() However, while the two film’s visuals are similar, everything that made The Place Promised in Our Early Days so impressive has been improved to the point of near perfection. In particular, 5 cm’s power lines, gorgeous portraits of cloudy skies, and ubiquitous use of lighting to set the mood will feel extremely familiar. Many will recognize the numerous similarities in style between 5 cm and Makoto's other works. Well, I seem to have been mistaken Makoto’s new visual masterpiece surpasses even his own monumental work. When I reviewed The Place Promised in Our Early Days several years ago, I said that the movie had the best animation that I had ever seen up to that point, and that the visuals would not likely be surpassed for some time. Makoto’s raw and heartbreaking material feels so personal and intimate that he could only be drawing from his own bittersweet memory. As Makoto continues to release these somber masterpieces, the fact that they must be partially autobiographical becomes increasingly clear. As a result, the final product feels positively amputated.Īs a whole, however, 5 cm is still a heartrendingly powerful work. Even more disastrously, the haphazard pacing actually serves to undermine the message that I think Makoto is going for. For one, the episode makes a key mistake of introducing a new character and then doing almost nothing with her. Sadly, I can’t help but believe that Makoto ran out of either time or funding, because the final arc is rushed and sloppy. Only the third and decidedly imperfect act prevents me from scoring 5 cm as highly as Makoto’s first two works. For the first two parts of the film, 5 cm meets and even exceeds Makoto’s former material. In 5 cm, however, Makoto finds the perfect mix the film manages to be wonderfully rich without having a trace of unnecessary plotting. If Makoto’s first two major stories had anything wrong with them at all, it was that Voices of a Distant Star was too simplistic and The Place Promised in Our Early Days had too much excess baggage. While 5 cm foregoes the science-fiction elements that Makoto is usually known for, the down-to-earth, slice-of-life story is never boring. These themes are no less powerful here than they were when Makoto first explored them, and should strike a chord in all but the most hyperactive viewers. No matter how cruelly fate intervenes, his protagonists cling desperately and determinedly to their love, as if it were a lone piece of driftwood amidst an angry and roiling ocean. Makoto is still very much obsessed with capturing the sheer, unrivaled beauty of an impossible love. If the film did not have a disappointing third arc, this would be his best work thus far and probably the best of the year.ĥ cm’s story will feel warmly familiar to those who have already had the pleasure of watching the director’s work. With 5 Centimeters per Second, Shinkai Makoto has polished the elements that made his previous anime so heartbreakingly poignant and produced a wonderful work.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |