CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.2/10
1.5 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA famous movie producer gives her young production assistant a chance to direct his first film.A famous movie producer gives her young production assistant a chance to direct his first film.A famous movie producer gives her young production assistant a chance to direct his first film.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 4 nominaciones en total
Konomi Kohara
- Joelle Davidovich 'Pompo' Pomponett
- (voz)
- (as Tomomi Kohara)
Rikiya Koyama
- Boss
- (voz)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
What is a movie to you? What do you want while seeing a movie? Why are movies important? Why is filmmaking important? Why do people love filmmaking?
Movies are something that hold a huge meaning to me. A good movie has a power to make you happy, make you cry, make you think about situations of your own life or someone else's. A movie, if done right, can provide you different perspectives, inspiring characters and the right movie might potentially change your life. Just seeing the word "movie" generates a lot of different emotions inside me. A movie can generate dreams, emotions that you might need at the time. That's what movies are capable of. Just the fact that someone can write a fictional story and fictional characters and then make me feel for them, that alone astounds me.
I saw "Pompo: The Cinephile" today, and I connected with this movie more than I can describe. This is a movie for cinephiles. It's about a simple character who loves watching movies and writes notes about them, and he's given a role of a director. And it's just about him and his staff trying to make a touching movie that can resonate with their audience. This movie understands films. That's why I loved it. There are so many quotes here that I connected with. It understands the importance of a short runtime, perspective of viewers, a scene that defines the entire movie, an idea that builds the entire script, correct casting. How can viewers relate more to their story? Who is this story for? Do you see yourself in the movie? Which scene is important which isn't? How cutting a scene can provide a different perspective to the audience? As someone who loves movies, this movie was unbelievable, and the first perfect score I've given in a long time.
Movies are something that hold a huge meaning to me. A good movie has a power to make you happy, make you cry, make you think about situations of your own life or someone else's. A movie, if done right, can provide you different perspectives, inspiring characters and the right movie might potentially change your life. Just seeing the word "movie" generates a lot of different emotions inside me. A movie can generate dreams, emotions that you might need at the time. That's what movies are capable of. Just the fact that someone can write a fictional story and fictional characters and then make me feel for them, that alone astounds me.
I saw "Pompo: The Cinephile" today, and I connected with this movie more than I can describe. This is a movie for cinephiles. It's about a simple character who loves watching movies and writes notes about them, and he's given a role of a director. And it's just about him and his staff trying to make a touching movie that can resonate with their audience. This movie understands films. That's why I loved it. There are so many quotes here that I connected with. It understands the importance of a short runtime, perspective of viewers, a scene that defines the entire movie, an idea that builds the entire script, correct casting. How can viewers relate more to their story? Who is this story for? Do you see yourself in the movie? Which scene is important which isn't? How cutting a scene can provide a different perspective to the audience? As someone who loves movies, this movie was unbelievable, and the first perfect score I've given in a long time.
10perky_
I hate giving out 10/10 all Willy nilly and my opinion might lower in the future but for now I LOVE this movie. Idk I tried going into it unbiased and knowing minimal about this really only knowing the plot. But I got this feeling which I've gotten occasionally with other films like Tick Tick Boom & The Road To El Dorado where I knew personally I was gonna love this movie. And I did idk I just really really like this movie let me get into why. Ok so if nothing even if the plot was horrible I'd still recommend this movie for the visuals alone. This movie is a wonder to look at the animation is so fluid and the colors and characters are so pretty. And idk how they do it but they have this attention to detail with character design having characters whose eye sparkle and those who don't and some who get em later to spark like it's hard to explain without spoiling but it's great. The movie is also kinda meta considering this is a movie about making a movie and this movie had to get made ya know like it gets really meta when you think about it but I lowkey really like that about it like the fact this is movie literally ends 90 mins on the dot is actually wild you'll understand if you watch like it's absolutely great it gets its message across in that time like idk it shows how it's not hypocritical like it's just one of those things you have to watch to understand it's amazing. I also just connect with Gene as an artist and someone who wants to create for a living in the future like idk it's so hard to put into words just what this movie gets across to the viewer and it's lowkey really beautiful to me. So if your a creator in anyway shape or form I do recommend giving this movie a shot. But even aside from that it's such a quick watch and it's so pretty where anyone and everyone should give this movie a try even if you're just someone who likes movies.
Whoa a movie about cinephiles. Cinema Paradiso! Really need to watch it.
As an anime, the animation was amazing as expected. The transitions were smooth and cool. The part where Gene edited the movie was pretty dope, and it was the most exciting part of the story.
As a story tho, although I get the passion, I did not agree with all the messages. There's a discussion on the length of a movie between Gene and Pompo that I for sure do not agree. This point became significant later, and it annoyed be a bit.
I also found the message pretty surface-level. It's not a whole lot different from other movies about passion for something. This made the plot fairly predictable.
Overall, it's an okay and easy to digest anime. 6/10.
As an anime, the animation was amazing as expected. The transitions were smooth and cool. The part where Gene edited the movie was pretty dope, and it was the most exciting part of the story.
As a story tho, although I get the passion, I did not agree with all the messages. There's a discussion on the length of a movie between Gene and Pompo that I for sure do not agree. This point became significant later, and it annoyed be a bit.
I also found the message pretty surface-level. It's not a whole lot different from other movies about passion for something. This made the plot fairly predictable.
Overall, it's an okay and easy to digest anime. 6/10.
A miracle testament to the compulsion, craft, and sacrifice required in meaningful creative expression. Articulate, specific, and deeply felt while simultaneously concise and wholly unpretentious.
Actors, directors, editors, producers, even financiers are shown to be roles with potentials for excellence and passion in their own ways which deeply affect the subsequent work (srsly what portraits of creativity give credit to the financiers that take the leaps of faith that let the things get made in the first place). Accident and spontaneity are shown as inseparable parts of the creative process. Introspection and personal insights are shown to be the key to resonant art. These are very astute observations about filmmaking that I have heard echoed many times in interviews with my favorite artists, and to see them reflected in this random anime movie is so crazy to me. That's to say nothing of the tour de force the editing segment of this film is, which has a specificity that I could not be more grateful for.
For all the beautiful and astute things it has to say, it really is the energy and enthusiasm of this film that makes it so infectious and inspiring. Crazy what happens when you abandon ego and actually put unabashed artistry ahead of your own petty hangups (this being made in the same industry that produced Belle is some twist). Of course this all got wasted on animefan mouthbreathers, but this is the type of thing to blow the right minds in the coming years.
Actors, directors, editors, producers, even financiers are shown to be roles with potentials for excellence and passion in their own ways which deeply affect the subsequent work (srsly what portraits of creativity give credit to the financiers that take the leaps of faith that let the things get made in the first place). Accident and spontaneity are shown as inseparable parts of the creative process. Introspection and personal insights are shown to be the key to resonant art. These are very astute observations about filmmaking that I have heard echoed many times in interviews with my favorite artists, and to see them reflected in this random anime movie is so crazy to me. That's to say nothing of the tour de force the editing segment of this film is, which has a specificity that I could not be more grateful for.
For all the beautiful and astute things it has to say, it really is the energy and enthusiasm of this film that makes it so infectious and inspiring. Crazy what happens when you abandon ego and actually put unabashed artistry ahead of your own petty hangups (this being made in the same industry that produced Belle is some twist). Of course this all got wasted on animefan mouthbreathers, but this is the type of thing to blow the right minds in the coming years.
Ok so this was an anime that I really, really enjoyed. Happy I saw this in theaters because it's a movie for people who love the art of making movies. Now typically I am not a huge fan of anime, but this one was one of the few that surprised me. I thoroughly enjoyed the character development, and the japanese voice work was very well realized. The last anime movie I saw in theaters was Belle, which I also thought was exquisite. I highly recommend this to anyone who loves the movies, especially anime fans. 4 editing processes out of 5.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaPompo asserts that films that go over 90 minutes are insulting. This film itself is 90 minutes (excluding four minutes for closing credits).
- ErroresAt the end of the trailer for "Marine" that Gene edits, "Marine"'s release date is written with both the month and day written as digits, with a dot between them. That's how release dates are written in Japan, but it's not how they are written in the USA or other English-speaking countries, where the month is usually identified by name, not as a number.
This contradicts that "Pompo" is supposedly set in a parody of Hollywood and is inconsistent with the on-screen text, including in the "Marine" trailer, being in English.
- Créditos curiososAt the end of the closing credits is the logo for Peterzen Films, Pompo's film company.
- ConexionesReferenced in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Across the Crazy-Verse (2021)
- Bandas sonorasDance on Fire
[Opening Theme]
Performed by Seiko Niizuma
Lyrics by Shôko Fujibayashi
Music by Kenta Matsukuma
Arranged by Scrambles
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- How long is Pompo: The Cinéphile?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 164,528
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 28,406
- 1 may 2022
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 185,884
- Tiempo de ejecución1 hora 34 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.78 : 1
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By what name was Pompo: La magia del cine (2021) officially released in India in English?
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