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Belle: The Dragon and the Freckled Princess

Titre original : Ryuu to Sobakasu no Hime
  • 2021
  • PG
  • 2h 1m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,0/10
19 k
MA NOTE
Kaho Nakamura and Takeru Satoh in Belle: The Dragon and the Freckled Princess (2021)
Suzu is a 17-year-old high school student living in a rural village with her father. For years, she has only been a shadow of herself. One day, she enters "U," a virtual world of 5 billion members on the Internet. There, she is not Suzu anymore but Belle, a world-famous singer. She soon meets with a mysterious creature. Together, they embark on a journey of adventures, challenges and love, in their quest to become who they truly are.
Liretrailer1:08
8 vidéos
99+ photos
Animation dessinée à la mainAnimeDrame pour adolescentsAnimationAventureComédie musicaleDrameFamilleFantastiqueMusique

Suzu est une adolescente qui vit avec son père dans une petite ville de la montagne. Dans le monde virtuel appelé "u", Suzu est Belle, une icône musicale.Suzu est une adolescente qui vit avec son père dans une petite ville de la montagne. Dans le monde virtuel appelé "u", Suzu est Belle, une icône musicale.Suzu est une adolescente qui vit avec son père dans une petite ville de la montagne. Dans le monde virtuel appelé "u", Suzu est Belle, une icône musicale.

  • Director
    • Mamoru Hosoda
  • Writer
    • Mamoru Hosoda
  • Stars
    • Kaho Nakamura
    • Ryo Narita
    • Shôta Sometani
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,0/10
    19 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Writer
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Stars
      • Kaho Nakamura
      • Ryo Narita
      • Shôta Sometani
    • 208Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 158Commentaires de critiques
    • 83Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 2 victoires et 23 nominations au total

    Vidéos8

    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:08
    Teaser Trailer
    English Dub Trailer
    Trailer 2:24
    English Dub Trailer
    English Dub Trailer
    Trailer 2:24
    English Dub Trailer
    Belle
    Trailer 0:33
    Belle
    Belle
    Trailer 0:31
    Belle
    Belle
    Clip 3:08
    Belle
    Belle: U (Music Video)
    Clip 3:29
    Belle: U (Music Video)

    Photos157

    Voir l’affiche
    Voir l’affiche
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    + 151
    Voir l’affiche

    Rôles principaux63

    Modifier
    Kaho Nakamura
    • Suzu
    • (voice)
    • …
    Ryo Narita
    Ryo Narita
    • Shinobu Hisatake
    • (voice)
    • (as Ryô Narita)
    Shôta Sometani
    Shôta Sometani
    • Shinjiro Chikami
    • (voice)
    Tina Tamashiro
    Tina Tamashiro
    • Ruka Watanabe
    • (voice)
    Lilas Ikuta
    • Hiroka Betsuyaku
    • (voice)
    • (as Rira Ikuta)
    Ryôko Moriyama
    • Yoshitani
    • (voice)
    Michiko Shimizu
    • Kita
    • (voice)
    Fuyumi Sakamoto
    • Okumoto
    • (voice)
    Yoshimi Iwasaki
    • Nakai
    • (voice)
    Sachiyo Nakao
    • Hatanaka
    • (voice)
    Toshiyuki Morikawa
    Toshiyuki Morikawa
    • Justian
    • (voice)
    Mamoru Miyano
    Mamoru Miyano
    • Muitaro Hitokawa
    • (voice)
    • …
    Sumi Shimamoto
    Sumi Shimamoto
    • Suzu's Mother
    • (voice)
    Kôji Yakusho
    Kôji Yakusho
    • Suzu's father
    • (voice)
    Ken Ishiguro
    Ken Ishiguro
    • Kei's Father
    • (voice)
    Ermhoi
    • Peggy Sue
    • (voice)
    • (as ermhoi)
    Hana
    • Tomo
    • (voice)
    • (as HANA)
    • …
    Mami Koyama
    Mami Koyama
    • Swan
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Writer
      • Mamoru Hosoda
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs208

    7,019.4K
    1
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    9
    10

    Avis en vedette

    5Rob-O-Cop

    A pretty miss

    I've enjoyed the last 3-4 movies from this director but this one was a misjudged sappy convoluted mess.

    It tried to marry the world of idol performers (a manufactured and manipulated and notably shallow world of selling music based on looks and marketing) to the struggles of youth in the modern world, and it just won't fit unless you turn off everything you know about social media, and manufactured entertainment. For a director who's made some smart and insightful dramas this one misses its target in the big picture although many of the details that make his previous films worthy are still here.

    There is a lot of japanese small town and city details that are rewardingly accurate and familiar. The images are fantastic (not photos as another reviewer criticised the film for, but just really good animation).

    The characters when they're not spreading on the cheese are more well rounded japanese people, until they're shifted into cliche, but they switch between the 2 regularly.

    It's like the film was directed by two directors, one making quality anime and the other making a greasy cheese sandwich. The end result is an uneasy mixture of the 2, and unfortunately the cheese is the overpowering taste left in ones mouth. I don't know what he was aiming for with this film but he made a move into hollywood and authentic japanese culture loses in that game.
    7Megan_Shida

    Looks Great! Cool Style!

    I really thought the animation was great and I loved a lot of the stylistic choices. A lot of the ideas involving the internet and music were also very cool. There is just A LOT going on with the story. There's a lot of elements of Beauty and the Beast, The Matrix, and other ideas and I don't feel like they always came together smoothly. All in, I'm happy to have watched it.
    6a-19899-62865

    hum...

    Sorry for my bad English. I'm not a Native speaker.

    Great image and sound mastering.

    Ordinary music arrangement and character design.

    But the plot... not great.

    Weak characterization and the topics changed around too fast makes it like an unfinished story.

    A little pity. ;-;
    7Quinoa1984

    Deeply emotional and cheesy in equal measure with consistently breathtaking animation

    Never tell anyone that you can't heap on the empathy in virtual reality by singing incredibly sappy and cheesy pop songs...

    There's a part of me that wants to rate this even higher, or even possibly lower. At times this is staggeringly gorgeous - and I'm not sure if I'm in a minority opinion that the scene scenes taking place in the real world are much more eye catching and appealing than those in the U Dimension (except for the climax, where it walks a tightrope of like Care Bears energy and one of the most heart-soaring moments in modern film, but again animated with emotional gusto, like that thing at the end of movies where everyone is there to applaud/say goodbye to the hero) - and at other times it's that mopey-dopey teenage girl stuff that's not my thing. Have you ever seen an Anime where the teenage heroine freaks out because (gasp) a boy maybe looked her way or (extra gasp) people may know who she is from a virtual reality world in the real one? Lots of that here.

    It's also completely open about it being so all-in on being Cornball and I admire and was involved by that. It may not address abuse and trauma and even grief necessarily in the most mature or well-rounded sense, but who would my old ass be to argue or look down if some young kid or teen somewhere found the messages about overcoming such rancid figures productive and meaningful (in real life as well as the web which is where all the horrors of the world multiply)?

    It manages to use the main empathetic meat of Beauty and the Beast, primarily the Disney one (they even copy, brilliantly, that one image of the Beast showing regret after kicking Belle out), while not making it so verbatim it neglects its own characters. I guess this is to say if an anime has to do an homage to that, might as well do it with a pop singer and a giant dragon!

    I'm not sure if it's great overall, and it's message about a daughter following in a mother's moral footprint is heavy - if, again, presented with a go for broke attitude for its emotional compass (this is BIG, and it's fitting if possible to see it in IMAX as I was lucky to do). I also wonder if it could bother to reckon with people living as a New Body in U. But I'll surely remember that little and pivotal scene where Suzu comes up with the song and how that is animated and edited is staggeringly good.
    8DoubleOscar

    Belle is a Feast for the Eyes and Ears

    Hot off the high from his first Oscar nomination for 2018's Mirai, Japanese director Mamoru Hosoda returns with a touching virtual-reality riff on the classic beauty and the beast tale. But don't let the familiar source material lull you into a false sense of security; Hosoda is not playing it safe just because he has a reliable tale to fall back on. In fact, after years of constant comparison to the films of Studio Ghibli and their unrivaled consistency and pedigree, it seems like the Oscar nomination may have renewed some confidence and ambition back into the veteran director.

    Like The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, this film follows another likable teenage protagonist, Suzu who, unfortunately, is unbearably grief-stricken after the death of her mother when she was six. After over a decade of lament, Suzu still has trouble understanding why her mother would put herself in the position that led to her untimely death. She often finds herself crying uncontrollably, only able to compose herself time and time again with the help of her longtime friend, Hiro.

    Suzu's relationship with her mother is portrayed through many wordless montages, only accompanied by the gorgeous work of the film's trio of composers, Taisei Iwasaki, Ludvig Forssell, and Yuta Bandoh. As devastating as it is to lose her mother, Suzu's grief is amplified by her own inability to find her singing voice again after the tragedy, despite her efforts. The despair and loneliness she deals with on a daily basis eventually lead her to try U, a new virtual universe that already totals over 5 billion users.

    U's technology works by conducting a biometric scan of its user, then creating a personalized avatar. For Suzu, her avatar appears as a beautiful and slender woman with pink hair, really only recognizable as Suzu due to the splash of freckles underneath her eyes. Once in cyberspace, the urge is irresistible. Suzu begins to sing-- And she sings beautifully. So beautifully in fact that it is only a matter of days before Suzu finds herself with millions of followers, all ready to pack virtual auditoriums as Suzu gives performances under the moniker of Belle.

    Described by Hosoda as "the one I've been wanting to make," the giddiness of a director finally allowed to make their long-gestating dream project is palpable onscreen, particularly in the film's virtual world sequences. In the real world, the animation is classic hand-drawn work, but in U, Hosoda translates the world's infinite possibilities into a spectacularly dynamic CG landscape, complete with a kinetic camera that swirls and moves in ways only possible in an animated world.

    If none of this so far sounds like the beauty and the beast you know and love, don't worry. The "beast" of this tale makes his grand appearance right at the end of the first act as he crashes through a giant dome that acted as a venue for one of Belle's performances. A figure only known as "The Dragon" is seen being pursued by self-proclaimed "Justices" of U. Though he is said to be wildly aggressive and ruining the sanctity of U, Belle immediately believes there is more to him than meets the eye, recognizing a pain that she herself has seen before. Intrigued by The Dragon, Belle suspends any future performances and instead devotes her time to discovering the identity of and connecting more with the mysterious beast.

    Outside of U, Suzu must balance her newfound stardom online with the meek reputation she has with real-life friends and classmates. Where the usual high school relationships and drama could, in the hands of a less skilled director, grind the imagination and creativity shown thus far to a halt, Hosoda surprisingly manages to make the grounded portions of his film just as engaging and playful as the virtual primarily by mining the material for a surprising amount of laughs.

    Where the film does falter a bit is with its final act, and while the two storylines are engaging in their own right, there is a feeling that they are too dissimilar to one another to possibly connect in a believable way by the end. And for the most part, this is true. The film employs some eye-rolling contrivances in its race-against-the-clock finale, but when the last scene's emotions hit and Suzu fully blossoms into the strong woman she knows she is, the machinations that led the film to that point are largely forgivable.

    When all is said and done, it is not going to be the final moments that stick with you from Belle. It's going to be the wonder and visual inventiveness of the virtual sequences -- the sprawling endlessness of the online world and the guiding hand of a director keen on pushing his film beyond that. Hosoda may have spent much of his career in the shadow of the great Studio Ghibli, but with Belle, he certainly makes the most of his chance at the spotlight.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Mamoru Hosoda and Jin Kim both had an admiration for each other's work. While Hosoda was attending the Oscar's ceremony for his film, Mirai no Mirai (2018) the two were able to meet for the first time. It was there the two said they would work together on a future project, which eventually became Belle.
    • Citations

      Hiro: Nobody in their right mind would ever guess that Belle's user is actually a mousy nobody like you from some remote town!

    • Connexions
      Featured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Talkin' Trailers (2021)
    • Bandes originales
      U
      Performed by Millennium Parade (as millennium parade) & Kaho Nakamura (as Belle)

      Music and Lyrics by Daiki Tsuneta

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Belle?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 14 janvier 2022 (Canada)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Japan
    • Sites officiels
      • Official Site (Japan)
      • Official site (United States)
    • Langue
      • Japanese
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Belle
    • sociétés de production
      • Studio Chizu
      • BookWalker
      • Dentsu
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 4 018 313 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 1 565 658 $ US
      • 16 janv. 2022
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 64 679 830 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
      • IMAX 6-Track
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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