Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba - En route vers l'entraînement des piliers
Titre original : Kimetsu no Yaiba Hashira Geiko-hen
NOTE IMDb
7,2/10
9,2 k
MA NOTE
Tanjiro suit un entraînement rigoureux avec le Hashira de pierre, Himejima, dans sa quête pour devenir un Hashira. Pendant ce temps, Muzan continue de chercher Nezuko et Ubuyashiki.Tanjiro suit un entraînement rigoureux avec le Hashira de pierre, Himejima, dans sa quête pour devenir un Hashira. Pendant ce temps, Muzan continue de chercher Nezuko et Ubuyashiki.Tanjiro suit un entraînement rigoureux avec le Hashira de pierre, Himejima, dans sa quête pour devenir un Hashira. Pendant ce temps, Muzan continue de chercher Nezuko et Ubuyashiki.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
Avis à la une
My daughter and I recently watched Demon Slayer: To the Hashira Train (2024) in theaters. The storyline follows brother and sister demon slayers Tanjiro and Nezuko, who encounter a demon that helps unveil new powers for Nezuko. A super demon, envious of Nezuko's abilities, hunts them down to steal these powers. We also get introduced to the Hashira Demon Slayers core, witness their powers, and they're sure to play a role in current events.
Directed by Haruo Sotozaki (Demon Slayer series), the animation and action scenes are absolutely elite. The first-person perspective in the run scenes felt three-dimensional, and many action scenes are captivating and impressive. The depiction of melting skin, display of powers, and cut scenes are brilliantly done. The demons and gore add to the overall experience, and the character interactions are magical, blending some nice comedy into the circumstances. While I'm still uncertain about loving the villain, I'm eager to see where the story goes. I do wish these movies weren't open-ended and essentially previews for upcoming series.
In conclusion, Demon Slayer: To the Hashira Train is a fun kick-off to the upcoming Demon Slayer series, featuring elite animation and character evolution. I would score this a 7/10 and recommend waiting for the entire series to be released.
Directed by Haruo Sotozaki (Demon Slayer series), the animation and action scenes are absolutely elite. The first-person perspective in the run scenes felt three-dimensional, and many action scenes are captivating and impressive. The depiction of melting skin, display of powers, and cut scenes are brilliantly done. The demons and gore add to the overall experience, and the character interactions are magical, blending some nice comedy into the circumstances. While I'm still uncertain about loving the villain, I'm eager to see where the story goes. I do wish these movies weren't open-ended and essentially previews for upcoming series.
In conclusion, Demon Slayer: To the Hashira Train is a fun kick-off to the upcoming Demon Slayer series, featuring elite animation and character evolution. I would score this a 7/10 and recommend waiting for the entire series to be released.
Just Got out of a Screening of Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba - To the Hashira Training
I don't know Anything About this, but it's been a Slow Weekend in the Cinema and I'm Eagerly Awaiting Dune 2 to be Released and after i watched that Absolute Joke that is Madame Web and the Snoozefest Anyone But You. I needed another Sit-down.
I liked it and Even though it's Episodic, from what I can Tell, the Characters and Lore are Really Good, here's what I liked -
1.🍃 Mist - Movement Training.
2. 💓 Love - Flexibility Training.
3. ⛎ Serpent - Sword Skill.
4. 🌾 Wind - Looked Like the Trainees were just Getting Whooped.
5. 🌜 Stone - Muscle Training.
My Favourite Part of the Entire Watch was this -
Overall, I Enjoyed it.
I don't know Anything About this, but it's been a Slow Weekend in the Cinema and I'm Eagerly Awaiting Dune 2 to be Released and after i watched that Absolute Joke that is Madame Web and the Snoozefest Anyone But You. I needed another Sit-down.
I liked it and Even though it's Episodic, from what I can Tell, the Characters and Lore are Really Good, here's what I liked -
- The Concept of This Demon Corps Hunting Down and Eliminating Demons.
- The Battles And Different Shots, Angles and Lighting were Great To Watch at Times.
- The Different Characters and Their Training Speciality.
1.🍃 Mist - Movement Training.
2. 💓 Love - Flexibility Training.
3. ⛎ Serpent - Sword Skill.
4. 🌾 Wind - Looked Like the Trainees were just Getting Whooped.
5. 🌜 Stone - Muscle Training.
My Favourite Part of the Entire Watch was this -
- One of the Plotlines of this Certain Powerful Character Who is Now Actively Looking for this Girl who has Somehow Conquered the Devastating Effects of the Sun.
Overall, I Enjoyed it.
If you came to this movie thinking that you wanted to see an uninterrupted sequence, no breaks, of the Swordsmith Vllg Arc, but on the Big Screen for all of that Grandiose Big Screen pleasure, you Win!! If you loved the Swordsmith Arc, and wanted to see it this way Or... if you failed to watch the Swordsmith Arc the right way, and need to re-watch it as a single movie and NOT separate episodes, again, you win!!
If, like me, you thought that they would pick up this great narrative storyline they have been crafting so perfectly and so sweetly for us and plunge us deeper into anime bliss, they don't. They move the narrative about 6 inches forward.
You might feel like the bus picked you up at your house, drove you in a circle, and deposited you 2 inches further ahead of the exact spot it picked you up. Almost nothing is advanced by way of narrative and storyline.
Let's say it like this; you feel hustled and cheated when it's over. Imagine if the new Star Wars movie was actually episodes 5-8 of last Summers's Mandalorian series on Disney!!
Not really a new movie is it if they attach some tiny little unremarkable filler stuff at the very end, and the movie then ends just like that!
If, like me, you thought that they would pick up this great narrative storyline they have been crafting so perfectly and so sweetly for us and plunge us deeper into anime bliss, they don't. They move the narrative about 6 inches forward.
You might feel like the bus picked you up at your house, drove you in a circle, and deposited you 2 inches further ahead of the exact spot it picked you up. Almost nothing is advanced by way of narrative and storyline.
Let's say it like this; you feel hustled and cheated when it's over. Imagine if the new Star Wars movie was actually episodes 5-8 of last Summers's Mandalorian series on Disney!!
Not really a new movie is it if they attach some tiny little unremarkable filler stuff at the very end, and the movie then ends just like that!
Now it's probably my fault, but I should have remembered after watching "Swordsmith Village" last March that this isn't a film at all, but the tail episode of a series (I hadn't seen) used to introduce the first episode of a new season (which I won't watch either) and so it didn't really make much sense. The ongoing training of "Tanjiro" as he seeks to become Hashira is mixed in with the continuing search for "Nezuko" and "Ubuyashiki" by the increasingly frustrated "Muzan". As with any serialisation, each episode is just a conduit to the next, so this film delivers very little by way of plot development. A tiny bit of closure is soon subsumed into an whole new set of challenges that will beset them as the next slew of episodes follow. Sadly, that means there's precious little story for us to get our teeth into and so we are really just left with some stylish and accomplished animation that we have all seen many, many, times before. As with last time, they didn't even bother to sew the episodes together properly, we get a credit roller amidst the thing. There are loads of interesting characters here but this film relies way too heavily on your having followed the strand elsewhere. As a stand alone piece of cinema, it's watchable, but pretty meaningless.
Tanjiro and his friends saved the swordsmith village and defeated two upper-ranked demons. While Tanjio is recovering, the Hashira are meeting to discuss Nezuko's recent ability to withstand the sun and Muzan's next move.
This movie is the next part in the Demon Slayer series and takes place right after the Swordsmith Village Arc. Unlike the Mugen Train movie, this one is more of a filler. The movie spends the majority of the runtime recapping the Swordsmith Village Arc. The remaining runtime does not expand too much on the story, and by the end, it is just a setup for the next arc. The movie is worth a stream for diehard fans and completionists, but it can be skipped for casual fans.
This movie is the next part in the Demon Slayer series and takes place right after the Swordsmith Village Arc. Unlike the Mugen Train movie, this one is more of a filler. The movie spends the majority of the runtime recapping the Swordsmith Village Arc. The remaining runtime does not expand too much on the story, and by the end, it is just a setup for the next arc. The movie is worth a stream for diehard fans and completionists, but it can be skipped for casual fans.
Le saviez-vous
- ConnexionsEdited from Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba (2019)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba - To the Hashira Training
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 17 657 658 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 11 505 414 $US
- 25 févr. 2024
- Montant brut mondial
- 44 354 825 $US
- Durée
- 1h 44min(104 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
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