Tatsuki Fujimoto 17-26
- टीवी सीरीज़
- 2025–
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ें8 short stories created by Tatsuki Fujimoto when he was 17 - 26 years old8 short stories created by Tatsuki Fujimoto when he was 17 - 26 years old8 short stories created by Tatsuki Fujimoto when he was 17 - 26 years old
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
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फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
A Dream Team Collaboration Worthy of Ghibli and Shinkai
The creative lineup behind this series is nothing short of jaw-dropping. At the helm is director Seijirou Nagaya, celebrated for his work on Chainsaw Man and The Heike Story. He brings that signature gritty realism and raw emotional energy that have become his trademarks, grounding even the most surreal moments in human truth. Every shot feels deliberate, textured, and alive, as if you could step into the world he's crafted and feel its pulse.
Overseeing the production is general director Noriyuki Takeda, whose legendary career spans some of Japan's most beloved films including Spirited Away, Howl's Moving Castle, and Weathering with You. Takeda's influence can be felt in the film's sweeping visuals and emotional precision. He infuses each scene with the kind of cinematic grace that turns animation into art, ensuring every frame glows with warmth, depth, and a painterly sense of movement.
Together, Nagaya and Takeda create a collaboration that feels almost historic in scope. Supported by a powerhouse team of Japan's most accomplished animators, color designers, and storyboard artists, the series achieves a rare duality. It feels both intimate and vast, capturing quiet personal emotions while unfolding across grand, cinematic landscapes.
Visually, it carries the timeless soul of Studio Ghibli's artistry, while emotionally it resonates with the sweeping, heartfelt scale of Makoto Shinkai's storytelling. The result is an experience that transcends genres and expectations, blending beauty and intensity into something entirely new. Every scene feels crafted with care, every moment charged with feeling, and by the end, it leaves you with the unmistakable sense that you've witnessed something extraordinary.
Overseeing the production is general director Noriyuki Takeda, whose legendary career spans some of Japan's most beloved films including Spirited Away, Howl's Moving Castle, and Weathering with You. Takeda's influence can be felt in the film's sweeping visuals and emotional precision. He infuses each scene with the kind of cinematic grace that turns animation into art, ensuring every frame glows with warmth, depth, and a painterly sense of movement.
Together, Nagaya and Takeda create a collaboration that feels almost historic in scope. Supported by a powerhouse team of Japan's most accomplished animators, color designers, and storyboard artists, the series achieves a rare duality. It feels both intimate and vast, capturing quiet personal emotions while unfolding across grand, cinematic landscapes.
Visually, it carries the timeless soul of Studio Ghibli's artistry, while emotionally it resonates with the sweeping, heartfelt scale of Makoto Shinkai's storytelling. The result is an experience that transcends genres and expectations, blending beauty and intensity into something entirely new. Every scene feels crafted with care, every moment charged with feeling, and by the end, it leaves you with the unmistakable sense that you've witnessed something extraordinary.
Absurd, Tragic, and Deeply Human
A Couple Clucking Chickens Were Still Kickin' in the Schoolyard blends absurd humor with a bleak sense of humanity's limits. What starts as a surreal spectacle slowly reveals something heartbreakingly real. The animation magnifies that tension, turning Fujimoto's dark wit into a meditation on compassion, cruelty, and the small dignity of survival. It's bizarre, funny, and quietly devastating.
The Japanese Love, Death & Robots - A Thrilling Ride of Imagination
This anthology truly earns the nickname "the Japanese Love, Death & Robots." Each of the eight shorts, written by Tatsuki Fujimoto, opens a door to a completely different world-one moment surreal and chaotic, the next intimate and human. From the frantic violence of A Couple Clucking Chickens Were Still Kickin' in the Schoolyard to the bittersweet absurdity of Love Is Blind, every story feels fresh, daring, and unpredictable.
What ties them together is Fujimoto's signature blend of raw emotion and visual invention. He has an uncanny ability to turn madness into meaning-to find tenderness in brutality and humor in tragedy. The result is an anthology that doesn't just entertain; it disorients, challenges, and moves you.
Each short bursts with its own rhythm and energy, yet together they form a cohesive exploration of love, loss, and the strange beauty of being alive. Fujimoto's worlds are filled with contradictions-violent yet poetic, absurd yet deeply human-and it's in these contradictions that his genius shines most clearly.
By the time the credits roll, you're left exhilarated and oddly reflective, caught between laughter and melancholy. Love, Death & Robots may have inspired it, but Fujimoto's vision pushes further-reminding us that animation can be as emotionally layered, unpredictable, and profound as life itself.
What ties them together is Fujimoto's signature blend of raw emotion and visual invention. He has an uncanny ability to turn madness into meaning-to find tenderness in brutality and humor in tragedy. The result is an anthology that doesn't just entertain; it disorients, challenges, and moves you.
Each short bursts with its own rhythm and energy, yet together they form a cohesive exploration of love, loss, and the strange beauty of being alive. Fujimoto's worlds are filled with contradictions-violent yet poetic, absurd yet deeply human-and it's in these contradictions that his genius shines most clearly.
By the time the credits roll, you're left exhilarated and oddly reflective, caught between laughter and melancholy. Love, Death & Robots may have inspired it, but Fujimoto's vision pushes further-reminding us that animation can be as emotionally layered, unpredictable, and profound as life itself.
A mix of sublime to stupid...
(18+) Some of these short stories were AMAZING! A couple were kind of stupid, too. Overall, I think "Shikaku", "Mermaid Rhapsody", and "Nayuta of the Prophecy" were brilliant, and it's worth watching this anthology just for those three! I wanted to face palm myself over "Sisters" though. Ugh. Anyways, I do recommend this title, there is a lot of good animation and stories to be experienced by watching it!
Check out my comprehensive list of Anime titles to find your next watch - just click my profile link at the bottom left of this review!
Check out my comprehensive list of Anime titles to find your next watch - just click my profile link at the bottom left of this review!
A Reflection of Fujimoto's Soul
These shorts feel deeply personal, as if Fujimoto poured fragments of his own identity into each story. In Shikaku, a young woman's emptiness echoes the universal fear of being unseen, while Mermaid Rhapsody explores the beauty and madness of love with eerie tenderness. Fujimoto shows that emotion doesn't need spectacle to feel profound - sometimes one quiet moment can reveal an entire world.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
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विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- आधिकारिक साइट
- भाषा
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- 藤本樹 17-26
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें
- रंग
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