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Galaxy Express 999

Original title: Ginga tetsudô Three-Nine
  • 1979
  • PG
  • 2h 9m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Masako Ikeda in Galaxy Express 999 (1979)
Adult AnimationAnimeHand-Drawn AnimationShōnenSpace Sci-FiActionAdventureAnimationDramaFantasy

The adventures of a brave young boy who travels from planet to planet in a determined quest to avenge his mother's death.The adventures of a brave young boy who travels from planet to planet in a determined quest to avenge his mother's death.The adventures of a brave young boy who travels from planet to planet in a determined quest to avenge his mother's death.

  • Director
    • Rintarô
  • Writers
    • Leiji Matsumoto
    • Kon Ichikawa
    • Fumio Ishimori
  • Stars
    • Masako Nozawa
    • Masako Ikeda
    • Yôko Asagami
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rintarô
    • Writers
      • Leiji Matsumoto
      • Kon Ichikawa
      • Fumio Ishimori
    • Stars
      • Masako Nozawa
      • Masako Ikeda
      • Yôko Asagami
    • 23User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos15

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    Top cast42

    Edit
    Masako Nozawa
    Masako Nozawa
    • Tetsurô Hoshino
    • (voice)
    Masako Ikeda
    • Maetel
    • (voice)
    Yôko Asagami
    Yôko Asagami
    • Claire
    • (voice)
    Miyoko Asô
    • Tochirô's Mother
    • (voice)
    Toshiko Fujita
    Toshiko Fujita
    • Shadow
    • (voice)
    Banjô Ginga
    • Captain of the Guard
    • (voice)
    • (as Takashi Tanaka)
    Yasuo Hisamatsu
    • Antares
    • (voice)
    Makio Inoue
    Makio Inoue
    • Captain Harlock
    • (voice)
    Tatsuya Jô
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Ryôko Kinomiya
    • Queen Promethium
    • (voice)
    Kaneta Kimotsuki
    • Conductor
    • (voice)
    Gorô Naya
    Gorô Naya
    • Doctor Ban
    • (voice)
    Noriko Ohara
    Noriko Ohara
    • Ryûzu
    • (voice)
    • …
    Ryûji Saikachi
    • Bartender
    • (voice)
    Hidekatsu Shibata
    • Kikai Hakushaku (Count Mecha)
    • (voice)
    Reiko Tajima
    Reiko Tajima
    • Queen Emeraldas
    • (voice)
    Kei Tomiyama
    • Tochirô Ôyama
    • (voice)
    Kôji Totani
    Kôji Totani
      • Director
        • Rintarô
      • Writers
        • Leiji Matsumoto
        • Kon Ichikawa
        • Fumio Ishimori
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews23

      7.42.5K
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      Featured reviews

      Meteru

      Get it on, bro.

      This movie inspired my IMDB name, Meteru. This, for some reason, appealed to me. Every 3 years, I see an anime that I'm really, really mad about, and this time it's GE999. Be forewarned- this film is very seventies. Bellbottoms are involved. There is scruffy, just-at-the-nape-of-your-neck-but-not-long-enough-to-be-cool hair. Some of the voice acting in the English version is really corny, albeit Saffron Henderson makes a good little boy. And some people interpret this to be a "children's" movie. Ladies and germs, this is not a children's movie. It isn't exactly "Orgasm in Demon City", as there is no nudity nor blood and guts. Some ignorant fools believe blood, guts and boobies are essential ingredients to Japanese animation. Go fig. Instead, this is a beautiful animation about a space-going train called the 999. Passengers are promised mechanical bodies that are practically immortal.Pain is deadened, but so is pleasure and purpose.

      And it's all up to young Tetsuro Hoshino to stop it. And he has to grow up, too. It has beauty, soul and a mind of its own, and that's more than most of us could say about the crap that's shoved down our throats these days. The End.
      lor_

      Minor Japanese animated space adventure

      My review was written in August 1982 after a Greenwich Village screening.

      "Galaxy Express 999" is an attractive Japanese animated sci-fi feature dating from 1979. One of the many hits in the genre in its domestic market, film was picked up for U. S. distribution by Roger Corman's New World Pictures in 1980 but shelved after test bookings. Sporting an effective English-language soundtrack, pic deserves a second look, with tv usage a strong possibility.

      Though the visual inspiration for "Galaxy Express" is from hit films such as "Star Wars", this episodic picture more closely resembles the format of Ray Bradbury's "The Martian Chronicles". Premise is to represent future concepts in familiar nostalgic forms. Thus the title refers to a vast space ship which looks to its passengers like a steam locomotive. Throughout the film, the visual mixture of the old-fashioned an high-tech creates comic juxtapositions.

      Story concerns an orphan named Joey, who encounters a beautiful blonde (Matel) who looks like his mother, killed years before per flashback) in a "people hunt" by the evil Count Mecca. The young boy, styled with his dark hair covering one eye (Veronica Lake-style) is bent upon revenge, riding with Matel on the Express to search for Mecca's TIme Castle on some distant planet.

      Stopovers en route bring him into contact with villains styled out of Westerns, pirate movies and other varied genres. After visiting the moon Titan circling around Saturn, duo visit the frozen planet Pluto, where humans' bodies are stored under the ice, after they have opted for immortality by taking machine bodies. The conflict between cyborgs (whose humanity is gradually draining away) and remaining human is the central theme, with the visuals making it understandable for younger viewers.

      Working in a limited animation format, the chief drawback of which is limited movement (backgrounds are static and key characters move minimally), the film does boast beautifully colored elaborate designs. Once one gets used to the lack of fluid, full animation, the imaginative visuals are impressive. Characters are practically all human or humanoid, with the Japanese animators typically using Caucasian models (all the better to match the American voice dubbing). Oddest touches, besides the use of misspelled English words worked into the animated designs, are an Ed Wynn styled voice for the Express's kindly conductor, and giving John Wayne's voice and gait to a good guy named Capt. Warlock. Violence and semi-nudity account for the basically children's film receiving a PG rating.
      billys

      Classic old-school anime from Leiji Matsumoto

      Fans of Matsumoto probably know him best from either his original mangas, or the mostly made-for-TV adaptations like "Space Battleship Yamato/Star Blazers" and "Captain Harlock." The man definitely had his own little enterprise there, with his own vision and style; for a while in the '70s he was arguable THE star creator of anime & manga (like Osama Tezuka before him, and Hayao Miyazaki after). I've never seen his stories in their original episodic TV form, just the impressive and emotional but maddeningly fragmented movie version of "Yamato" (edited down from an entire TV series into roughly two-odd hours). There is no such problem with "Galaxy Express 999," a feature film from 1979.

      Besides a cohesive storyline--involving scrappy young Tetsuro Hoshino taking a trip on the eponymous spacegoing locomotive along with enigmatic lady-in black Maetel, and kicking some major mechanical butt along the way for his dead mother--the movie has all the trademarks of Matsumoto at his best: wonderfully slinky old-school character designs, fanciful details and settings, a stylized, distinctly "vintage-futuristic" flavor (rather than the grungy postmodern cyberpunk variety made popular by "Blade Runner" and, in anime, "Bubblegum Crisis"); Matsumoto's obsession with vintage terrestrial vehicles streaking through space (the 999 is an old-fashioned steam locomotive-turned-spaceship, the Yamato is a resurrected WWII Japanese battleship-turned spaceship...one wonders if Leiji ever considered a "Galactic Land-Yacht Edsel"); even Leijiverse regulars Captain Harlock, one of the coolest anime characters ever, and Queen Emeralda figure into the story. A scene where the good Captain forces a belligerent android to down a bottle of rust-inducing milk is a classic--I can hear Japanese movie audiences cheering.

      Above everything else, "Galaxy Express 999" offers a kind of poetry in the imagery and the story, and an enormous reserve of humanity and unadulterated drama, that touches on very deeply embedded emotional buttons. Like the Yamato movies, I find myself feeling close to tears in several places. This is no empty thrill-ride anime where the mecha are the stars, but a bona-fide sci-fi drama featuring effectively "real people" with real concerns and intense feelings that radiate directly out to you--what the best anime are all about. See this one, definitely. The style (including that endearing '70s-rock end theme) may strike some younger otaku as quaint or even hard to deal with, but those who stay on the Galaxy Express 999 to the end of the line will be glad they did, experiencing a true anime classic, from a master of the genre, that has survived the test of time.
      9doctim850

      Weird

      One word can describe this movie and that is weird. I recorded this movie one day because it was a Japanese animation and it was old so I thought it would be interesting. Well it was, the movie is about a young boy who travels the universe to get a metal body so he can seek revenge. On the way he meets very colorful characters and must ultimately decide if he wants the body or not. Very strange, if you are a fan of animation/science-fiction you might want to check this out.
      zadkiel57

      classic

      this movie is a classic of the genre. deals with innocense lost, the idolization of parental figures, the journey myth. everyone in the movie, even the secondary characters, has an agenda and a complexity lacking most american live-action movies, let alone the animated ones.

      one of the best things about this movie is its use of iconographic imagery, the trains, the pirate ships. in the future where bodies can be replaced by machines without trouble, why not have trains and pirate ships. their allagoric status is made more powerful by their total out-of-place-edness within an outer space environment.

      what's more, their importance to the characters becomes clear. in a world where the loss of body can lead to the callousness displayed by the "evil" characters, and their eventual loss of inner humanity, icons of what it means to be human become that much more important. each character in this movie is ultimately looking for that which makes them who they are. the landmarks of their collective pasts as the human race are important.

      the best anime, in my humble opinion, is that which asks those questions because it is in the peculiar position of being able to explore it in fantastic ways. GE999 works well along those lines.

      *drops $.02 in jar*

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      Storyline

      Edit

      Did you know

      Edit
      • Trivia
        Janyse Jaud's debut and her voice is many TV series and films.
      • Goofs
        The length of the Galaxy Express 999 is inconsistent. A car count reveals that the number of cars varies from shot to shot.
      • Alternate versions
        Around 35 minutes was cut from the original for the New World Pictures's Roger Corman's release.
      • Connections
        Edited into Gamera: Super Monster (1980)

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • August 8, 1981 (United States)
      • Country of origin
        • Japan
      • Language
        • Japanese
      • Also known as
        • Galaxy Express 999: The Signature Edition
      • Production companies
        • New World Pictures
        • Nova Media
        • Ocean Group
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 2h 9m(129 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.33 : 1(original ratio)

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