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Gridman Yashahime: Princess Half-Demon Harley Quinn Fena: Pirate Princess Blade Runner: Black Lotus 2022 Made in Abyss Shenmue: The Animation Lupin the 3rd Part 6 Housing Complex C 2023 Unicorn: Warriors Eternal My Adventures with Superman FLCL: Grunge FLCL: Shoegaze 2024 Lycoris Recoil Ninja Kamui Zom 100: Bucket List of the Dead Uzumaki TBA Lazarus Anime and manga portal Category Retrieved from "https://en. wikipedia. org/w/index. php?title=Blue_Exorcist&oldid=1212770578" Categories: Manga series2009 manga2011 anime television series debuts2013 manga2017 anime television series debuts2024 anime television series debutsA-1 PicturesAdventure anime and mangaAnime OVAs composed by Hiroyuki SawanoAnime composed by Hiroyuki SawanoAnime series based on mangaAnimeismAniplex franchisesComics about spirit possessionDark fantasy anime and mangaDemons in anime and mangaExorcism in anime and mangaFiction about CatholicismFiction about the DevilMainichi Broadcasting System original programmingMuse CommunicationShueisha franchisesShueisha mangaShōnen mangaToonamiViz Media mangaWorks about the IlluminatiHidden categories: CS1 French-language sources (fr)CS1 uses Japanese-language script (ja)CS1 Japanese-language sources (ja)Articles containing Japanese-language textCS1 Polish-language sources (pl)Articles with short descriptionShort description matches WikidataUse mdy dates from October 2012Commons category link from WikidataArticles with Japanese-language sources (ja)Official website different in Wikidata and Wikipedia This page was last edited on 9 March 2024, at 14:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4. 0; additional terms may apply.In the same way that it was easy to read Shinkai’s Weathering With You as a reflection of what it means to live in a world upended by extreme climate change, in Suzume, you can clearly see Shinkai grappling with the Great East Japan earthquake of 2011 that killed nearly 20,000 people, injured thousands more, and caused catastrophic damage across the country. Though Suzume never feels fatalistic or at risk of becoming lost in the darkness of its metaphor, it also never lets you forget that each and every single instance of the worm bursting through a portal carries the risk of causing a calamity like the real-world 2011 quake. But one of the most powerful concepts woven throughout the film is how the key to keeping the darkness at bay isn’t preparedness or simply responding with magical force but, rather, holding space and having a deep reverence for the past and all it can teach us about the present. There’s a certain degree of random and somewhat twee energy coursing through Suzume as it’s first laying out the series of events that leaves Sōta transformed into a walking, talking, child-size chair who needs Suzume’s help tracking Daijin across Japan’s various islands. But there’s a subtle brilliance to the way the movie uses the duo’s journey to illustrate different facets of its larger ideas about the past, memory, and growing up. In Suzume, Shinkai’s signature use of oversaturated colors and playing with light to give natural settings an almost otherworldly splendor is in full force. Here, though, it works more to emphasize the beauty there is to be found in everyday, ordinary places and happenings when people slow down to appreciate them as the things that make life worth living. At times, it’s almost disorienting how seamlessly Suzume’s able to shift gears and become more of a coming-of-age story about a girl learning to make her way through the world both on her own and with the help of unexpectedly kind strangers. But instead of ever feeling like it’s veering off course, Suzume’s paced in such a way that makes its brief tangents into the lives of other characters feel like it’s taking the scenic route on the way to a truly moving finale. Those showing up to Suzume hoping to see a completely new side to Shinkai might be somewhat disappointed because, in everything from its sun-drenched depictions of the Japanese countryside to its deeper metaphorical meanings, you can see how the movie’s the result of his doubling down on the things that light him up as a filmmaker. But that doubling down is also what makes Suzume feel like one of Shinkai’s strongest outings yet that’s almost certain to become even more of a classic with its wide release.
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