haikyu february 2024
Retrieved May 14, 2023. ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony (April 15, 2023). "Super Mario Bros Now At $87M: Best
Second Weekend Ever For Animated Movie & Illumination – Saturday PM Box Office". Deadline Hollywood. Archived from the original on April 16, 2023. Retrieved April 17, 2023. ^ Schley,
Matt (November 10, 2022). "Suzume:
Makoto Shinkai reigns supreme as master of visuals". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on November 24, 2022. Retrieved November 23, 2022.
She assures her young self the chair will provide her with the strength to overcome the tragedy and continue to grow. The young Suzume becomes energized and decides to leave the Ever-After and return (in the past), leading to her being found by Tamaki twelve years prior. Suzume and Souta leave the Ever-After themselves (to the present), with Souta returning to Tokyo, while Suzume and Tamaki return to Kyushu, revisiting the friends Suzume made along the way. Sometime later, back in her hometown in Kyushu, Suzume makes her way to school. To her surprise, she runs into Souta again, at the same location where they first met. Voice cast[edit] Character Cast Japanese English[4] Suzume Iwato (岩戸 鈴芽, Iwato Suzume) Nanoka Hara[5]
Akari Miura (young)[6] Nichole Sakura
Bennet Hetrick (young) Souta
Munakata (宗像 草太, Munakata Sōta) Hokuto Matsumura[7] Josh Keaton Tamaki Iwato (岩戸 環, Iwato Tamaki) Eri Fukatsu[8] Jennifer Sun Bell Minoru Okabe (岡部 稔, Okabe Minoru) Shota Sometani[8] Roger Craig Smith Rumi Ninomiya (二ノ宮 ルミ, Ninomiya Rumi) Sairi Ito[8] Amanda C. Miller
Chika Amabe (海部 千果, Amabe Chika) Kotone Hanase[8] Rosalie Chiang Tsubame Iwato (岩戸 椿芽, Iwato Tsubame) Kana Hanazawa[8] Allegra Clark Hitsujirō Munakata (宗像 羊朗, Munakata Hitsujirō) Matsumoto Hakuō II[8] Cam Clarke Tomoya Serizawa (芹澤 朋也, Serizawa Tomoya) Ryunosuke Kamiki[9] Joe Zieja Daijin (ダイジン) Ann Yamane[10] Lena Josephine Marano Miki (ミキ) Aimi[11] Mela Lee Production[edit] Development[edit] The 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami served as an influence for the film. The stranded catamaran Hamayuri [ja] in this aerial image taken in Ōtsuchi, Iwate became the prototype of the stranded vessel appearing in the afterlife scene. Makoto Shinkai conceived the idea for Suzume while he was traveling around Japan to give talks about his past works. He said, "In Japan, it is customary to hold a jichin-sai [ja] or groundbreaking ceremony, before construction begins on a new building or home, but we do nothing when we close them down. " Shinkai noticed that there were more empty or abandoned areas in Japan due to the country's declining birth rate and aging population, so he thought of writing a story about "mourning deserted places.
In a way, I don't really feel comfortable in the fact that I've actually enjoyed it (quite a lot, to be honest, as it can be delightfully funny (https://youtu. be/bHmBSfci0yE)1 and also very inspiring (https://youtu. be/a-SDwYnIDJ0)), since it can get pretty
misogynistic in the way it portrays
some women, and that the leitmotiv of the show is that the main character is always, somehow, better at their job than the women he confronts and flirts with despite not knowing anything about the subject in question at the beginning of the episode and that the . women are actually skilful and pundits at their respective fields.