Book Girl (film)

Book Girl

Theatrical poster
Japanese 劇場版文学少女
Hepburn Gekijōban Bungaku Shōjo
Directed by Shunsuke Tada
Produced by Masahito Arinaga
Takeshi Hashimoto
Katsumi Koike
Kenta Suzuki
Yuichirō Takahata
Screenplay by Yuka Yamada
Story by Mizuki Nomura (novels)
Starring Kana Hanazawa
Miyu Irino
Aya Hirano
Nana Mizuki
Aki Toyosaki
Daisuke Ono
Shizuka Itō
Mamoru Miyano
Music by Masumi Itō
Production
company
Distributed by Pony Canyon
Release dates
  • May 1, 2010 (2010-05-01)
Running time
103 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Box office 59 million yen[1]

Book Girl (劇場版文学少女 Gekijōban Bungaku Shōjo, Book Girl Film Edition) is a Japanese anime film directed by Shunsuke Tada and produced by Production I.G as a commemoration of Enterbrain's ten-year anniversary. The film is based on the light novel series Book Girl written by Mizuki Nomura, with illustrations by Miho Takeoka. It was released in Japanese theaters on May 1, 2010[2] and later released on Blu-ray Disc and DVD on August 27, 2010 by Pony Canyon.

Plot

Shortly after entering high school, Konoha Inoue (Miyu Irino) is recruited into the literature club by Tohko Amano (Kana Hanazawa), the president and sole member of the club, after he witnesses her ripping out a page of a book and eating it. Instead of eating actual food, Tohko can only eat stories by consuming the paper they are printed on. Konoha spends his days after school writing short stories for Tohko as "snacks". Tohko had previously set up a birdhouse on the school grounds so anyone could ask the literature club to help them in matters of love by submitting letters. Tohko and Konoha find a piece of paper in the birdhouse one day, but there is only a childish illustration on it. Tohko recognizes the drawing to be from the original manuscript of Kenji Miyazawa's poem "Songs of a Defeated Young Man". When Tohko finds the same image in the birdhouse five days in a row, they decide to stake out the scene at night, and they find Chia Takeda (Aki Toyosaki), a friend of Konoha's classmate Nanase Kotobuki (Nana Mizuki). She tells Konoha that the pictures are from Miu Asakura (Aya Hirano).

After New Years, Konoha goes to see Nanase in the hospital, who had fallen down the stairs. There, he finds Nanase confronting Miu, who had previously attempted to kill herself when she and Konoha were in junior high school. This was due in part to Konoha winning a new author's contest with his novel Similar to the Sky, which he wrote under the pen name Miu Inoue. Miu had wanted to enter and win, though in the end she only sent in blank sheets to make Konoha believe she had participated. Miu eventually tells Konoha that she hates him. Later, she escapes from the hospital, and Konoha goes to find her at the roof of their junior high school, where she had tried to kill herself. After explaining her reasons for doing so, Konoha agrees to jump from the roof with her. Just as they are about to fall, Tohko arrives and Konoha manages to prevent Miu from jumping. However, back on street level, Miu jumps in front of a truck and gets hit. Afterward, Miu seemingly believes to be a fourth grader and has lost most mobility in her arms and legs, but Nanase interferes, which makes Miu give up the ruse.

Tohko takes them to a planetarium and draws parallels between Konoha and Miu and the main characters in Similar to the Sky. Miu had always wanted to make people happy because her parents were always fighting as she grew up. Konoha tells Miu that he wrote the novel to tell her how much he loved her. Realizing that someone had loved her, Miu apologizes for everything she did to Konoha. When he realizes Tohko has disappeared, Konoha races to the train station and finds her there. She tells him that she got accepted to the university in Hokkaidō and that she can no longer eat his stories anymore. On the train, Tohko explains that she wants him to become everyone's author instead of keeping him all to herself. After Konoha departs the train, they have a final goodbye kiss and Tohko departs on the train. Years later, Konoha has put out his second novel titled Book Girl, and an editor comes to his house to read his newest work before it gets released. It remains unclear whether the editor is Tohko or not.

Production and release

The Book Girl film, animated by Production I.G, was produced by the Book Girl Production Committee, which includes: Enterbrain, Pony Canyon, T.O Entertainment, Lantis and Kadokawa Contents Gate. The screenplay was written by Yuka Yamada, and features character design by Keita Matsumoto, who based the designs on Miho Takeoka's original illustrations.[3] The art director for the film was Michie Suzuki and there were six animation directors: Kazuya Kise, Yōsuke Okuda, Keiichi Sano, Kanami Sekiguchi, Kyōhei Tezuka, and Yūko Yoshida. The music was produced by Masumi Itō,[3] with Masafumi Mima and Toshihiko Nakajima as the sound directors. Book Girl was released on Blu-ray Disc as a limited edition and DVD as limited and regular editions in Japan by Pony Canyon on August 27, 2010.[3] The film's theme song is "Haruka na Hibi" (遥かな日々 Distant Days) by Eufonius; the single was released on May 1, 2010 by Lantis.[4] The film's original soundtrack titled Musique du film was released on May 1, 2010 by Lantis.[5]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.