Title
Sword of the Stranger
Director
Masahiro Ando
Studio
Bones
Release Date
9/29/2007
At a time of great stride and strife alike in the fields of film and animation, the temptation to look back at the cinema of years past is stronger than ever before, and the anime industry is no exception. Beginning this weekend, Masahiro Ando's Sword of the Stranger, an underrated classic containing one of the best sword fights ever put to animation, is returning to theaters in Japan.
Studio Bones — the creators ofFullmetal Alchemist, Mob Psycho 100, and Bungo Stray Dogs — produced this visceral jidaigeki (period drama) back in 2007. The film follows a young boy named Kotaro and his dog on the run when they encounter Nanashi, a ronin who agrees to escort them to safety while protecting them from the cult that wishes to sacrifice the boy.
Sword of the Stranger has been remastered in 4K and the film is back in theaters for two weeks. This limited run began on Sunday, April 14. To celebrate the release of this upscaled version, director Masahiro Ando spoke at the first showing at Cinema City's Cinema One in Tokyo.
Ando is a certified industry veteran whose portfolio spans many all-time greats. He was an animator on Evangelion and Ghost in the Shell, the animation director on the Cowboy Bebop movie, and he directed one of Bones' greatest romance stories, Snow White with the Red Hair, to name just a few. He's even directing an adaptation of 1978's Time-Patrol Bon this year, coming to Netflix on May 2. However, Stranger is often seen as his magnum opus.
Stranger was the first original film by Studio Bones, and in that vein, it feels so unlike most other anime films before or since. Despite its bloody spectacle and the occult motives of its antagonists, it's a fairly grounded action film with almost no supernatural elements. Its leads were also not the most conventionally cast. Tomoya Nagase, the voice of Nanashi, primarily acted in live-action. Likewise for Yuri Chinen, who was only 13
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