Be Forever Yamato (ヤマトよ
Be Forever Yamato | |
---|---|
Directed by | |
Screenplay by | |
Story by | Leiji Matsumoto |
Produced by | Tooru Yoshida[5] |
Starring | Kei Tomiyama Yoko Asagami Shusei Nakamura |
Music by | Hiroshi Miyagawa |
Production company | Academy Productions[a] |
Distributed by | Toei Company |
Release date |
|
Running time | 148 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | ¥2.5 billion[6] |
Plot
editThe Black Nebula Empire, last seen in Yamato: The New Voyage, lands a huge fortress on Earth and sends out an invasion force, while the Black Nebulan fleet wipes out Earth's space fleets. The fortress contains a bomb capable of destroying half the planet. The Nebulans threaten to use it if they are attacked.
The Yamato reaches the other side of the Black Nebula and finds a grand, white galaxy, similar to the Milky Way. They follow a beacon signal to a planet that looks just like Earth. They land, and are greeted by an apparently human woman, Sada, and two officers from the Black Nebulan Empire. They meet the Emperor, Scaldart, who also appears to be a human. He tells them that they are actually back in the Milky Way, in the year 2402. The vortex was a hole in time. The Earth has been under Black Nebulan rule for 200 years, and he is the (puppet) governor. Scaldart shows Kodai and the landing party all sorts of collections of Earth's famous artwork, and, up on the Yamato, the video screen scans the surface of the planet to find all of Earth's famous landmarks.
Scaldart shows them a time viewing machine which shows the history of the Yamato from 2199 up until the present. Then he shows them the future. The Yamato, orbiting the Earth, is destroyed by the enemy's flagship, the Grodaze, in 2402.
The landing crew returns, demoralized, to the Yamato... except for Sasha who seems to know her true destiny. She abandons the party and remains on conquered Earth. while alone on the surface, her mother Starsha appears in a vision. She tells Sasha that she was born between Iscandar and Earth, and that her destiny is to die far from both, in service of both.
Sasha manages to survive the incineration of the surface by escaping to the planet's lower levels. She finds a control center and sends a message to the Yamato, telling them that to destroy Dezarium, they must travel to the core through a huge conduit she is about to open. Scaldart announces after her message that if the Yamato proceeds any further, he will detonate the hyperon bomb on Earth.
The blast sets off an explosive chain reaction. The Yamato does a 180-degree turn and rushes out of the internal chamber, going to emergency warp when it reaches the conduit exit. Dezarium explodes behind them, destroying the delicate gravitational balance between the two sides of the Double Galaxy. They crash into each other, commencing the birth of a new galaxy.
Cast
edit- Kei Tomiyama as Susumu Kodai
- Shuusei Nakamura as Daisuke Shima
- Youko Asagami as Yuki Mori
- Akira Kamiya as Shiro Kato
- Banjou Ginga as Grotas
- Ichirô Nagai as Dr. Sakezo Sado
- Kazuo Hayashi as Yasuo Nanbu
- Keiko Han as Sasha(as the daughter of Mamoru Kodai and Starsha)/Mio Sanada(as the member of the family of Shiro Sanada)
- Kenichi Ogata as Analyzer
- Masatō Ibu as Heikuro Todo
- Michio Hazama as Narrator
- Mikio Terashima as Sho Yamazaki
- Miyuki Ueda as Starsha
- Mugihito as Kazan
- Nachi Nozawa as Alphon
- Osamu Kobayashi as Osamu Yamanami
- Shinji Nomura as Yoshikazu Aihara
- Taichirou Hirokawa as Mamoru Kodai
- Takeshi Aono as Shiro Sanada
- Tohru Furuya as Tasuke Tokugawa
- Tōru Ōhira as Skulldart
- Yoshito Yasuhara as Kenjiro Ota
- Yumi Nakatani as Sada
Production
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (June 2011) |
This movie was intended to be Space Battleship Yamato III.[10][11][12]
Reception
editHelen McCarthy in 500 Essential Anime Movies called it a "flawed masterpiece" and stated that "this movie is epic in every way. But its length is a problem - the ending is rushed and there are some plot holes that another half hour or so could have plugged".[13]
Notes
edit- ^ The studio went through numerous name changes, which are listed as follows for the sake of consistency with other articles listing the studio: Academy Productions (April 1973–July 1980); Tokyo Animation (July–August 1980); Office Academy (August–October 1980); Nishizaki Music & Video Corporation (October 1980–April 1983); West Cape Corporation (April 1983–August 1997).
References
edit- ^ ヤマトよ
永遠 に [Be Forever Yamato] (motion picture) (in Japanese). Event occurs at 1:32. チーフディレクター -勝間田 具 治 [Chief director - Tomoharu Katsumata] - ^ ヤマトよ
永遠 に [Be Forever Yamato] (motion picture) (in Japanese). Event occurs at 1:36.監督 -舛田 利雄 [Director - Toshio Masuda] - ^ ヤマトよ
永遠 に [Be Forever Yamato] (motion picture) (in Japanese). Event occurs at 1:16.監督 -松本 零 士 [Director - Leiji Matsumoto] - ^ a b c ヤマトよ
永遠 に [Be Forever Yamato] (motion picture) (in Japanese). Event occurs at 1:22.脚本 -藤川 桂 介 ,舛田 利雄 ,山本 英明 [Screenplay - Keisuke Fujikawa, Toshio Masuda, Eiichi Yamamoto] - ^ ヤマトよ
永遠 に [Be Forever Yamato] (motion picture) (in Japanese). Event occurs at 1:32. プロデューサー -吉田 達 [Producer - Tooru Yoshida] - ^
宇宙 戦艦 ヤマト大 事典 . ラポート. 1983. p. 137. - ^ "Be Forever Yamato". mania.com. Archived from the original on 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2009-10-19.
- ^ Bandai Visual. Product.bandaivisual.co.jp. Retrieved on 2011-06-15.
- ^ "Star Blazers: Space Battleship Yamato 3199 Now Available on Crunchyroll". Crunchyroll. Retrieved 2024-07-28.
- ^ The Making of Be Forever Yamato, Part 1. Starblazers.com (1979-10-23). Retrieved on 2011-06-15.
- ^ The Making of Be Forever Yamato, Part 2. Starblazers.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-15.
- ^ The Making of Be Forever Yamato, Part 3A. Starblazers.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-15.
- ^ McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 46. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
External links
edit- Be Forever Yamato
- Be Forever Yamato (anime) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Be Forever Yamato at IMDb