Makoto Shinkai's The Garden of Words Trailer Posted With Sub
www.you-q.net anime wholesaler / 2013-03-05 |
CoMix Wave Films acquaint the aboriginal bivouac for administrator Makoto Shinkai's newest blur The Garden of Words (Kotonoha no Niwa) with assorted accent subtitles on Wednesday.
CoMix Wave describes the story:
We accept met, for anniversary of us to airing forward.
Takao, who is training to become a shoemaker, skipped academy and is abstraction shoes in a Japanese-style garden. He meets a abstruse woman, Yukino, who is earlier than him. Then, after alignment the times, the two alpha to see anniversary added afresh and again, but alone on backing days. They deepen their accord and accessible up to anniversary other. But the end of the backing division anon approaches …
Kenichi Tsuchiya is designing the characters and administering the action process. Hiroshi Takiguchi is confined as the art director, and Daisuke Kashiwa is basic the music. Miyu Irino and Kana Hanazawa banderole the casting as Takao and Yukino, respectively. Motohiro Hata contributes the affair song "Rain" with lyrics and music by Senri Oe.
Shinkai ahead wrote that The Garden of Words will be his aboriginal adventure about adulation in the acceptable Japanese acceptation of the word. Originally, "love" was accounting as "lonely sadness" (koi), and, according to Shinkai, the avant-garde abstraction of "love" (ai) was alien from the West. While his new blur is set in the avant-garde era, it will be about koi in the aboriginal "lonely sadness" acceptation — of anxious for anyone in solitude.
The blur will accessible on May 31. Midori Motohashi is adapting the blur into a manga in Kodansha's Monthly Afternoon annual starting in April.
Shinkai began his career by creating his own anime titles about singlehandedly — getting amenable for the writing, directing, and even voice-acting. He now works with CoMix Wave Films and added agents associates on anime projects. His titles cover She and Her Cat, Voices of a Distant Star, The Place Promised in Our Early Days, 5 Centimeters Per Second, and 2011's Children Who Chase Lost Voices.