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https://blacknerdproblems.com/why-tokyo-godfathers-is-one-of-my-favorite-christmas-films/

On Christmas Eve, three homeless people living on the streets of Tokyo discover a newborn baby among the trash and set out to find its parents. Tokyo Godfathers is the acclaimed holiday classic from master director Satoshi Kon (Paprika, Perfect Blue), with script co-written by the legendary Keiko Nobumoto. For those unfamiliar, Kon was “a kind of the Stanley Kubrick of animation” as noted by a commenter on one of my favorite video essays about his work here

I’ve always been enamored with the way Nobumoto wrote humanity and personalities into the animated projects she worked on. Some of my favorites include Cowboy Bebop and Wolf’s Rain. Off jump, Tokyo Godfathers is a classic. It’s a critically acclaimed film, it’s a tour de force in the world of animation by way of Japan, and it has sincerely one of the best narratives about family in a film. 

Tokyo Godfathers (2003) also has one of the high honors of being one of my favorite Christmas movies. What makes a film a Christmas movie? Depending on how you might define it in your own understanding: The Christmas Story (1983), The Nativity Story (2006) and How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) are a few films that may make the cut. In the same breath, Die Hard (1988), Mean Girls (2004) and Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz (2001) may also make the cut. 
In my heart of hearts, this tragicomedy has always been a Christmas classic from the first time I watched it years ago, and I will tell you why. Tokyo Godfathers is one of the best Christmas films because it has a narrative focusing on family, on the audacity of hope, and features characters chasing redemption and working to put others first.

Note: This editorial will explore some plot points of Tokyo Godfathers. Please know that while I do not spoil the entirety of the film, certain details are revealed and elaborated on. To avoid any spoilers, please consider watching this amazing film and returning to read if this caught your eye!


Family, Matters

Tokyo Godfathers employs a trope that so many of us adore: the (found) family trope. According to the incredible online database TV Tropes, it is also alternatively referred to as Family of Choice. The website states that “Members of a Chosen Family mourn the lack of family in their lives and decide to build one of their own out of people they care for and who care for them in turn.“ This is true for our little family present in the film: a homeless bunch consisting of Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki. All three have circumstances that are hinted at why they aren’t with their families by blood. 

It is revealed that Gin once was married and even had a child, but his own vices destroyed his family life. He surprises the other two when he demonstrates how to change a diaper and how to fix a bottle of baby formula for the little one to drink. Hana, is a trans woman (voiced by Shakina Nayfack in the newer English dub restoration) who actually never knew her actual parents. She’s the one out of the bunch who feels the most sympathy for “Kiyoko,” the baby they find that she also names. The youngest of the three that found our mystery baby is Miyuki: our teenage runaway who actually still has a home to go back to but won’t. It is revealed later that her home life was tense and an incident she’s involved in caused her to leave home and stay far away from it.

The TV Tropes site also mentions: “To fill the vacant roles in their lives, some characters build their own families with people they choose to care about.” This rings true in the sense that as homeless people, the three are forgotten members of society. They mostly do their best to protect themselves, find food together, and avoid who would do them harm. Sadly, through each viewing I am reminded how their being homeless makes them less than in the eyes of many: their ordeal to find a happy ending for the little one means the three are constantly dismissed, belittled, harassed, ignored, and even physically beaten for the audacity of existing.

The Audacity of Having Hope

Christmas, while celebrated widely around the world, means something different to everyone, but the original Christmas story is most often the celebration of the Christ child. A baby born into the world to bring hope and salvation to a dark world. Children bring newness to the world, don’t they? In happier situations, babies are happily expected and celebrated. Their births bring happiness, light, and joy to those who receive them. Baby Kiyoko is the same with her pseudo family. There’s a line from the original subtitled version of the film where Gin (voiced by Tōru Emori in Japanese) says out loud “A child’s the only thing you hold dearer than life itself.” It is a poetically beautiful line that illustrates the start of the bond that our little crew gains with this lost child.

Tokyo Godfathers

The baby brings hope to the little family that finds her along with a bevy of mixed emotions. Gin, who was once a father, feels out of place whenever pressed too hard about his daughter and his life back then. Hanna, later thinks back on a life she had with a now deceased lover and the family she never was able to have. Miyuki, when comforted by a good Samaritan who breastfeeds baby Kiyiko, reveals how her own actions–an act of violence injured someone she loved. Having this baby in their presence eventually leads all three of them to come face to face with their pasts and their mistakes that have brought them to the now.

Redemption Comes in the Morning

Christmas, December twenty-fifth, is one the last major holiday before the year ends. To me the period of December twenty-fifth to January first has always felt like a magical, ethereal time period. For me, it has been a time to ponder about the person I wanted to be and start moving towards her. Whatever I failed at, I could try again next year. Whatever hurts I carried on my heart, I could work to drop them and focus on happier things in the new year. There’s a great line of poetry, a haiku actually, that Hanna drops in the film about the new year and wrapping up business and dealings. In Tokyo Godfathers, baby Kiyoko’s adventures with Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki take place during this time between the holiday and the rising of the new year’s day.

Perhaps one could look at this journey to personally reunite the baby with her parents as a selfish or even illogical course of action, especially when most would agree that dropping the baby off at a police station would do. But that won’t work, not according to Hanna. She’s of the mind that this little one will need a better memory for the future. She doesn’t relish the idea that Kiyoko will be told that her first Christmas will be spent at a police station where eventually she’ll be told that she was abandoned and found on the day. Caring Hanna is determined, hell bent, really to hear from the mother of the child, herself why this little bundle of love was abandoned. 

Tokyo Godfathers

Doing the right thing isn’t always the easiest task as Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki find out throughout the film. A trip to a hospital for one member of their family leads to a surprise family connection and reunion for Gin. Hanna in a calculated act of love purposely pushes Gin to be closer to this family member that they meet at the hospital. She gently tells young Miyuki that it’s the best course of action because people need to be with their families with the understanding that she’ll be left alone. It is a selfless gesture that startles Miyuki as she struggles to understand Hanna’s reasoning.

It is also a noble and heartbreaking moment that takes me by surprise with every viewing as it comes later in the film after I’ve emotionally bonded with this group and their mission. And yet upon relaxing a critical error when returning baby Kiyoko to her mother, the three regroup to right the wrong they have unwittingly done in the last act of the film. In the rising light of the new day of the new year, several souls are redeemed as everyone rushes to save not just one person but in a proverbial way themselves, as well.

Home is (Where your heart is)

What I love for our motley crew at the end of Tokyo Godfathers is that they learn that home is more so the people we love more than actual places. Back when our little family with Kiyoko in tow finally find the house in the photo of the baby’s parents, they are shell shocked to learn that it’s not only deserted but in the process of being torn down. Their last big lead is gone, and they sit about nearby listless and depressed until an incident sends them to the hospital. 

What a happy accident it is because it is where Gin reunites with the person from his past, she tells him that the house they once lived in is gone but offers up her contact info so they can stay in touch. Even Miyuki discovers over the course of the film that her family home is certainly a place but not a whole one if she’s not there, according to the ones who loved her first. 

At the end of the film, the audience is reminded that family is the people we choose. Yet family is also the people who chose us. That means the new families we make and the members of the ones that are left behind. One last twist reunites two families: two that were broken and also introduces to them the makeshift family that saved the day two times over. This hilarious and touching last moment ties together a film that continues to serve cinema by way of the Christmas spirit, in the best way.

Tokyo Godfathers works its magic with a story focusing on the importance of family and the audacity of having hope in dark periods of life. It is a brilliant film that features characters chasing redemption and working through selfishness to make it to the light of a new day for the sake of others. For these reasons, this is why Tokyo Godfathers stands the test of time, in my canon of favorite Christmas movies. I will turn to this film when I want evidence that miracles do happen and happy endings are not in short supply, waiting for those who least expect them.

Tokyo Godfathers

You can watch the original subtitled version of Tokyo Godfathers on Youtube and on the Tubi app

Cover image via Rotten Tomatoes

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The post Why ‘Tokyo Godfathers’ is One of My Favorite Christmas Films appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.

December 31, 2022

Why ‘Tokyo Godfathers’ is One of My Favorite Christmas Films

https://blacknerdproblems.com/why-tokyo-godfathers-is-one-of-my-favorite-christmas-films/

On Christmas Eve, three homeless people living on the streets of Tokyo discover a newborn baby among the trash and set out to find its parents. Tokyo Godfathers is the acclaimed holiday classic from master director Satoshi Kon (Paprika, Perfect Blue), with script co-written by the legendary Keiko Nobumoto. For those unfamiliar, Kon was “a kind of the Stanley Kubrick of animation” as noted by a commenter on one of my favorite video essays about his work here

I’ve always been enamored with the way Nobumoto wrote humanity and personalities into the animated projects she worked on. Some of my favorites include Cowboy Bebop and Wolf’s Rain. Off jump, Tokyo Godfathers is a classic. It’s a critically acclaimed film, it’s a tour de force in the world of animation by way of Japan, and it has sincerely one of the best narratives about family in a film. 

Tokyo Godfathers (2003) also has one of the high honors of being one of my favorite Christmas movies. What makes a film a Christmas movie? Depending on how you might define it in your own understanding: The Christmas Story (1983), The Nativity Story (2006) and How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000) are a few films that may make the cut. In the same breath, Die Hard (1988), Mean Girls (2004) and Gundam Wing: Endless Waltz (2001) may also make the cut. 
In my heart of hearts, this tragicomedy has always been a Christmas classic from the first time I watched it years ago, and I will tell you why. Tokyo Godfathers is one of the best Christmas films because it has a narrative focusing on family, on the audacity of hope, and features characters chasing redemption and working to put others first.

Note: This editorial will explore some plot points of Tokyo Godfathers. Please know that while I do not spoil the entirety of the film, certain details are revealed and elaborated on. To avoid any spoilers, please consider watching this amazing film and returning to read if this caught your eye!


Family, Matters

Tokyo Godfathers employs a trope that so many of us adore: the (found) family trope. According to the incredible online database TV Tropes, it is also alternatively referred to as Family of Choice. The website states that “Members of a Chosen Family mourn the lack of family in their lives and decide to build one of their own out of people they care for and who care for them in turn.“ This is true for our little family present in the film: a homeless bunch consisting of Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki. All three have circumstances that are hinted at why they aren’t with their families by blood. 

It is revealed that Gin once was married and even had a child, but his own vices destroyed his family life. He surprises the other two when he demonstrates how to change a diaper and how to fix a bottle of baby formula for the little one to drink. Hana, is a trans woman (voiced by Shakina Nayfack in the newer English dub restoration) who actually never knew her actual parents. She’s the one out of the bunch who feels the most sympathy for “Kiyoko,” the baby they find that she also names. The youngest of the three that found our mystery baby is Miyuki: our teenage runaway who actually still has a home to go back to but won’t. It is revealed later that her home life was tense and an incident she’s involved in caused her to leave home and stay far away from it.


The TV Tropes site also mentions: “To fill the vacant roles in their lives, some characters build their own families with people they choose to care about.” This rings true in the sense that as homeless people, the three are forgotten members of society. They mostly do their best to protect themselves, find food together, and avoid who would do them harm. Sadly, through each viewing I am reminded how their being homeless makes them less than in the eyes of many: their ordeal to find a happy ending for the little one means the three are constantly dismissed, belittled, harassed, ignored, and even physically beaten for the audacity of existing.

The Audacity of Having Hope

Christmas, while celebrated widely around the world, means something different to everyone, but the original Christmas story is most often the celebration of the Christ child. A baby born into the world to bring hope and salvation to a dark world. Children bring newness to the world, don’t they? In happier situations, babies are happily expected and celebrated. Their births bring happiness, light, and joy to those who receive them. Baby Kiyoko is the same with her pseudo family. There’s a line from the original subtitled version of the film where Gin (voiced by Tōru Emori in Japanese) says out loud “A child’s the only thing you hold dearer than life itself.” It is a poetically beautiful line that illustrates the start of the bond that our little crew gains with this lost child.

Tokyo Godfathers

The baby brings hope to the little family that finds her along with a bevy of mixed emotions. Gin, who was once a father, feels out of place whenever pressed too hard about his daughter and his life back then. Hanna, later thinks back on a life she had with a now deceased lover and the family she never was able to have. Miyuki, when comforted by a good Samaritan who breastfeeds baby Kiyiko, reveals how her own actions–an act of violence injured someone she loved. Having this baby in their presence eventually leads all three of them to come face to face with their pasts and their mistakes that have brought them to the now.

Redemption Comes in the Morning

Christmas, December twenty-fifth, is one the last major holiday before the year ends. To me the period of December twenty-fifth to January first has always felt like a magical, ethereal time period. For me, it has been a time to ponder about the person I wanted to be and start moving towards her. Whatever I failed at, I could try again next year. Whatever hurts I carried on my heart, I could work to drop them and focus on happier things in the new year. There’s a great line of poetry, a haiku actually, that Hanna drops in the film about the new year and wrapping up business and dealings. In Tokyo Godfathers, baby Kiyoko’s adventures with Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki take place during this time between the holiday and the rising of the new year’s day.

Perhaps one could look at this journey to personally reunite the baby with her parents as a selfish or even illogical course of action, especially when most would agree that dropping the baby off at a police station would do. But that won’t work, not according to Hanna. She’s of the mind that this little one will need a better memory for the future. She doesn’t relish the idea that Kiyoko will be told that her first Christmas will be spent at a police station where eventually she’ll be told that she was abandoned and found on the day. Caring Hanna is determined, hell bent, really to hear from the mother of the child, herself why this little bundle of love was abandoned. 

Tokyo Godfathers

Doing the right thing isn’t always the easiest task as Gin, Hanna, and Miyuki find out throughout the film. A trip to a hospital for one member of their family leads to a surprise family connection and reunion for Gin. Hanna in a calculated act of love purposely pushes Gin to be closer to this family member that they meet at the hospital. She gently tells young Miyuki that it’s the best course of action because people need to be with their families with the understanding that she’ll be left alone. It is a selfless gesture that startles Miyuki as she struggles to understand Hanna’s reasoning.

It is also a noble and heartbreaking moment that takes me by surprise with every viewing as it comes later in the film after I’ve emotionally bonded with this group and their mission. And yet upon relaxing a critical error when returning baby Kiyoko to her mother, the three regroup to right the wrong they have unwittingly done in the last act of the film. In the rising light of the new day of the new year, several souls are redeemed as everyone rushes to save not just one person but in a proverbial way themselves, as well.

Home is (Where your heart is)

What I love for our motley crew at the end of Tokyo Godfathers is that they learn that home is more so the people we love more than actual places. Back when our little family with Kiyoko in tow finally find the house in the photo of the baby’s parents, they are shell shocked to learn that it’s not only deserted but in the process of being torn down. Their last big lead is gone, and they sit about nearby listless and depressed until an incident sends them to the hospital. 

What a happy accident it is because it is where Gin reunites with the person from his past, she tells him that the house they once lived in is gone but offers up her contact info so they can stay in touch. Even Miyuki discovers over the course of the film that her family home is certainly a place but not a whole one if she’s not there, according to the ones who loved her first. 

At the end of the film, the audience is reminded that family is the people we choose. Yet family is also the people who chose us. That means the new families we make and the members of the ones that are left behind. One last twist reunites two families: two that were broken and also introduces to them the makeshift family that saved the day two times over. This hilarious and touching last moment ties together a film that continues to serve cinema by way of the Christmas spirit, in the best way.

Tokyo Godfathers works its magic with a story focusing on the importance of family and the audacity of having hope in dark periods of life. It is a brilliant film that features characters chasing redemption and working through selfishness to make it to the light of a new day for the sake of others. For these reasons, this is why Tokyo Godfathers stands the test of time, in my canon of favorite Christmas movies. I will turn to this film when I want evidence that miracles do happen and happy endings are not in short supply, waiting for those who least expect them.

Tokyo Godfathers

You can watch the original subtitled version of Tokyo Godfathers on Youtube and on the Tubi app

Cover image via Rotten Tomatoes

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The post Why ‘Tokyo Godfathers’ is One of My Favorite Christmas Films appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


December 30, 2022

Does Madmartigan Have a Role in the WILLOW TV Series?

https://nerdist.com/article/willow-tv-series-is-madmartigan-in-it-val-kilmer/

Spoiler Alert

Two hundred moons after the events of 1988’s Willow, a new Disney+ series with the same name steps back into the world of magic and adventure. The film ended with Elora Danan, the chosen one, safe and sound. But what happens when she comes of age? That’s where the Willow TV series picks up, exploring a world in danger from darkness. Willow Ufgood returns, as does Sorsha. They join a cast of new characters, including Sorsha’s children with Madmartigan, Kit and Airk. Madmartigan himself, however, has not appeared in the series. Despite that, we do hear about Madmartigan and even get introduced to an imposter in the series. Willow hints that Madmartigan is still out there. He’s alive. It’s just a matter of finding him.

Val Kilmer as Madmartigan in Willow
Lucasfilm

We learn Madmartigan left on a quest and never returned home. Though they had to move on, his family has had no closure. Kit and Airk, very clearly the progeny of the rogue-ish figure, comment on their missing father. Boorman, part of the quest to find Airk, is an associate of Madmartigan. The enigmatic adventurer has stories to tell, and Kit is ready to listen. She wants to find any clue that might explain why her father has been gone.

In a fun guest role, Christian Slater plays another associate of Madmartigan in episode six of the series. The trolls have kept him captive for 10 years. He introduces himself as Madmartigan, though obviously Kit and Willow know he’s an imposter. He claims he used the name to distract the trolls so the real Madmartigan could save the world. His real name is Allagash.

Showrunner Jon Kasdan shared of the role, “The idea immediately, once we saw where we were going with this, [is] there was a movie you never got to see… It came out in 1992, and it was The Adventures of Madmartigan, and it had Madmartigan leading a team of adventurers on a daring quest. And we thought, ‘Who would be in that movie?’ And Christian was the first name that popped into our heads.”

Christian Slater guest stars as Allagash, an associate of Madmartigan's, in Willow
Lucasfilm

Allagash brings Willow and the others to the door through which Madmartigan disappeared. Kit finds Madmartigan’s sword and even hears his voice calling for her in the Willow series. It certainly sounds like Val Kilmer, but it’s actually his son, Jack Kilmer. Madmartigan’s heroic theme from the original movie even plays a few times throughout these Willow scenes. 

In other words, Madmartigan’s presence looms over Willow even though he hasn’t appeared yet. During a recent press conference for the series, Kasdan even said, “Madmartigan is still out there. I’ve had many conversations with everyone involved, and our feeling is he is out there to be found, should the day arrive.”

The group of adventurers in Willow on horseback
Lucasfilm

Including the key character in the series was a conversation from the beginning. However, Val Kilmer, who portrayed Madmartigan in Willow, couldn’t make it to Wales for filming. That doesn’t rule out some kind of appearance in the future. And now that Kit hasn’t just heard tales of her lost father but heard his voice for herself, it seems all the more likely Madmartigan will turn up in the future of Willow.

New episodes of Willow air on Wednesdays on Disney+.

Originally published November 30, 2022.

The post Does Madmartigan Have a Role in the WILLOW TV Series? appeared first on Nerdist.


December 29, 2022

ELDEN RING: THE BOARD GAME Raised $4 Million on Kickstarter

https://nerdist.com/article/elden-ring-the-board-game-succesful-on-kickstarter-late-pledges-still-available/

Rise, Tarnished! There’s a new way to venture through the Lands Between of the much-loved Elden Ring game. A tabletop version is coming, and there’s still time to pledge your support (and runes) to the Kickstarter campaign. More than 13,000 showed their enthusiasm for the Elden Ring: The Board Game project, raising nearly $4 million towards the relatively modest $180,000 goal. So get ready for Elden Ring’s quests and open-world exploration to come to the realm of tabletop hex tiles, attack cards, and sculpted miniatures.  

The Elden Ring tabletop game comes with miniatures, cards, and hex tiles
Steamforged Games Ltd

The Elden Ring video game, which was just released in February 2022, blends two popular styles of fantasy. George R.R. Martin was involved in the world-building aspect, while Hidetaka Miyazaki directed the game itself. With that pedigree, it’s no surprise that it became one of the most popular and award-winning games of the year. Steamforged Games designed the upcoming tabletop version. The company previously brought Miyazaki’s Dark Souls board game to life. Now that the Kickstarter is successful, Elden Ring: The Board Game will debut around May 2024. But you can still be a part of the journey with a late pledge on several levels.

You can see the highly-detailed prototype Elden Ring board game in the gameplay clip above and unboxing video below. The main quest is called Realm of the Grafted King, but there are, of course, going to be multiple expansion packs. Steamforged Games promises over 90 hours of possible gameplay!

There is no shortage of tabletop adventures, with many more on the way. Besides the Elden Ring board game, we also recently saw the news that another popular property, Gloomhaven, is getting the tabletop treatment. It’s a good time to be a gamer ready to explore mysterious fantasy worlds. It’s also probably a good time to invest in a separate gaming table so the rest of your family can go about their normal lives while you and your fellow adventurers take on these quests. 

Melissa is Nerdist’s science & technology staff writer. She also moderates “science of” panels at conventions and co-hosts Star Warsologies, a podcast about science and Star Wars. Follow her on Twitter @melissatruth. 

The post ELDEN RING: THE BOARD GAME Raised $4 Million on Kickstarter appeared first on Nerdist.


December 29, 2022

‘The Quintessential Quintuplets Movie’: Comfort Food in an Anime

https://blackgirlnerds.com/the-quintessential-quintuplets-movie-comfort-food-in-an-anime/

Written by: April Prince

Harem anime is a big part of the anime experience. From traditional harem to reverse harem, fans of the genre like to sit back, relax, and watch a group of characters who fit into different archetypes fall in love with one clueless protagonist who doesn’t notice all of their friends are in love with them until the last episode. Or in the case of Quintessential Quintuplets, we get a nice movie to cap off the journey we’ve taken with these characters. So let’s see if The Quintessential Quintuplets Movie ends the story one a high note, or leaves romance at the door. 

Starting with the plot, the movie takes place in two different points in time. We open the movie before the wedding between our main character Futaro Uesugi and one of the quintuplets, but we’re not sure which one yet. We then flash back to the main characters’ time in high school, specifically to the planning of their school festival. This school festival ends up being the catalyst for Futaro telling the quintuplets that he has in fact fallen for one of them and he’s going to tell them after the festival who he has decided to pursue a relationship with. This gives us our mystery for the movie. Who does Futaro confess his love to, and which sister does he end up marrying? Thankfully all of the sisters decide to play a nice trick on Futaro by dressing up as five brides with matching attire. Gotta keep the mystery alive, right? 

The characters for Quintessential Quintuplets are so well defined and clear in their archetypes that it makes it easy to pick out one to identify with. This is especially clear when one looks at the Nakano sisters and how each one has different aspirations, interests, and personality apart from the others. This also gives viewers incentive to have one or more sisters to root for when it comes to who ends up with Futaro. The choice to make the movie a build-up to which sister Futaro ends up marrying lends itself well to how the sisters are portrayed. Not to be outdone, the man himself is quite the character. Futaro is an academically gifted young man who tends to lean into a blunt and straightforward approach to life. He can be full of himself, but that makes the moments where he’s open about his feelings hit that much harder. 

The movie has such a rich and inviting color palette. Everything feels like it’s been bathed in sunlight but in a way that gives the feeling of looking out the window in midsummer. The high-definition cinematic resolution means that everything pops even more. Adding even more to the cozy feel is the music. If you’ve ever watched Clannad, the music has something akin to that whimsical but comforting emotion behind it.  This makes this a comforting watch and could very feel become someone’s comfort film. 

Speaking to who this film is for, there’s the elephant in the room that this is the conclusion to a two-season series. So to be honest, there’s an entire history behind these characters that a first-time watcher would not be privy to if they were to jump right into the movie without watching the series beforehand. That said, if one were to be looking for a movie about a group of sisters who fell in love with their tutor, there’s enough substance there to enjoy the experience. However, it is advised that you go back and experience the story from the beginning afterward you see the movie. Knowing the dynamics of the cast makes each moment so much sweeter. 

All in all, The Quintessential Quintuplets Movie is an experience that’s leans into the warm and inviting. Where a lot of harem anime can lean into the back and forth between the love interests quite a bit, QQ tends to be more wholesome in its presentation, and the movie is no different. So, if you’re looking for something that’s easy going and more on the sweet side, this may be the movie for you. 

The filmed was first released in theaters in Japan in May 2022, while the United States had to wait all the way until December 2 to see the conclusion to the story. Though it’s sad to say goodbye to these characters, it’s nice to see Futaro find his one true bride, for the Nakano sisters to not only find a great tutor but a husband/brother-in-law, and that everyone was able to make it through their last year of high school — not to mention, at the end of the movie, the sisters are deciding on where to go for the honeymoon. So let’s raise a glass to the newlyweds and wish Futaro and the Nakano sisters a happy and prosperous future. 


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