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The Cat Returns in Movie Theaters | Fathom Events
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The Cat Returns (Japanese: ?????, Hepburn: Neko no Ongaeshi, lit. The Cat's Repayment) is a 2002 Japanese animated fantasy film directed by Hiroyuki Morita, produced by Toshio Suzuki and Nozomu Takahashi, written by Reiko Yoshida, based on The Cat Returns by Aoi Hiiragi with music by Yuji Nomi, animated by Studio Ghibli for Tokuma Shoten, Nippon Television Network, Hakuhodo, Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Mitsubishi and Toho and distributed by the latter company. It stars Chizuru Ikewaki, Yoshihiko Hakamada, Tetsu Watanabe, Yosuke Saito, Aki Maeda and Tetsur? Tamba. A spin-off of Whisper of the Heart, it was theatrically released in Japan on July 20, 2002 through Toho and in 2005 in the United States through Walt Disney Home Entertainment. It received an Excellence Prize at the 2002 Japan Media Arts Festival. GKIDS re-issued the movie on Blu-ray & DVD on January 16, 2018 under a new deal with Studio Ghibli.


Video The Cat Returns



Plot

The story is of a girl named Haru Yoshioka, a quiet and shy high school student who has a suppressed ability to talk with cats. One day, she saves a dark blue cat from being hit by a truck on a busy road. The cat is Lune, Prince of the Cat Kingdom. As thanks, the cats give Haru gifts of catnip and mice, and she is offered the Prince's hand in marriage. Her mixed reply is taken as a yes.

Wanting none of this, Haru hears a kind, female voice, which tells her to seek the Cat Business Office. Haru meets Muta, a large white cat the voice told her to seek for directions, who leads her there to meet the Baron (the same Baron from Whisper of the Heart), who is a cat figurine given life by the work of his artist, and Toto, a stone raven who comes to life much like the Baron. Soon after meeting them, Haru and Muta are forcefully taken to the Cat Kingdom, leaving Toto and the Baron in the human world to follow the group from the air. The Baron and his crow friend find the entrance to the Cat Kingdom on Earth: Five lakes forming a cat's paw.

Haru is treated to a feast at the castle of the Cat Kingdom and she begins to slowly turn into a cat with tan paws, ears and whiskers, though still mainly human, so that she will make a suitable bride for the Prince. At the feast, the Baron (in disguise) dances with Haru as part of the entertainment, and reveals to her that the more she loses herself in the kingdom, the more cat-like she will become, and that she has to discover her true self. When the Baron is discovered and is forced to fight the guards, he and Haru are helped by Yuki, a white female cat who works as a servant in the palace and who had tried to warn Haru to leave the Cat Kingdom before she was taken to the castle. After Yuki shows them an escape tunnel, Haru, the Baron, and Muta move through a maze to a tower, which contains a portal to Haru's world. The King goes through a series of efforts to keep them in the Cat Kingdom long enough for Haru to remain trapped in the form of a cat and have her as his daughter-in-law.

Lune and his guards return to the Cat Kingdom to reveal the King was not acting on his behalf and that he has no desire to marry Haru; he has instead planned on proposing to Yuki. Muta is revealed to be a notorious criminal in the Kingdom (having devoured a whole lake of fish in one session), and Yuki as being the strange voice who had advised Haru to go to the Cat Bureau. In her childhood, Haru had saved Yuki from starvation by giving her the fish crackers she was eating, and Yuki has now repaid her kindness. Muta, or as he is known as the infamous criminal Renaldo Moon, tells Haru "I respect a woman who stands up for herself" after she rejects the King's marriage proposal outrightly and proceeds to help her escape from the King's soldiers.

Eventually, the Baron, Haru and Muta escape the Cat Realm, with the aid of Prince Lune and Toto, and Haru discovers her true self and tells the Baron how she has come to like him. He tells her, "Just for the record, I admire a young woman who speaks from the heart," and that when she needs them, the doors of the Cat Bureau will be open for her again. Haru returns to the human world with more confidence in herself; after learning that her former crush has broken up with his girlfriend, she simply replies "it doesn't matter anymore."


Maps The Cat Returns



Cast


The Cat Returns Blu-Ray review | Front Row Reviews
src: www.frontrowreviews.co.uk


Origin

In 1995, Studio Ghibli released a film entitled Whisper of the Heart, based on a manga by Aoi Hiiragi, of a girl writing a fantasy novel. Although the girl's life had no magical elements, the film featured short fantasy scenes depicting what the girl was writing of the Baron, a character of her novel, which were so popular that an indirect sequel was made, featuring the Baron and another girl, a high school student, named Haru. Muta also returned. The Cat Returns began as the "Cat Project" in 1999. Studio Ghibli received a request from a Japanese theme park to create a 20-minute short starring cats. Hayao Miyazaki wanted three key elements to feature in the short -- these were the Baron, Muta (Moon) and a mysterious antique shop. Hiiragi was commissioned to create the manga equivalent of the short, which is called Baron: The Cat Returns (??? ????, Baron: Neko no Danshaku, lit. Baron: The Cat Baron) and is published in English by Viz Media. The theme park later canceled the project. Miyazaki then took the existing work done by the "Cat Project" and used it as testing for future Ghibli directors -- the short was now to be 45 minutes long. Responsibility was given to Hiroyuki Morita, who had started as an animator in 1999 for the film My Neighbors the Yamadas. Over a nine-month period he translated Hiiragi's Baron story into 525 pages of storyboards for what was to be The Cat Returns. Miyazaki and Toshio Suzuki decided to produce a feature-length film based entirely on Morita's storyboard; this was partly because Haru, the main character, had a "believable feel to her". It became the second theatrical (third overall) Studio Ghibli feature to be directed by someone other than Miyazaki or Takahata.


The Cat Returns in Movie Theaters | Fathom Events
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Manga

Baron: The Cat Returns is a 2002 Japanese adventure fantasy manga written by Aoi Hiiragi and published by Tokuma Shoten and Viz Media.


Neko no Ongaeshi (The Cat Returns ) - Zerochan Anime Image Board
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Release

Box office

The film was the highest-grossing domestic film at the Japanese box office in 2002 and the 7th highest-grossing film of the year overall. As of January 5, 2015, is the 86th highest-grossing film in Japan, with ¥6.46 billion.

Critical reception

According to Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 90% among 20 critics, with an average rating of 6.9/10. Michael Booth of The Denver Post noted that "[Director] Morita has a slightly cruder, more realistic sense of the world and its looniness than does Miyazaki, and you can see where The Cat Returns moves on a different track even as it pays homage to Japan's current animation master."


The Cat Returns by DitaDiPolvere on DeviantArt
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References


Neko no Ongaeshi (The Cat Returns ) Image #124455 - Zerochan Anime ...
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Further reading

Anime

  • Arnold, Adam (March 2005). "The Cat Returns". Animefringe. 6 (3). p. 18. 
  • Jones, Tim. "Tim's Top 20 Favorite Anime of the 00's". T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews. 
  • Luther, Katherine (24 December 2011). "Favorite Family Anime". About.com. The New York Times Company. 
  • Non, Sergio (28 January 2005). "The Cat Returns". IGN. Ziff Davis. 
  • Santos, Carlo (31 March 2005). "The Cat Returns DVD". Anime News Network. 
  • Stanton, Hannah (26 August 2004). "The Cat Returns". T.H.E.M. Anime Reviews. Archived from the original on 11 October 2004. 
  • "Cat Moves". The Official Schoolgirl Milky Crisis Blog. Jonathan Clements. 31 December 2008. 
  • "Top 25 Animated Movies of All Time". IGN. Ziff Davis. 11 March 2008. p. 1. 

Manga

  • Webb, Jen (18 October 2011). "Baron: The Cat Returns". Teenreads. The Book Report, Inc. 
  • Arnold, Adam (April 2005). "Manga Shorts: Baron: The Cat Returns". Animefringe. 6 (4). p. 29. 
  • Chavez, Eduardo M. (15 March 2005). "Baron: the Cat Returns Vol. #01". Mania. Demand Media. Archived from the original on 10 June 2014. 
  • Contino, Jennifer M. (May 2005). "Baron: The Cat Returns". Newtype USA. 4 (5). A.D. Vision. p. 164. ISSN 1541-4817. 

30 Years of Ghibli: The Cat Returns รข€
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External links

  • Official website at Studio Ghibli (in Japanese)
  • Official website at Disney
  • The Cat Returns (film) at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
  • The Cat Returns at The Big Cartoon DataBase
  • The Cat Returns on IMDb
  • The Cat Returns at the Japanese Movie Database (in Japanese)
  • The Cat Returns at Rotten Tomatoes

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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