Pokémon: Jirachi, Wish Maker
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Pokémon: Jirachi, Wish Maker | |||||
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Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | 劇場版ポケットモンスターアドバンスジェネレーション 七夜の願い星 ジラーチ | ||||
Literal meaning | Pocket Monsters Advanced Generation the Movie: The Wishing Star of Seven Nights Jirachi | ||||
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Directed by | Kunihiko Yuyama | ||||
Screenplay by | Hideki Sonoda | ||||
Based on | |||||
Produced by | Yukako Matsusako Takemoto Mori Choji Yoshikawa | ||||
Starring | see below | ||||
Cinematography | Takaya Mizutani Hisao Shirai | ||||
Edited by | Toshio Henmi | ||||
Music by | Shinji Miyazaki | ||||
Production company | |||||
Distributed by | Toho | ||||
Release date |
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Running time | 81 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese | ||||
Box office | ¥4.5 billion[1] |
Pokémon: Jirachi, Wish Maker[a] is a 2003 Japanese animated adventure fantasy film directed by Kunihiko Yuyama. It is the sixth theatrical release in the Pokémon franchise. It was accompanied by the short Gotta Dance.[b]
The film was released in theaters in Japan on July 19, 2003, by Toho. The English-language adaptation was distributed by Miramax Films and released direct-to-video on June 1, 2004. The events of the film take place during the sixth season of Pokémon: Advanced, being the first film to feature characters from Advanced Generation.
The featured song in this movie is Asuca Hayashi's A Small Thing (小さきもの, Chiisaki Mono) in the Japanese version while the English version, Make a Wish, was sung by Cindy Mizelle.[citation needed] The tune of this song is also used as the lullaby May and Max's mother used to sing to them when they were children. This is the first movie in which the original Japanese song is also clearly used in the English version, and the first time in which the names of the guest characters were the same in both the English and Japanese versions.[citation needed]
The movie's main location, Forina, is based on Wulingyuan, located in the Hunan Province of China.[citation needed]
Plot
[edit]The Millennium Comet, which appears in the night sky for seven days once every thousand years, is approaching. This is also when the Mythical Pokémon Jirachi awakens from its long slumber to absorb the comet's energy. This energy, in turn, brings life to the area known as Forina where it rests. This time, however, a magician known as Butler and his girlfriend Diane unearth the stone that encases Jirachi, and take it away from Forina.
Meanwhile, in celebration of the Millennium Comet's appearance, Ash Ketchum and his friends May, Max, and Brock arrive at a wide crater, which is where the festival of the Millennium Comet is meant to be. While they're sleeping, the festival arrives and they later watch as everything is set up.
At the festival, May buys a seven-panelled novelty that is said to grant a person one wish if a panel is closed for each night the comet appears and is visible in the sky. Later, Ash and Max accidentally volunteer for one of Butler's magic tricks after Max hears a voice coming from the rock Diane is holding. Max is introduced to Jirachi, who he hears talking from inside the rock. Butler lets Max take the rock, from which Jirachi emerges later that night. Hoping its wishing ability is true, Max wishes for lots of candy, and it appears – but it is revealed that instead of creating the candy, Jirachi teleported it from a stall in the festival.
The intentions of Butler are soon revealed: he was a former scientist for Team Magma who was seeking to resurrect the Legendary Pokémon Groudon. Butler had devised the perfect system, but could not find the necessary amount of power to fuel and was fired from Team Magma, to his humiliation. To try and fuel his machine again, he hoped to use Jirachi's energy for his own purposes. Seeing this danger, the Pokémon Absol, whose presence usually indicates impending disaster, arrives to help Jirachi and alert the group.
Butler attempts to harness Jirachi's power, but is interrupted inside the circus tent by Ash and his friends. With the help of Diane and Absol, they take Butler's bus to Forina so that Jirachi can go home; unknown to them, Butler's Mightyena places a tracking device on the bus as it is leaving. As Ash and his friends travel along bumpy terrain, the device falls off, but Butler still discovers where they are headed. Before the day Jirachi has to return, Max feels upset about losing his new friend, so Ash tells him about one of his friends, Misty, explaining that even though they don't see each other anymore, they will always be friends. Before the group can make it back to Forina, they realize that Butler had followed them there and set a trap. Butler manages to once again steal Jirachi in an attempt to take its power again.
When Butler sets his plan in motion, he is shocked to find out that his work didn't create a resurrected Groudon, but instead created a giant monster resembling Groudon. The fake Groudon soon begins to consume all of life by absorbing the energy from the surrounding area, turning Forina into a wasteland by killing all plants in sight and absorbing all living creatures, including May, Brock, and Team Rocket, who had followed them the whole way. When Diane is absorbed by the fake Groudon, Butler realizes his long-time relationship with her is what is more important, and with Ash and Max's help, he is able to distract the fake Groudon.
Eventually, Jirachi re-absorbs the energy used to create the fake Groudon, and uses Doom Desire to destroy it for good, before leaving for another thousand years of slumber. May, in all the excitement, forgets to close the last panel of her novelty, but simply brushes it off. Though she never reveals what she wished for, she is confident it will still come true. Before they leave Forina, Max hears Jirachi's voice one last time, reminding him that they will always be friends.
Cast
[edit]Character | Japanese | English |
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Ash Ketchum | Rica Matsumoto | Veronica Taylor |
Pikachu | Ikue Otani | |
May | KAORI | Veronica Taylor |
Max | Fushigi Yamada | Amy Birnbaum |
Brock | Yuuji Ueda | Eric Stuart |
Narrator | Unshō Ishizuka | Mike Pollock |
Jessie | Megumi Hayashibara | Rachael Lillis |
James | Shinichiro Miki | Eric Stuart |
Meowth | Inuko Inuyama | Maddie Blaustein |
Wobbuffett | Yuuji Ueda | Kayzie Rogers |
Butler | Kouichi Yamadera Kenji Nojima (young) |
Wayne Grayson |
Diane | Riho Makise Natsuki Yoshihara (young) |
Megan Hollingshead |
Bogie | Papaya Suzuki | Eric Stuart |
Jirachi | Tomiko Suzuki | Kerry Williams |
Absol | Megumi Hayashibara | Eric Stuart |
Flygon | Shinichiro Miki |
Reception
[edit]The film was a box office hit. It made ¥4.5 billion at the Japanese box office. It became the second highest-grossing domestic film of the year in Japan.[1]
Release
[edit]Home media
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2021) |
The original Japanese DVD and VHS were released on December 19, 2003 by Media Factory. The English dub was released directly to VHS and DVD by Buena Vista Home Entertainment on June 1, 2004.[2] This was the second Pokémon film (the first being Pokémon: Mewtwo Returns) to be released directly to DVD and VHS in the US. The film was released on DVD in the UK on October 23, 2006 to celebrate the Pokémon 10th Anniversary Tour in Britain. In the UK, the film was released by Paramount Home Entertainment.
The film has had a Blu-ray and DVD release in the US by Echo Bridge Home Entertainment on April 3, 2012, which is now out of print, as a Miramax Multi-Feature compilation with 3 other Pokémon films, Pokémon 4Ever, Pokémon Heroes and Pokémon: Destiny Deoxys.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Originally released in Japan as Pocket Monsters Advanced Generation the Movie: The Wishing Star of Seven Nights — Jirachi (Japanese: 劇場版ポケットモンスターアドバンスジェネレーション 七夜の願い星 ジラーチ, Hepburn: Gekijōban Poketto Monsutā Adobansu Jenerēshon Nanayo no Negaiboshi Jirāchi)
- ^ Originally released in Japan as Odoru Pokemon Himitsu Kichi (おどるポケモンひみつ基地, Secret Base of the Dancing Pokémon)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "2003年(平成15年)興収10億円以上番組" (PDF). Eiren. Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
- ^ "Sizing Up the Promise of Animation in Direct-to-Video". Animation World Network. Retrieved 2019-09-05.
External links
[edit]- 2003 films
- 2003 anime films
- 2003 children's films
- Animated films about wish fulfillment
- Pokémon films
- Toho animated films
- 2000s children's animated films
- 2000s children's fantasy films
- 2000s Japanese-language films
- Animated films based on animated series
- Miramax animated films
- Films directed by Kunihiko Yuyama
- Japanese sequel films
- Anime and manga about revenge
- Films scored by Shinji Miyazaki
- OLM, Inc. animated films