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Wanpaku Ouji no Orochi Taiji
Rated: PG - Children
Status: Finished Airing
Source: Original
Score: 6.37
Rank: 7855
Popularity: 9811
Susanoo, the youngest child of the creation gods Izanagi and Izanami, is a mighty warrior, easily able to defeat tigers with his bare hands. After his mother dies, Susanoo is devastated. Determined to travel to Heaven to find her, he carves a boat out of a tree, and along with his rabbit companion, Akahana, he prepares to cross the ocean. As Susanoo does not know how to reach Heaven, he first visits his brother, Tsukuyomi, leader of the Night Kingdom, and his sister, Amaterasu, leader of the Light Kingdom. While his siblings can warn Susanoo of the dangers he faces, they are unable to stop him or provide him with the directions to Heaven. As Susanoo continues his journey to the ends of the Earth, Orochi, an eight-headed dragon, awakens to stand in Susanoo's path. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
Susanoo
Main
Review
IantheSilverfire
I've forgotten how I stumbled upon this film, but I was very surprised by what I saw. It lacks in many ways. Story, sound, character. It's a basic retelling of the mythos of Susano'o. Although, making him a more likable character. But the art! Oh my, the art! It's absolutely beautiful. I love animation of all kinds. I don't care where it's from, I love animation. The techniques, the history. I see on Wikipedia that when this first came out it made quite the splash in animation circles and I can see why! The scene with the dancer luring Amaterasu out of her cave, andof Orochi drinking the sake. And the fight with Orochi was truly something to behold! For anyone on their own journey into a love of animation I would highly recommend this film. Fair warning there are some standard old school prejudices on display.
AlanDSouza1
After five films trying to imitate the whirlwind success of Disney for Japanese audiences that disappointed my expectations in one way or another, TOEI doga finally find their footing and discover a unique identity that would lay the seeds for modern anime, dramatic and complex battle choreography and perhaps most modern Kaiju movies. Susanoo and the Yamato no Orochi sets its sights on portraying the creation story at the center of Japanese myth itself - Susanoo's search for his mother, the female creator of the Island Nation, Izanami, who departed into heaven. Susanoo is a herculean individual who fails to comprehend the vastness of his ownphysical strength and how it puts him at odds with the relatively fragile world around him. At the same time, a veil of innocence shields his mind from the deeper truths of the world and bolsters his bull headed optimism. The writers of this movie finally managed to crack the code of the perfect balance in narrative progression and the need to water down the ideas for younger audience. The Disney inspired background characters that have been a forceful addition to most of the previous TOEI doga films take a backseat and Susanoo ends up with just a single animal companion, whose presence does not interfere with the broader narrative focus of the film. The story is constantly fixtured on Susanoo himself, and the journey of his increasing collection of companions until he encounters the titular Yamata no Orochi - a Japanese mythological demon with some physiological similarities to the hydra. The reveal of this particular demon itself, was one of the most amazing sequences ever brought to realization in Japanese animation. A long sequence in poorly lit dusk lingers on the vast shadows of the eight gigantic serpent heads as the battle music reminiscent of world War 2 propaganda films slowly builds tension and emphasizes the sheer scale of this tyrannical opponent.