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Gedo senki (2006) More at IMDbPro »

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Overview

User Rating:
6.6/10   3,257 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 4% in popularity this week. See rank & trends on IMDbPro.
Director:
Goro Miyazaki
Writers:
Ursula K. Le Guin (novel)
Goro Miyazaki (screenplay) ...
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Contact:
View company contact information for Tales from Earthsea on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
29 July 2006 (Japan) more
Plot:
Something bizarre has come over the land. The kingdom is deteriorating. People are beginning to act strange... more | add synopsis
Plot Keywords:
Awards:
2 nominations more
User Comments:
Suffocated by its source material more

Cast

  (Credited cast)
Junichi Okada ... Arren (voice)
Aoi Teshima ... Theru (voice)
Bunta Sugawara ... Haitaka (voice)
Yûko Tanaka ... Cob (voice)
Teruyuki Kagawa ... Hare (voice)
Jun Fubuki ... Tenar (voice)
Takashi Naitô ... Hazia dealer (voice)
Mitsuko Baisho ... The Mistress (voice)
Yui Natsukawa ... The Queen (voice)
Kaoru Kobayashi ... The King (voice)
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Jeff Bennett ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Susanne Blakeslee ... Additional Voices (voice: English version) (as Suzanne Blakeslee)

Kathryn Cressida ... Additional Voices (voice: English version) (as Kat Cressida)

Willem Dafoe ... Cob (voice: English version)

Timothy Dalton ... Ged / Sparrowhawk (voice: English version)

Pat Fraley ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Jessica Gee ... Additional Voices (voice: English version) (as Jessica Gee-George)

Brian George ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Grant George ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)

Mariska Hargitay ... Tenar (voice: English version)
Jess Harnell ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Steve Kramer ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Matt Levin ... Prince Arren (voice: English version)
David Lodge ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Tress MacNeille ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)

Cheech Marin ... Hare (voice: English version)
Liam O'Brien ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)

Tara Platt ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Blaire Restaneo ... Therru (voice: English version)

Kevin Michael Richardson ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Mark Silverman ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Terrence Stone ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)

Karen Strassman ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
Russi Taylor ... Additional Voices (voice: English version)
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Tales from Earthsea (International: English title)
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Runtime:
115 min
Country:
Japan
Language:
Japanese
Color:
Color
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 more

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
Initially, "Earthsea" author Ursula K. Le Guin wanted Hayao Miyazaki to direct the film. At the time, however, the elder Miyazaki was tied up working on Hauru no ugoku shiro (2004), and thus could not come on board at the right time. Not wanting to pass up the opportunity to make the film, Miyazaki's son Goro Miyazaki stepped up to the plate and decided to make this his first film. more
Movie Connections:
Version of Earthsea (2004) (TV) more

FAQ

When will this be availible in America?
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24 out of 33 people found the following comment useful:-
Suffocated by its source material, 3 August 2007
6/10
Author: j30bell (j30bell@yahoo.co.uk) from London, England

Films experiencing production hell are rarely as good as they might have been, no matter how good the director is (c.f. Gangs of New York and AI) and this one is no exception.

Taken on its own terms, Tales of Earthsea is a competent, if not breathtaking, start for Miyazaki junior, and bears comparison to the lesser Gibli canon without scaling the heights of its major work. It is unfair to compare it to My Cousin Totoro, Spirited Away or Graveyard of the Fireflies; but it is also a shame for the fans of Earthsea. They didn't get a top director at the top of his game.

The principal problem with the film is that it doesn't seem to know what to do with the books it is based on. Are they source material to be pillaged? Are they stories to be adapted? Are they concepts to be explored? In the end Miyazaki opts for a mix: the narrative structure is broadly based on the third novel (The Farthest Shore), with a significant sub-plots from both the first (The Wizard of Earthsea) and the fourth (Tehanu). Into the mix he throws some recognisable manga/anime formulae (the arch-enemy; the ronin henchmen; the violence) which cut across the major themes explored by the novels and alluded to by the film.

If this all sounds like a disaster, it isn't exactly. The plot functions: evil wizard, through pride, upsets the balance of Earthsea forcing archmage, Sparrowhawk, in the company of a young prince, to do battle to restore the balance, destroy the evil and face down their own demons. Had Miyazaki been more ruthless all would probably have been well – for anime fans anyway. But there are too many blind alleys, lose ends and needless distractions – all nods to the books - which make the first half of the film in particular feel like a second rate brass band meandering painfully around a Brassed Off version of Adagio for Strings. The narcotic Hazia, for example, which dominates the beginning of the third story, is introduced early in the film and then simply abandoned. Later, Tenar's back-story fades into nothingness leaving the audience with a forcible impression of a producer impatiently looking at his watch. The whole effect is not homage, but distraction – and a film that it is at least 40minutes longer than it needed to be.

Ursula LeGuin, who wrote the Earthsea novels, had suggested to (Hayao) Miyazaki that he create new story for Ged, uncluttered by her previous stories, set in the many years between the first two books. This would have made for a less ponderous film.

Regarding the technical side of animation; it appears the younger Miyazaki was aiming for the dreamlike quality of animation so characteristic of his father's work. Again, he has some partial success in this regard, although it is undeniably more clunky than other Gibli titles. But a lot can be forgiven for his reliance on hand-drawn animation, and there are some moments of real beauty – windblown grasses, rocks on the seashore and chill sunsets. This, along with some strong characters and a much tighter second half, make Tales from Earthsea watchable film, if a slightly underwhelming one. But better than Disney. 6/10

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Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Gedo senki (2006)
Recent Posts (updated daily)User
From the books eldino26
Terribly underrated post-post-post-modern
So what happened at the end then?? (MAJOR SPOILERS) whyte-matt
A real film jii-virtanen
'the farthest shore' not 'tales from earthsea'... boltgod19
US Release? ladytheatrelover10
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