Bubble | |||||
Native Name: |
| ||||
Director: | Tetsurō Araki | ||||
Music: | Hiroyuki Sawano | ||||
Cinematography: | Kazuhiro Yamada | ||||
Editing: | Aya Hida | ||||
Studio: | Wit Studio | ||||
Runtime: | 100 minutes | ||||
Country: | Japan | ||||
Language: | Japanese | ||||
Gross: | $509,309[1] |
is a 2022 Japanese animated post-apocalyptic film produced by Wit Studio. It is directed by Tetsurō Araki and written by Gen Urobuchi with character designs by Takeshi Obata and music composed by Hiroyuki Sawano. The film had early screenings at the Berlin International Film Festival on February 10, 2022. It was followed by its worldwide release on Netflix on April 28, 2022, before it was released theatrically in Japan in May.[2] [3] [4] A manga adaptation of the film by Erubo Hijihara was serialized in Shōnen Jump+ from April 22 to May 23, 2022.[5] [6]
In the near future, the world is overcome by bubbles that break the laws of reality. An explosion at Tokyo Tower concentrates all the bubbles in Tokyo, but makes the city uninhabitable. Various young folk defy the restrictions, and live there anyway, using parkour tournaments as a means to barter and trade supplies. In one parkour team, the Blue Blazes, 18-year-old Hibiki is an exceptional parkour talent, but he avoids others due to a hearing ultrasensitivity. Tokyo Tower continues to be an impossible location to get to because of gravity anomalies.
One day, Hibiki attempts to climb the tower because he hears a woman's song, and believes he sees a boy there. He almost makes it, but ends up falling into the ocean, where his final exhale combines with some of the bubbles to make a young girl. She is clearly new to being a human, but learns quickly from others. Hibiki names her "Uta" ("Song") because she knows the song he hears in his head. Uta and Hibiki train parkour together, beating a team called the Morticians/Undertakers, however, in one final catch, when Uta touches Hibiki, her arm fades away into bubbles. Bubble activity starts up again, so the Tokyo residents need to flee. Uta goes to Tokyo Tower to stop it. Hibiki goes to save her.
In the final scene they save each other, but Uta fades into bubbles as in the original fairy tale from Hans Christian Andersen: "The Little Mermaid." In her final breath, she tells Hibiki that he made it worth it for her to be human. With the bubbles gone, the citizens of Tokyo return and start to rebuild. The parkour teams continue their lives too. Whether real or imagined, in the end credits Hibiki is still continuing to do parkour and there is a bubble following him which could imply it is Uta.
Character | Japanese voice | English voice[7] | |
---|---|---|---|
Hibiki | Jun Shison[8] | Zach Aguilar | |
Hibiki (young) | Jeannie Tirado | ||
Uta | Riria | Emi Lo | |
Makoto | Alice Hirose[9] | Erica Lindbeck | |
Shin | Mamoru Miyano | Keith Silverstein | |
Kai | Yuki Kaji | Robbie Daymond | |
Usagi | Sayaka Senbongi | Laura Stahl | |
Denki Ninja | Tasuku Hatanaka | Kyle McCarley | |
Undertaker Leader | Marina Inoue | Cristina Vee | |
Kantō Mad Lobster | Shin-ichiro Miki | Chris Jai Alex |
The film's score is composed by Hiroyuki Sawano. The opening theme song is "Bubble feat. Uta" performed by Eve, while the ending theme song is performed by Riria, who voices Uta in the film.[10]
Bubble (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | |
Type: | Soundtrack |
Artist: | Hiroyuki Sawano |
Genre: | Soundtrack |
Length: | 73:28 |
Label: | Toy's Factory |
Producer: | Hiroyuki Sawano |
Bubble grossed $509,309 at the box office.
|-! scope="row" rowspan="2" | 2022| 72nd Berlin International Film Festival| Generation 14plus — Crystal Bear for the Best Film| Tetsurō Araki| | [9] |-| Asian Academy Creative Awards| Best Animated Programme or Series (2D or 3D)| rowspan="2" | Bubble| | [11] |-! scope="row" | 2023| 7th Crunchyroll Anime Awards| Best Film| | [12]