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1980
あしたのジョー 劇場版
Directed by Osamu Dezaki, Yoichiro Fukuda
Synopsis
Never give up!
Joe Yabuki is a troubled youth, whose only solution to problems is throwing punches at them. What he lacks in manners and discipline, he makes up for with his self-taught fighting skills. One day, while wandering the slums of Doya, Joe gets into a fight with the local gang. Although greatly outnumbered, he effortlessly defeats them, drawing the attention of Danpei Tange—a former boxing coach turned alcoholic. Seeing his potential, he offers to train Joe into Japan's greatest boxer. At first, Joe dismisses Danpei as a hopeless drunk; but after the trainer saves his life, he agrees to live with him and learn the art of boxing. Unfortunately, Joe's personality makes him an unruly student, and he often falls back to his old ways. To survive the harsh world of his new career, Joe needs to trust his mentor and master the techniques taught to him. However, the road to becoming a professional boxer is rife with struggles that will test his mettle to the end.
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- Cast
- Crew
- Details
- Genres
- Releases
Cast
Teruhiko Aoi Jūkei Fujioka Toshiyuki Hosokawa Fumi Dan Shiro Kishibe
DirectorsDirectors
Osamu Dezaki Yoichiro Fukuda
ProducerProducer
Hisao Masuda
WriterWriter
Tetsuya Chiba
Original WriterOriginal Writer
Ikki Kajiwara
CinematographyCinematography
Akifumi Kumagai
Additional DirectingAdd. Directing
Shingo Araki Akio Sugino Nobuo Matsuda Akihiro Kanayama
Art DirectionArt Direction
Teiichi Akashi
ComposerComposer
Kunihiko Suzuki
Studios
SANKYO Fuji Eiga Company
Country
Japan
Language
Japanese
Alternative Titles
Tomorrow's Joe, Ashita no Joe, Rocky Joe - Joe Del Domani, あしたのジョー, 내일의 죠, Champion Joe, Rocky Joe, Rocky Joe: Il primo round, Ashita no Joe - Le film, 劇場版 小拳王, 明日之丈 剧场版, 내일의 죠 1, Завтрашний Джо 2, Joe do Amanhã, o Filme, Ρόκυ Τζο 2: Η ταινία
Genres
Drama Animation Action
Releases by Date
- Date
- Country
Theatrical
08 Mar 1980
Japan
Releases by Country
- Date
- Country
Japan
08 Mar 1980
- Theatrical
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Review by Kaijuman ★★★★½ 2
An iconic story about determination, willpower, rivalry, and fighting spirit. Tomorrow’s Joe is the older, manlier brother to Rocky Balboa.
I jest but I wouldn’t be surprised if Stallone was inspired by this when he penned the script for Rocky. Regardless, this was truly a diamond in the rough for me.
Covering the first anime series, the plot concerns Joe, an arrogant kid who’s quick to pick a fight, as fate seemingly leads him into the world of professional boxing. At first he has no interest in the sport, but things change once he’s put in jail. It’s there he meets Toru Rikiishi, a brutal boxer who quickly puts Joe in his place. They quickly become rivals and the rest…
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Review by DBC ★★★★½ 2
The Anime Marches On! 2019 Challenge (22/26)
One Osamu Dezaki Movie
--
Sleep deprivation was doing solid work on me when I watched this, and that potent mix of beat-up exhaustion and inability to just lie down and quit may have been one of the most appropriate filters through which to view this brutal 153-minute anime boxing epic.The two-and-a-half hour runtime I speak of is the result of trying to cram a 79 episode TV series into a single feature-length film. Condensing what is essentially a 900 minute saga down to just its most visually dynamic and emotionally gut-wrenching moments (along with just enough scenes conveying important plot points to keep the whole thing mostly coherent) really ends up…
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Review by Eli ★★★½
Barely even pretends to cohere as a single feature - unknown amounts of time pass and character relationships shift regularly between cuts, occasionally what seem like two different scenes appear to be edited together to condense plot points - but even as a Cliff’s Notes version of the TV show/manga, it successfully convinced me that the series’ reverence among the deeply anime-enfranchised is well earned. A marriage of 70s shonen serials like Fist of the North Star, Rockywrit long, and literary hero epics in the vein of Musashi (whose journey from free-raging punk to honorable warrior via time in the slammer is plainly echoed in Joe). Its vision of late-midcentury Japan is almost postapocalyptic in its visual desolation and casual…
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Review by JustTru ★★★★½
A phenomenal summary. Apparently, this was adapted from over 70 episodes (900 minutes), and I didn't feel like I was missing a thing. It's nonstop exhilaration and tense gut reactions.
I feel like I went through many stages in the course of watching the film. My thoughts and feeling changed a lot through the introduction, central plot, and climax.
In the beginning, I found the film to be really fun. It had its fair share of jokes, incredible action, and breathtaking animation. The punching sound effects mixed with the action-anime style took me back to the old Street Fighter games. I loved it! But quickly it became more to me.
The animation is just wonderful in general though. It may… -
Review by Fadi
"ثم كل ما يتبقى رماد ابيض نقي"
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
راح استخدم هذا للتعليق على الانمي كامل (الموسمين) بدون حرق
عمل فوق التقييم عمل ايقوني خالد .. اكبر من ان يحصر بالرياضة انمي درامي واقعي قبل يكون رياضي
ابدأ بمدح القصة او كتابة الشخصيات وعمق اختلافها او اختيار الموسيقى والتنوع المناسب لكل شخصية ومشهد وطبعا ما انسى النهاية اللي وصلت القمة واللي شخصيا اعتبرها افضل نهاية .. عمل عظيم متكامل. -
Review by digitaldevilgal ★★
This movie does an admirable job of turning 50 episodes of anime into a film, but it’s far from the ideal way of experiencing the first half of the story. It works in the sense that it’s coherent, but it has an uneven pacing and the entire film being re-cut from pre-existing scenes causes many issues. For example, the character Nishi has almost no reason to be in this film, he adds nothing to the plot, but they have to spend time introducing him because he’s in the background of so many scenes. On the other hand, Yoko, a character integral to the story, is totally shafted. Because she’s hardly actually on screen with the protagonist Joe, most of her…
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Review by RAOI ★★★★★ 1
Ashita no Joe inspired everything you love.
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Review by Nic Kinopanic ★★★½
Medium: thru black magic
REVIEW LENGTH: 700 words
WARNING: Following anime film contains copious amounts of yelling “BAKA YAROU!”Ashita No Joe / Tomorrow’s Joe is one of the manga/anime legends, thats not particularly well known outside its home country.
Joe Yabuki is a young drifter, gifted but unruly fighter who got in fights because. By chance, he runs into a has-been boxing coach, Danpei, who takes a beating from Yakuza on Joe’s behalf. Danpei tries to convince Joe to become a boxer, but Joe is not intrested.
Eventually placed in a Juvie (two different actually), his experiences there make him reconsider a life as a boxer… especially after running into Tohru Rikiishi, the first person to actually beat him…
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Review by Spenser Peebles ★★★★
This movie is a condensed version of the original 80 episode series and having watched the series myself I really think they did a great job of editing it down to a 153 minute runtime. All the filler is cut out and what you are left with is a very compelling movie that stands as one of the greatest underdog stories I've seen.
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Review by JonasJoestar ★★★★★ 2
Hey Joe! I remember..
Pura arte isso daqui👏🏻
youtu.be/w9GPOj6COBA?si=Lon4FwtxbYrLPwQv -
Review by lethargilistic ★★★
Ashita no Joe is considered a classic, and it's pretty clear why even from this abridged movie. Its arc has a very iconic feel, reminiscent of other underdog sports shows as it follows an unrepentant asshole on his path to redemption through hitting other guys in the face.
The visuals are limited through most of the run, but there are parts, specifically the more intense fights, that get really intense, emphasizing how the fighters are pressing themselves to their limits. When people aren't fighting, it's slow, but I feel like that's just a consequence of having to cut down a 70 episode series into 2.5 hours and retaining a lot of critical exposition.
That said, there's not really much to…
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Review by Harmony Korean ★★★★★
better than rocky!