FILM BOX OFFICE 2023 SUZUME

Credit @yomosueillust

Have you seen Suzume yet? Mamazorayas like this video because, in addition to the great tale, it contains many surprises, exquisite color selection that pleases the eyes, fascinating sound effects, and is, of course, appropriate for viewing with family.

Suzume is a Japanese animated fantasy adventure film released in 2022. Makoto Shinkai wrote and directed the film. While traveling, Makoto Shinkai had the inspiration for Suzume. It is typical in Japan to organize a groundbreaking ceremony before the construction of a new building or residence, yet we do nothing when we close them down.

Shinkai became aware of increasingly vacant or abandoned sites in Japan as a result of the country's dropping birth rate and aging population, and he decided to write a novel about "mourning desolate places." The film ultimately became a road movie about seeing locations.

The concepts for the film were inspired by the 2011 Japanese Tsunami and earthquake. He was afraid that people's memories of the catastrophe would fade with time, and he believed that by depicting the earthquake and tsunami in his film or novel, he would be able to share his feelings with young people who were unaware of the incident.


SYNOPSIS OF SUZUME

Suzume Iwato, 17, is a high school student. She had a dream one night about looking for her mother as a youngster in a destroyed neighborhood. Suzume runs across a young man looking for abandoned spots with doors the next morning on her way to school. 

Suzume spots a blaze-like column erupting from the site of the onsen that no one else can see when she tells him about a historic onsen resort nearby. As she returns, she sees the previous man attempting to close the door. Suzume rushes to aid after seeing him struggle and become hurt. The crimson column vanishes, but not before smashing into the town silently and wreaking earthquake-like destruction.


SUZUME BOX OFFICE 

"Suzume" has grossed $80.6 million in Chinese theaters after 10 days and earned $1.6 million on Imax screens over the weekend, bringing its China-Imax total to $13 million, the second best score for a Japanese-language picture on Imax. Suzume has also made about $30 million in South Korea and $105 million in Japan.


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