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Miss Hokusai(百日紅 〜Miss HOKUSAI〜)

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Japan · 2015
Rated PG-13 · 1h 30m
Director Keiichi Hara
Starring Anne Watanabe, Kumiko Aso, Gaku Hamada, Kengo Kora
Genre Animation, Drama, History

O-Ei is the daughter of famed artist Tetsuzo, also known as Hokusai, a woodblock painter seemingly lost in his art. O-Ei shares his passions, living in his shadow with her father as her artistic mentor. She navigates her coming adulthood while assisting her father, delving deeper and deeper into his art following a divorce.

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What are critics saying?

83

The Playlist by Andrew Crump

Hara marries biography to observational and slapstick humor, plus a healthy dose of supernatural rumblings, and in so doing produces something altogether fascinating and endlessly entertaining.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Boyd van Hoeij

If some anime films also feature more painterly details in the backdrops, especially when depicting nature, what feels new here is the attention to details such as the glow of light sources, including candles and lanterns, that are warmer and more realistically detailed than usual.

80

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

Miss Hokusai surprises us with its different emotional tones, ranging from the sinister and supernatural to the unapologetically sexual and the sweetly sentimental.

80

Total Film by Kevin Harley

Magical and melancholy, tender and robust: rippling reserves of theme and style compensate for wobbly pacing in Keiichi Hara’s adaptation of Hinako Sugiura’s manga Sarusuberi.

83

The A.V. Club by Noel Murray

One of the ways this film feels fresh and revisionist is that it doesn’t succumb to “great man”-ism, positioning a famous artist’s genius as singular.

80

Variety by Peter Debruge

Animation proves the ideal medium for Miss Hokusai’s relatively tame story, allowing audiences to admire the family’s artwork within a world that they were partially responsible for creating.

70

Village Voice by Sherilyn Connelly

Keiichi Hara's episodic anime Miss Hokusai is a lovely biopic, even if it never quite picks up and focuses on a single thread. (Then again, neither does life.)

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