Wolf Children movie reviews & Metacritic score: Wolf Children is a staggeringly beautiful animated feature film from director Mamoru Hosoda (Summer Wars). Here's my review of Wolf Children: Mamoru Hosada could be one anime Director who could rival the international reputation of his former employers; Studio Ghibli. "Wolf Children" is his third feature after the successes of "The Girl Who Leaped Through Time" and "Summer Wars". I first watched this movie when I was Eleven.

The story follows a young mother who is left to raise two half-human half-wolf children, Ame and Yuki. Lycanthropy becomes a metaphor for puberty in this photorealistically drawn, touching animation How exactly do you raise wolf children? Like vampirism, lycanthropy here becomes a metaphor for puberty - for.

Wolf Children

The film stars the voices of Aoi Miyazaki, Takao Osawa and Haru Kuroki. The story follows a young mother who is left to raise two half-human half-wolf children, Ame and Yuki, after their werewolf father dies. Stylistically, "Wolf Children" is the least showy of Hosoda's features, frequently observing things from a distance or lingering on small details, as a live-action art film might. With the exception of a couple CG-enhanced scenes, this elegant project lovingly upholds Japan's hand-drawn tradition, perfectly suited. "Wolf Children" Is A Movie Full Of Sadness, Triumph, Emotion And Wolves. The children also undergo their own journeys, as they struggle with how to live their lives. One theme that runs throughout the movie is the idea of Ame and Yuki trying to find how they'd rather live: as humans or as wolves.

Trailer Wolf Children

Wolf Children is a beautiful story about the power of a Mother's love to save her children. The film stars the voices of Aoi Miyazaki, Takao Osawa and Haru Kuroki for the Japanese dub and Collen Clinkenbeard, David Matranga, Jad Saxton. Wolf Children is honest about the gross reality of raising kids (and pets) while still leaving room for fantasy, which is really the only way a movie about Wolf Children 's world is so alive that it speaks to the audience, conveying meaning through a quiet summer storm or a river transitioning into a.

Wolf Children opens softly and elegantly; it's narrated from the perspective of Hana's daughter, and she doesn't need to say much. The initial scenes are lovingly slow-paced, with little to no dialogue and extended sequences of people simply living life. The academic and urban environments are flawlessly. Wolf Children begins in unpromisingly mawkish fashion.