AA! MEGAMI-SAMA! MOVIE
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
ORIGINAL
RELEASE
October 21, 2000
LENGTH
106 min
DESCRIPTION
For centuries, a god named Celestin has been imprisoned on the moon for betraying the kingdom of Yggdrasil. Released by the fairy Morgan Le Fey, Celestin travels to Earth to reunite with his former pupil, the goddess Belldandy. Things go awry as Celestin erases Belldandy's memories of her boyfriend Keiichi and uses her as a catalyst to wreak havoc on Earth and Yggdrasil.
CAST
Belldandy
Kikuko Inoue
Urd
Yumi Touma
Skuld
Aya Hisakawa
Keiichi Morisato
Masami Kikuchi
Celestine
Hiroshi Yanaka
Peorth
Rei Sakuma
Megumi Morisato
Yuriko Fuchizaki
Chihiro Fujimi
Yuka Imai
Sora Hasegawa
Ikue Ootani
Morgan Le Fey
Ayako Kawasumi
Chrono
Yui Horie
Ere
Rumi Kasahara
Ex
Aki Uechi
Kawada
Kouichi Sakaguchi
Ishii
Kan Tanaka
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REVIEWS
Wyroquax
40/100A below-average introduction to one of the few anime franchises which are centred around Norse mythology.Continue on AniListThis review might contain spoilers. You may proceed if you can handle the truth...
Since I have not seen or read any of the source material, and the movie expects the viewer is familiar with the characters and the world, I will assume that both are well-established in the TV series, OVA and manga for this review. Despite someone's lack of prior knowledge, the film establishes its characters, relationships and world sufficient to be fathomable for a newcomer to the franchise. In comparison to other animes, it stands out with its references to and integration of Norse mythology. Like Neon Genesis Evangelion's religious elements, those only have an aesthetic purpose and have no intentional deeper meaning.
Unquestionably, the fantasy realm of the supernatural characters is the most exciting part of the picture. The broad computer network Yggdrasil, its complex inner workings, and its connections to the goddesses are intriguing concepts to explore for the viewer. The settings in Valhalla and on the moon are gorgeous, and the mysteries surrounding the heavenly place keep the viewer invested. Sadly, most of the runtime focuses on the activities on Earth rather than the fictional world.
On Earth, the love relationship between both main protagonists, Belldandy and Keiichi, is the movie's main plotline. Before the viewer can get a deeper insight into their relationship, Belldandy experiences selective amnesia. She forgets who Keiichi is and her connection with him. Throughout the movie's first half, Belldandy tries to recover her lost memory with the aid of her sisters and Keiichi.
After she remembers some emotional moments with Keiichi, redundant and pointless drama occurs. Instead of being furious about Keiichi kissing another girl, she asks him whether he would love her if she wants to be the only person receiving his affection. To regain her missing memories, Belladandy undergoes a dangerous treatment. Ultimately, its outcome stays ambiguous, but they find their love after those troubled times again.
Besides the dull and generic love story with a minor twist, the plot also features a villain with an accomplice. Albeit both appear mysteriously at the beginning of the picture, their characterization and reveal of their motives happen late in the second half. Consequently, they are neither interesting nor compelling for the majority of the runtime. Both the villain and the accomplice lose their credibility after Belladandy persuades them almost effortless to stop pursuing their goals.
Another flaw of the movie is the immature humour which does not resonate with an older audience. Additionally, some scenes are unnecessary for both the plot and the development of the characters. Apart from the negative aspects, the visuals are overall pleasing, and the CGI is well-integrated into the hand-drawn animation. The unmemorable score is neither irritating nor exceptional.
To sum up, Ah! My Goddess: The Movie is a decent introduction for those who plan to check out the series or manga. Despite its shortcomings, the picture gives a well-rounded glimpse into the characters, subnatural world and immature love relationship. Nevertheless, I cannot recommend this picture to those who desire a well-structured plot or engaging characters.
CosmicCuune
85/100A decent ending for the Megami-sama series, could really used more screen time.Continue on AniListWith great power comes great responsibility, a lot of bad things happen in the world, are the gods not responsible for them? Are they not being cruel when they allow these things to happen? This is the question proposed by the antagonist in this movie, which chronologically happens basically after all the TV and OVA series. For anyone who's new to the series, protagonist Keiichi is a regular university student who got lucky when he obtained a contract with Belldandy the godess, that she will "be with him forever". At first Keiichi felt guilty he kind of roped Belldandy into this ridiculous obligation, but overtime they develop a genuine relationship and become bounded by love rather than contract.
In this movie Belldandy has her memory reset to essentially the very beginning of the series, forgetting their 3 years of relationship, not the most original premise for a love story. Unforturenatly there also wasn't enough time for this arc to play out its full potential, in the end it just felt like hey the final boss is here, time to remember everything! The movie needed that screen time to flesh out the antagonist Celestine, Belldandy's mentor. This man had the luckiest job in the world because kid Belldandy is the most lovely being in the universe. However when she came of age she had to basically work as some kind of ambassador to do charity work for people on Earth, which means witnessing all the pain and injustice there for the first time.
I think there are some contradictions in this premise, Celestine is basically denying the value of Earth realm because he saw that it was full of suffering. Belldandy would be in the perfect position to argue against his position, if she hadn't lost her memory of life on Earth. There is also a secondary anatagonist Morgan, who supports Celestine's viewpoint, but she's not human. Sure you could say maybe the reality of suffering is the same for her realm just like on Earth, but I think the story would be more focused if she was also from Earth. Or if this was 2-part movie, one about amnesia the other about Celestine and Morgan.
The sakuga is quite strong in this movie, animation is fluid and there isn't that obvious distinction between stuff that move and don't move in the frame. I really like this consistent look even if it's doesn't have the most detail or highest frame rate. I had this one scene burned into my brain years ago when I haven't watched anything else in the series, or rest of the movie:
You can certainly find more detailed/fluid mech combat scenes from other shows but I just love these sidecar action because the choice of this particular motorsport compliments the theme of the story very well. I'm not a sidecar expert but just looking at the scenes and using basic knowledge of how cars work, you can tell:
The maximum speed you can take a left and right turn are different, the driver and passenger are also doing significantly different things in the race.
The driver needs to account for the passenger when evaluating the maximum speed at which they can take the next corner.
I shouldn't have to explain why these things are thematically significant to the story. Unforturnately again, I think I'm owed at least one more sidecar sequence hinted by the stroy but doesn't happen due to time constraints.Belldandy and Keiichi's ultimate answer to Celestine's question is not gonna shake your worldview like watching AOT might, but it's still a neat bow to tie everything together, including the rest of the series set before the movie. It is must-watch if you liked the TV or OVA series. Should you watch this by itself? They certainly tried to drop hints everywhere to catch you up, together with me having explained Celestine's motive here, I think there's a good chance you'll enjoy it.
Bonus point for extremely cute final battle outfits for the three godesses
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SCORE
- (3.6/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inOctober 21, 2000
Main Studio AIC
Favorited by 51 Users