As the highest grossing anime film of all time. A simple romance film between Taki and Mitsuha who have the unfortunate experience of switching their bodies,
Has not opened in American theaters. Thanks to some weird marketing decisions by Funimation — for example, a one-week showing in Los Angeles to make it eligible for the Oscars– the film has been delayed to April when everyone else has watched it.

So as of this writing, the film has been trapped in a Hadron Large Collider Hyperchambers of Hype and Magic. Distortions and bizarre speculations of the film’s story in the United States anime fandom are rampant. Everything is praise:
Kimi No Na Wa
This has led to zero discussion of the flaws of the film. Amidst news of the film beating every sales record thinkable, there is a vocal minority in Japan who is confused how something like this is popular. I agree. I find the film a bit too superficial for its rather large-than-life scale as it dives deeper into science fiction and fantasy territories. This is especially apparent in the final act as the film begins to leap over necessary steps to explain what is going on. Googling 君の名は 考察 gives you giant essays in explaining what happens there, but I don’t buy any of them. The film feels like a Jun Maeda work where you come out of the work crying but you aren’t sure how it achieved that effect. The ending is at best a string of tearjerker scenes to draw out emotions, but it doesn’t make any coherent sense in the story whatsoever.
So there’s something missing to the film. Many ideas are unexplored or cut especially in the second half of the film. The film sports a huge cast of likable characters and is entertaining and a visual spectacle from start to finish, but it’d be nice if the film made a bit more sense. Most people are probably satisfied and argue that there’s no need to add — the film is just a romance film and it has done its job to make us fall in love with the characters. But for the people who really want to understand the film, they need something more.
Is a short story collection featuring four different perspectives in Itomori. It begins with Taki as Mitsuha learning how to put on a bra and ends with Toshiki, Mitsuha’s father, on the day of the comet.
Your Name. Another Side: Earthbound Vol. 2 Review
Is a very ambitious project when you realize this book is merely fleshing out themes of what is already seen as a finished product in the creator’s eyes. It is why it has the cautionary title
In the first story, Taki is trying to understand how Mitsuha can withstand this much pain from society. He learns that she always feels pressured thanks to how her family has broken up and how her father seems to be in some crude political deals. Classmates often gossip about her and make fun of how she is hanging out with Tessie who is the son of the subcontractor her father is working closely with.
Taki gets frustrated and retaliates, but he remembers that this isn’t his place to change the public perception of her. Of course, as anyone watched the film goes, it’s impossible to not do that as people are beginning to see a “new side” of Mitsuha. A wilder side, that is. Taki realizes how flexible Mitsuha is and begins to moonwalk to the bassline of “Smooth Criminal” and even gets some people clapping for his dance moves. It is ridiculous and quite cute to read this bizarre scene.
Why Is The Anime Your Name (kimi No Na Wa) So Popular?
But what makes the story very fascinating to read is how Taki begins to empathize with Mitsuha with learning how to strap on a bra. He has no idea bras are this complicated and needs help from Natori. It’s a clever and subtle way to introduce to readers the themes of connection and empathy.

Is a film about how we connect with people in the most unexpected ways and perceive people differently as a result. The second story in the book involves Tessie as he struggles to understand what his place in the city is. He wants to change the small town of Itomori, but he isn’t sure how. The story replicates the beginning of the film as Tessie listens to Natori and Mitsuha complain about how there are no urban facilities, especially cafes. He points to the vending machine that sells coffee. But what the film doesn’t show is that he is actually serious someday he will build an open cafe around that spot for people to hang out. Taki as Mitsuha decides to help out and this is a pleasant surprise for Tessie. He never knew that he’ll be connected to Mitsuha in this way. It is this unexpected connection that resonates with readers (and I suspect, cinemagoers) which is threaded throughout the book.
People, space, time, events, nature, the world — we are all connected in the same way the side stories are connected to the film. The connection may be perceived as unnecessary, but it is what drives the world.
Kimi No Na Wa. Another Side
Admits connections between the wildest opposites are divine. It is the thread of fate that links us — the signification in semiotics — which we call God.
We find this appear in Yotsuha’s chapter as she is confused about what in the world is wrong with Mitsuha. She knows very little and, to Mitsuha, is just a little sister who wakes her up every day. But she sees Mitsuha as a shade of her mother who she barely remembers meeting. She becomes more emotionally attached to her sister and that attachment is what we call divine.

with Toshiki reminiscing his past as a folklorist who has fallen in love with his then wife, Miyamizu Futaba. But Toshiki is distraught when Futaba passes away and no one in the Miyamizu family seems to have grieved at all. They say it’s part of fate and she should be happy as a servant of the deities. Toshiki runs away from all this — even his daughters — to become a politician and change the city for the sake of his wife. But at the end of the story, he realizes that all of his actions are part of an intricate network of connections that have been building up to this moment. He sees the signification in all of this. Everything before has happened for this decision he needs to make.
Exploring The Past
All of these stories have one thing in common: the connection between subjects is beautifully fated to one another. It is what Hitoha, the grandma, has been talking about when she mentions 結び (musubi). Unexpected they might be, the link has been chalked up by fate and it is our responsibility to uncover these systems and understand what they mean.
A story about how causality is actually a romance between people and events. We believe in the genuine affection between Taki and Mitsuha because of this and
gives reasons why. While the writing is rough, the book is an entertaining and almost necessary read for fans who want more out of the work. I personally loved the book more than the film in what it is trying to do and appreciate how amusing most of the scenes are. It is a book I don’t mind recommending.

Kimi No Na Wa.
Is ambivalent in delineating predestination/fate and free will. I went out of the film with the impression that both can coexist and love is the most powerful divine connection one can ever make to combat fate. Love is free will. Love makes the film tick.
But in the book, it is revealed everything in Toshiki’s life is set up by “destiny” to save the town. This can be applied in extension to every event in the film. Everyone and everything are important to make the parallel worlds happen to give us a happy ending. There is no ounce of free will. You can’t escape the connections that have put you on this road.
So all those sweat and tears Taki and Mitsuha are not genuine. They are going to end up together and save people. It isn’t the unexpected connection that links them but fate. Their romance isn’t beautiful but an arranged marriage by the threads of fate. Everything about the film is cheapened because of this book when you start thinking about the internal consistencies and logic of the world.
Your Name. Another Side:earthbound, Vol. 1 (manga) (your Name. Another Side:earthbound (manga), 1): Shinkai, Makoto, Nakamura, Jyunya, Kanoh, Arata: 9781975329327: Amazon.com: Books
What are we to say about Taki’s undying passion for the countryside? Mitsuha’s love for the new and urban? The ending that Shinkai Makoto has crafted from the threads of fate?

I’m not arguing against predestination or for free will — I am a devout Taoist, so such ideas are meaningless — but in the context of the the film, the concepts don’t make any sense whatsoever. There is no logic to the film. Beautiful connections are ruined because they are scripted. Nothing is real. Everything is artificial. You have paid to watch a film that has been plotted to purge out emotions you never thought you ever had and make you cry. Deceptive marketing is all there is to the
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