Overview
An apocalyptic look at the possibility of an earthquake of magnitude 7 or greater striking the Tokyo area. Mirai, a middle school freshman girl who goes to Tokyo's artificial Odaiba Island for a robot exhibition with her brother Yutaka at the start of summer vacation. A powerful tremor emanates from an ocean trench, the famed Tokyo Tower and Rainbow Bridge crumble and fall, and the landscape of Tokyo changes in an instant. With the help of a motorcycle delivery woman named Mari who they meet on Odaiba, Mirai and Yutaka strive to head back to their Setagaya home in western Tokyo.
| Original Air Dates: | — |
|---|---|
| Country: | Japan |
| Genre: | Adventure, Anime, Drama |
| Network: | Fuji TV |
| Watched by: | 2 745 1 008 335 |
| Total running time: | 4 hours 35 minutes |
| Episode duration: | |
| Episodes: | 11 |
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Gee, it's funny to watch the ages: in childhood, we are always good-natured and full of energy, always friendly and want to help, closer to adolescence, all this instantly disappears and a person becomes lazy, impudent and harsh, doing everything out of the blue. And when he grows up... well, it's just a matter of luck.
What am I talking about... the series is very realistic. Everyday life as it is. And despite the fact that I'm a hell of a fan of fiction first of all (oh, cyberpunk, cyberpunk), I liked anime from the very first minutes.
I was so worried. I kept thinking about how to compare this experience, if you remember the last experience of anime, then only baseball games came to mind, but it's not that clear. I wasn't worried about the future or the past, but about the present, about what was happening to "us" now. From life, the experience of an exam or waiting for a call from the dean's office has come to be compared, but this is also outright bullshit. In short, there's nothing good about the sensations, but for some reason anime catches on, I want to worry about them further. Or maybe you just want to face the truth?
Such mourning happens every day, even if not on such a large scale, but just look at the accident statistics.…
People are too spoiled by a "quiet lifestyle" and in order to catch trash, they take it out on their loved ones, not out of spite, but somehow subconsciously. Such tragedies prove that in fact we all love each other, we just don't know how to show it and live in peace.
There were a lot of beautiful "camera" moments: a blade of grass that was stepped on, and it rose back up, a drop on a children's bike, shiny like a tear, etc. I love it when they insert such things. I highly recommend watching it