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Fullmetal Alchemist (film)

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Revision as of 02:59, 26 November 2024 by wiki>Pazio Paz (Sources fix.)
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Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox film

Template:Nihongo is a 2017 Japanese science fantasy action film directed by Fumihiko Sori, starring Ryosuke Yamada, Tsubasa Honda and Dean Fujioka and based on the manga series of the same name by Hiromu Arakawa, covering the first four volumes of the original storyline.[1] It was released in Japan by Warner Bros. Pictures on 1 December 2017.[2][3][4][5] The theme song of the film, "Kimi no Soba ni Iru yo", is performed by Misia. Two sequels were released in 2022: Fullmetal Alchemist: The Revenge of Scar and Fullmetal Alchemist: The Final Alchemy.

Plot

In the fictional country of Amestris, children Edward Elric and his younger brother Alphonse live in a rural town with their mother Trisha while self-learning alchemy. When the brothers commit the taboo act of Human Transmutation to resurrect Trisha after she dies of illness, it backfires and they face the consequences via the Law of Equivalent Exchange: Edward loses his left leg, while Alphonse is dragged into the Gate of Truth. Edward sacrifices his right arm to save his brother's soul and bind it to a suit of armor. His missing limbs are replaced with "automail" prosthetics made by the town's automail mechanic whose granddaughter, Winry Rockbell, is the brothers' childhood friend.

Edward receives an invitation from Colonel Roy Mustang to join the military. After becoming the country's youngest State Alchemist with the title "Fullmetal Alchemist", he and Alphonse begin their quest to find the legendary Philosopher's Stone that can restore their bodies. Years later, the brothers, now teenagers, receive help from Major General Hakuro after another failed attempt to find the stone. Hakuro introduces them to Shou Tucker, a bio-alchemy authority who obtained his State Alchemist credentials by creating a talking chimera. Tucker points them to Dr. Tim Marcoh, who created a Philosopher's Stone prior to going into hiding.

When Edward and Winry find Marcoh, he is murdered by Lust, an assassin. Upon return, Edward and Alphonse are horrified to discover that Tucker has transmuted his young daughter Nina, and his dog together to create a human talking chimera in a bid not to lose his State Alchemist credentials. They have Tucker arrested, though not before he tries to turn Alphonse against Edward, causing the brothers to fight. Edward and Mustang's close friend Major Maes Hughes makes a disturbing discovery from Marcoh's notes, but is killed by Lust's associate Envy. Using Marcoh's notes, Edward is led to the clandestine Fifth Laboratory, where he finds the now-insane Tucker holding Alphonse and Winry hostage. When Edward learns that Philosopher's Stones are unethically created from human lives, he has a breakdown, realizing he can no longer depend on that method.

Lust kills Tucker, revealing herself as a homunculus. Hakuro reveals himself as their partner, divulging that the military made Philosopher's Stones using human hostages. He activates a Mannequin Soldier homunculi army with the Stones but is killed by them. As the military destroys the Mannequins, Mustang kills Lust and tears out the Philosopher's Stone that was powering her body. He gives Edward the stone so he can restore Alphonse but the brothers refuse, now knowing how they are made. Instead, Edward uses the stone to appear before his brother's corporeal body at the Gate of Truth and promises to find another way to restore him.

In a mid-credit scene, Envy is revealed to have survived Mustang's attack as its true parasitic form escapes from its human body's charred remains.

Cast

Character Actor English dubbing[6]
Edward Elric Ryosuke Yamada,[2] Template:Interlanguage link (Young) Vic Mignogna, Kristine De Los Santos (Young)
Alphonse Elric Atomu Mizuishi, Seiru (Young) Aaron Dismuke, Ryan Bartley (Young)
Winry Rockbell Tsubasa Honda[2] Caitlin Glass
Roy Mustang Dean Fujioka[2] Steve Phelan
Riza Hawkeye Misako Renbutsu[2] Dana Powers
Maes Hughes Ryuta Sato[2] Matt Mountjoy
Gracia Hughes Natsuki Harada[2] Ryan Bartley
Maria Ross Natsuna Watanabe[2] Lilly Grand
Tim Marcoh Jun Kunimura[2] Paul St. Peter
Envy Kanata Hongō[2] Brian Timothy Anderson
Lust Yasuko Matsuyuki[2] Caitlyn Elizabeth
Gluttony Template:Interlanguage link[2] Mark Allen Jr.
Trisha Elric Template:Interlanguage link Lilly Grand
Father Cornello Kenjirō Ishimaru[2] Jamieson Price
Shou Tucker Yo Oizumi (special appearance)[2] Lane Sandison
Nina Tucker Template:Interlanguage link Rachel Luna
General Hakuro Fumiyo Kohinata[2] Andrew Thacher
Truth T.J. Lowe

Production

Director Fumihiko Sori

The film was originally planned to be produced in 2013 but because of low budget and also technology, it was delayed until it was officially announced for production in May 2016. According to the director's press conference in March 2017:

Template:BlockquoteOn adapting the source material, Fumihiko Sori said, "I want to create a style that follows the original manga as much as possible. The cast is entirely Japanese, but the cultural background is Europe. However, it's a style that doesn't represent a specific race or country." Regarding the faithfulness of the adaptation, which has characters of non-Japanese ethnicity, the director said, "There will never be a scene in which a character says something that would identify him/her as Japanese."

Sori told Oricon he has a deep affection for the story that tells the "truth of living," and said, "It is my dearest wish to turn this wonderful story into a film, and it is not an exaggeration to say that I am living for this reason." He added that he "wants to create a wonderful film that uses techniques that challenge Hollywood," and noted that nowadays Japanese filmmaking techniques have progressed greatly.[1]

Filming was spotted in June 2016 in the Italian town of Volterra

Principal photography took place in Italy. Shooting was spotted in Volterra (identified as Reole from 06:53 to 12:54) on the first week of June and some scenes continued filming in Japan from June and finished on 26 August 2016.

Japanese VFX company OXYBOT inc. provided the visual effects for the film.[1] The first teaser visual was unveiled on 31 December 2016.[7] The updated version with the 2017 New Year Greetings were unveiled on the following day with the text "Happy New Year".[8] In February 2017, they unveiled the release date of 1 December, with the CG appearance of Alphonse[9]

On 19 February 2018, the film released on Netflix as a Netflix Original Film. Notably, in the English-language dub voice actors Vic Mignogna, Aaron Dismuke, and Caitlin Glass reprised their roles as Edward Elric, Alphonse Elric, and Winry Rockbell respectively from the Funimation dub of the Fullmetal Alchemist anime series.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Reception

The film received mostly mixed reviews.[10] The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 28% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 18 reviews, with an average rating of 4.8/10.[11] On Metacritic, which assigns and normalizes scores of critic reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 48 out of 100 based on 5 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[12]

Sequels

In July 2017, Sori and Yamada said a sequel was in development.[13] In early March 2022, it was announced that two sequels would be released during the year: Template:Nihongo and Template:Nihongo, with Mackenyu playing the role of Scar.[14] They were released on 20 May and 24 June respectively.[15][16] They became available on Netflix on 20 August and 24 September respectively.[17][18]

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:Fullmetal Alchemist Template:Fumihiko Sori