Product Details
Princess Mononoke

Princess Mononoke
Directed by Hayao Miyazaki

List Price: $32.99
Price: $17.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

60 new or used available from $12.87

Average customer review:

Product Description

Claire Danes (THE MOD SQUAD), Minnie Driver (GOOD WILL HUNTING), and Billy Bob Thornton (ARMAGEDDON, SLING BLADE) head a cast of hot Hollywood stars who lend their talents to this exquisitely animated, overwhelmingly acclaimed adventure epic! Inflicted with a deadly curse, a young warrior named Ashitaka (Billy Crudup -- WITHOUT LIMITS) sets out for the forests of the west in search of the cure that will save his life. Once there, he becomes inextricably entangled in a bitter battle that matches Lady Eboshi (Driver) and a proud clan of humans against the forest's animal gods, who are led by the brave Princess Mononoke (Danes), a young woman raised by wolves! Also starring Gillian Anderson (THE X-FILES) and Jada Pinkett Smith (SCREAM 2), this monumental struggle between man and nature will have you transfixed as stunning artistry blends with epic storytelling to create a uniquely entertaining motion picture!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #786 in DVD
  • Brand: Princess
  • Released on: 2000-12-19
  • Rating: Unrated
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Animated, Color, DVD-Video, NTSC
  • Original language: English, Japanese, French
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 134 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com essential video
This epic, animated 1997 fantasy has already made history as the top-grossing domestic feature ever released in Japan, where its combination of mythic themes, mystical forces, and ravishing visuals tapped deeply into cultural identity and contemporary, ecological anxieties. For international animation and anime fans, Princess Mononoke represents an auspicious next step for its revered creator, Hayao Miyazaki (My Neighbor Totoro, Kiki's Delivery Service), an acknowledged anime pioneer, whose painterly style, vivid character design, and stylized approach to storytelling take ambitious, evolutionary steps here.

Set in medieval Japan, Miyazaki's original story envisions a struggle between nature and man. The march of technology, embodied in the dark iron forges of the ambitious Tatara clan, threatens the natural forces explicit in the benevolent Great God of the Forest and the wide-eyed, spectral spirits he protects. When Ashitaka, a young warrior from a remote, and endangered, village clan, kills a ravenous, boar-like monster, he discovers the beast is in fact an infectious "demon god," transformed by human anger. Ashitaka's quest to solve the beast's fatal curse brings him into the midst of human political intrigues as well as the more crucial battle between man and nature.

Miyazaki's convoluted fable is clearly not the stuff of kiddie matinees, nor is the often graphic violence depicted during the battles that ensue. If some younger viewers (or less attentive older ones) will wish for a diagram to sort out the players, Miyazaki's atmospheric world and its lush visual design are reasons enough to watch. For the English-language version, Miramax assembled an impressive vocal cast including Gillian Anderson, Billy Crudup (as Ashitaka), Claire Danes (as San), Minnie Driver (as Lady Eboshi), Billy Bob Thornton, and Jada Pinkett Smith. They bring added nuance to a very different kind of magic kingdom. Recommended for ages 12 and older. --Sam Sutherland

From The New Yorker
This handsome, beautifully designed Japanese animated film has the size-though not the clarity-of a great Japanese film epic. The enormous landscapes and the variety of human and animal figures are gratifying, but the plot is more complicated than that of "The Ring of the Niebelungen." It's impossible, at times, to tell who's fighting on whose side, and why, so it's best not to try to make sense of everything but instead relax and enjoy the fantastic forest demons, the enormous wolves, the mix of slashing swords and arrows, and the enveloping, gelatinous forest-demon gunk. The movie may be semi-incoherent, but it's still gripping. Minnie Driver, Billy Crudup, Billy Bob Thornton, Gillian Anderson, and Claire Danes provide the voices. Hayao Miyazaki is the director. -David Denby
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

Hayao Miyazaki is so amazing5
Another interesting movie from Hayao Miyazaki. This story is about what hatred can do to your soul and how your attitude affects you and those around you. It encourages cooperation and although everyone doesn't live happily ever after, ends with a satisfying conclusion. These movies always contain some moral or cultural message for viewers. My kids are 12 and 16 and they want to collect everything Miyazaki has done. Others they enjoy: Kiki's Delivery Service, Castle In the Sky, Spirited Away, Porco Rosso, My Neighbor Totoro, Howl's Moving Castle. I'm so glad Disney has become involved in getting these films out to the masses.

Frickin' Sweet5
This movie is amazing! Everything about this movie is great, though I must admit it can be gory at times. One of my favorites.

excellent5
This movie was beautifully made as a whole. I found the plot to be fantastic and it stuck with me for awhile as I contemplated my own actions. Isn't that what a good story does? As with another reviewer, this was not what I expected to see by the title, which turns out to not be a problem with the beautiful artwork/graphics and a storyline that hooks you deep.

This movie was good enough to even hook my mother, whom showed up as it started. She does not like anime in the least and is never quiet when watching any movie. This one kept her silent until the end and all she said was "Wow, that was really good." Enough said.