Category: anime / In category: 4 of 10 / Overall: 37 of 100
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‘The Girl Who Leapt Through Time’ starts with Makoto hearing a snippet of a news forecast on TV before, late as always for school, she dashes from the house and pedals her bike full-tilt through the narrow streets. The TV tells her it’s going to be a lucky day. It turns out anything but. In short order, Makoto causes a flash fire in her home economics class, is almost crushed when horseplay between some fellow students gets out of hand, takes a tumble in the science lab and, heading home, finds the brakes on her bike defective as she plunges down a steep hill towards the railway crossing.
Makoto cheats death. As she struggles to understand how she could possibly have survived, it becomes apparent she managed to travel back through time a few moments. The first third of the film is great fun as Makoto figures out what happened and how, tries to replicate the circumstances, and proceeds to have a whale of a time changing the past in a number of small ways (such as jumping back three or four minutes every time her song finishes at a karaoke bar; her allotted slot lasts all evening and she wakes up the next morning with a sore throat; the way she rasps through the next scene, sounding like an oriental version of Lemmy, is priceless).
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Still, it’s involving enough and Makoto’s rollercoaster through the highs and lows of adolescence is wryly observed. Hosada shunts the narrative back into high gear as the film approaches the home straits and things threaten to take a bleakly ironic turn. It’s at this point that Hosada pulls the rug from under the viewer and the film makes a sudden aesthetic and tonal shift, haring off into the realms of the metaphysical. All well and good, but his subsequent attempt to segue back into the teenage angst hinted at earlier just adds to the burgeoning sense of inconsistency. The denouement, mawkish and unfocused, drags on interminably. The final scene left me shrugging my shoulders indifferently. Which is a shame: as a 30-minute short, ‘The Girl Who Leapt Through Time’ would be joyous.
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