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Stand by Me Doraemon (Japanese: STAND BY ME ドラえもん, Hepburn: Sutando Bai Mī Doraemon) is a 2014 Japanese 3D computer-animated science fiction comedy drama film based on the Doraemon manga series and directed by Ryūichi Yagi and Takashi Yamazaki.[2] It was released on 8 August 2014.[3][4] It is the highest-grossing film of the Doraemon franchise. Bang Zoom! Entertainment premiered an English-dubbed version of the film at the Tokyo International Film Festival on 24 October 2014.[5] The English version features the cast of the Disney XD show Doraemon: Gadget Cat From the Future.[citation needed] A different English version with local actors was distributed by Multivision Pictures Entertainment and VIVA International Pictures for a Filipino audience in 2015. It is therefore the first of 2 Doraemon films to be dubbed into English.

Stand by Me Doraemon
Theatrical release poster
JapaneseSTAND BY ME ドラえもん
LiterallyStand By Me Doraemon
Directed by
Screenplay byTakashi Yamazaki
Based onDoraemon
by Fujiko F. Fujio
Produced by
  • Okura Shunsuke
  • Keiichiro Moriya
  • Kiyoko Shibuya
  • Maiko Okada
Starring
Music byNaoki Sato
Production
companies
  • Shirogumi
  • Robot Communications
  • Shin-Ei Animation
Distributed byToho
Release date
  • 8 August 2014 (2014-08-08) (Japan)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
Box office$183.4 million[1]

Stand by Me Doraemon was commercially successful in Japan. It was number-one on the box office charts for five consecutive weeks and was the second highest-grossing Japanese anime film of 2014 in Japan, with a box office total of $183.4 million, behind Disney's Frozen.[6][7][8] In February 2015, the film won the Japan Academy Prize for Animation of the Year at the 38th Japan Academy Prize.[9]

A sequel was released on 20 November 2020 in Japan.[10]


Plot


Nobita Nobi is a fifth grader who constantly gets failing grades in his subjects due to his laziness and is always bullied by his classmates Suneo Honekawa and Takeshi 'Gian' Goda. His great-great grandson from the 22nd century, Sewashi, who watches him every day, travels to Nobita's timeline while bringing along his robotic cat Doraemon. Sewashi reveals that if Nobita keeps up his act, he will have a disastrous future: he will marry Gian's sister Jaiko, have his private company burned down, and will be left with great debt. To circumvent this, he orders Doraemon to help Nobita, modifying Doraemon's nose to prevent him from returning to the future unless Nobita gains a better future.

Being reluctant until the threat, Doraemon introduces his gadgets to help Nobita which helps him immensely. Though Doraemon warns Nobita not to be too dependent on his gadgets, Nobita asks Doraemon to help him woo his crush Shizuka Minamoto whom Doraemon reveals is the one Nobita will marry if his future is corrected. However, all his efforts end up making Shizuka become closer to ace student, Hidetoshi Dekisugi. Nobita's attempt to be equal with Dekisugi by studying harder is futile, and he decides to let go of Shizuka to make her happier. He does this by flipping Shizuka's skirt to reveal her underwear (but not looking at it), resulting in Shizuka screaming and holding her skirt down in embarrassment before slapping him and running away in tears. After a while, Shizuka realizes that Nobita had his eyes shut when he did this to her. This makes her start worrying about Nobita. She overhears Gian and Suneo's conversation about Nobita's self-esteem getting crushed by Sensei for recently failing another test, causing her to believe he is planning to commit suicide, Shizuka arrives at the Nobi residence and resists Nobita's people-repelling potion to help him, which Doraemon reveals is the first step in Nobita and Shizuka's growing relationship to eventually becoming a couple.

After seeing his older self rejecting Shizuka's invitation to a mountain climbing, Nobita disguises himself as his older self to help Shizuka, who becomes separated from her group during a heavy blizzard. His efforts to help Shizuka do more harm to himself, but this makes Shizuka feel that she has to accompany Nobita, saying "Yes" before collapsing from cold she contracted from her earlier conversation with Nobita. Forcing himself to remember the moment, the two are rescued by Nobita's older self, who recalled the memory. Nobita learns from his older self that Shizuka was answering to latter's proposition to marry her. It means that Shizuka will indeed marry Nobita. After hearing that Shizuka's father has also accepted Nobita as his daughter's spouse, Nobita and Doraemon return to the present timeline. Nobita visits Shizuka declaring that he will make her happy whatever it takes.

As Nobita's future has been changed for the better, Doraemon's programming commands him to return to the future in 48 hours. Noticing that Doraemon has a hard time leaving due to his worry for Nobita, Nobita confronts and has a brutal fight with Gian to prove that he is able to defend himself without Doraemon. Seeing that Nobita refuses to give up, Gian forfeits as Doraemon tearfully takes Nobita home before leaving in peace the next day. During April Fools, Nobita is tricked by Gian into believing that Doraemon has returned. In anger, he drinks a solution Doraemon gave to him which makes the opposite of everything the consumer says comes true. Finishing his retribution against Suneo (who was chased by a dog trying to bite him) and Gian (who was being dragged away by his mother who was preparing to punish him), Nobita goes back home while lamenting that Doraemon will never return. To his surprise, Doraemon suddenly returns and tells Nobita that he has gotten permission to stay with him because Nobita said that Doraemon would never return, still with the effects of the potion, and it became a truth. They both hug and cry in happiness.


Production


In 2011, the producers said that, "Different from the other Doraemon films, this will be a special film".[11] The production team spent 18 months on the character design and CGI animation began after the film recorded the voice of characters.[12]


Adaptation


The plot combines elements from the short stories "All the Way from the Country of the Future", "Imprinting Egg", "Goodbye, Shizuka-chan", "Romance in Snowy Mountain", "Nobita's the Night Before a Wedding" and "Goodbye, Doraemon..." into a new complete story – from the first time Doraemon came to Nobita's house to Doraemon bidding farewell to Nobita.[13][14]


Voice cast


Character Japanese English
Doraemon Wasabi Mizuta Mona Marshall
Nobita Nobi Megumi Ōhara
Satoshi Tsumabuki (adult)
Johnny Yong Bosch
Shizuka Minamoto Yumi Kakazu Cassandra Morris
Suneo Honekawa Tomokazu Seki Brian Beacock
Takeshi Goda Subaru Kimura Kaiji Tang
Sewashi Sachi Matsumoto Max Mittelman
Jaiko Vanilla Yamazaki Minae Noji
Hidetoshi Dekisugi Shihoko Hagino Spike Spencer
Teacher Wataru Takagi Keith Silverstein
Tamako Nobi Kotono Mitsuishi Mari Devon[15]
Nobisuke Nobi Yasunori Matsumoto Tony Oliver
Gian's Mother Miyako Takeuchi Jessica Gee
Yoshio Minamoto Aruno Tahara
Mahito Oba
Steve Blum[15]

Soundtrack


Stand by Me Doraemon Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
Naoki Sato
Released17 September 2014
Genre
  • Soundtrack
  • Music
Length46:56
LabelNippon Columbia

Original Japanese In the movie, most of the soundtrack was composed by Naoki Sato composer (except the ending theme)

All music is composed by Naoki Sato.

Stand by Me Doraemon Original Soundtrack
No.TitleLength
1."Nobita no Ichinichi"2:13
2."STAND BY ME Doraemon Opening Title"1:09
3."Boku, Doraemon"0:54
4."Takecopter"2:48
5."Yojigen Pocket"3:25
6."Surikomi Tamago"1:14
7."Suneo Love"0:48
8."Sakusen Shippai"1:13
9."Shitsuren?"2:02
10."Benkyou"1:01
11."Test no Kekka"2:00
12."Sayounara, Shizuka-chan"3:53
13."Mushisukan"2:02
14."Boku no Mirai"2:59
15."Nobita Seinen"2:11
16."Todoke, Kono Kioku!"1:55
17."Tomodachi"2:55
18."Mirai Hikou"1:37
19."Kekkon Zen'ya"2:59
20."Doraemon no Namida"1:31
21."Yakusoku"4:10
22."Saikai ~Uso 800 no Kiseki~"1:57
Total length:46:56

Ending theme: Himawari no Yakusoku (ひまわりの約束, lit. "Promise from Sunflower") by Motohiro Hata


Release


The film was released in Japan on 8 August 2014, in Italy on 6 November 2014. In Indonesia and Singapore, the film was released on 10 and 11 December 2014, respectively.[16] In Spain and Taiwan, the film was released on 19 December 2014. In Thailand, the film was released on 31 December 2014. In Malaysia, the film was released on 29 January 2015 and in Hong Kong, the film was released on 5 February 2015. The film was released in Vietnam on 12 December 2014, with broadcast on 1 June 2015 by K+ NS[17] The film was released in the Philippines on 17 June 2015, announced by SM Cinema on Facebook, distributed by VIVA International pictures & Multivision Pictures Entertainment.[18] The film was released in Turkey on 11 September 2015[19] The film was released in China on Thursday, 28 May 2015 becoming the first and only Japanese film to be released in China after Ultraman in July 2012 in three years.[20][21] Altogether, the film was released in 60 countries worldwide.[22][23][24][25] The film was released in the US on Netflix on December 24, 2021.

In Japan, the film was released on Blu-ray, in a deluxe and normal edition, and DVD by Pony Canyon on 18 February 2015.[26][27][28] The DVDs and Blu-rays released in Hong Kong feature English subtitles.[29][30] The iTunes release in Singapore also includes English subtitles.[31]


Reception



Box office


The film earned a total of US$86 million internationally by 7 January 2015,[32] and was also the third highest earning film in Japan in 2014 with ¥8.38 billion, behind Frozen and The Eternal Zero.[33] Outside Japan, the highest revenue came from China ($86.92 million),[34] Hong Kong ($5.1 million), South Korea ($3.3 million),[35] Italy ($3.2 million), Indonesia ($3 million) and Thailand ($1.2 million).[6]

In Japan, the film earned ¥767 million in the first 2 days and ¥988 million after 3 days. After 40 days the film earned ¥7 billion and ¥8 billion after 76 days. The film – after the release day – was ranked 1st in cinemas Japan for 5 weeks continuous. As of December 2014, the film earned ¥8.38 billion ($70 million) in Japan.[citation needed]

The film performed well in Hong Kong, which was partly boosted by the sudden death of the long-time voice actor of Doraemon, Lam Pou-chuen, a month before the movie's local release. It became the all-time highest-grossing Japanese film in Hong Kong (breaking Ring's record), the highest-grossing film of the Chinese New Year period in Hong Kong (from 18 to 21 February) and the all-time fourth highest-grossing animated film in Hong Kong, behind Pixar's Toy Story 3, Monster's University and Inside Out.[6] It also broke the opening day record (previously held by Ponyo on a Cliff).[6] In China, the film scored a single-day record of US$14.2 million (breaking Kung Fu Panda 2's record) and a four-day opening record of US$38.5 million (breaking How to Train Your Dragon 2's record).[36] In just five days it earned $53 million to become the highest grossing non-Hollywood animated film in China (breaking Boonie Bears: Mystical Winter's record).[37] It is currently the third highest-grossing animated film in China ($86.9 million), behind Kung Fu Panda 2 ($92.2 million) and Big Hero 6 ($86.7 million).[38] It ended its run in China with ¥530,06 million RMB ($86.9 million).[39]

A web survey was published giving a closer look at the attendees. The audience consisted of 20.4% were children, 21.5% were in their 20s, 20.4% were in their 30s, 20.4% were in their 40s. 47% were male while 53% were female.[40]


Accolades


Awards
Year Award Category Recipients and nominees Result Ref.
2014 Lumiere Japan Awards Grand Prix Grand Prix Award Stand by Me Doraemon Won [41]
2014 27th Nikkan Sports Award Direction Award Takashi Yamazaki Won [42]
2015 3D Film Award Jury Award for Foreign Animation Stand by Me Doraemon Won [43]
2015 38th Japan Academy Prize Animation of the Year Stand by Me Doraemon Won [44]
2015 Tokyo Anime Award Anime of the Year (Film Category) Stand by Me Doraemon Notable Entry [45][46]
2015 Yubari International Fantastic Film Festival VFX JAPAN AWARD Ryūichi Yagi Won [47]
2015 20th AMD Awards Digital Media Award Stand by Me Doraemon Won [48]
2015 24th The Japan Film Critics Award Lifetime Achievement Award Michihiko Umezawa and Shuji Abe Won [49]
2015 34th Fujimoto Prize Ito Yoshiaki, Michihiko Umezawa and Shuji Abe Won [50]


Eiga Stand by Me Doraemon Visual Story
AuthorFujiko F. Fujio
Original title映画「STAND BY ME ドラえ もん」VISUAL STORY
CountryJapan
LanguageJapanese
SeriesDoraemon
GenreAdventure, Time travel, Romantic, Comedy, Family
PublisherShogakukan
Publication date
7 August 2014
Media typeShinsho
Pages80
ISBN9784093883818
Fujiko · F · Fujio (writer), Hiroshi Sasaki (editor), Fujiko Pro (monitoring) ISBN 978-4-09-388384-9
A book containing 7 short stories, with commentary by Hiroshi Sasaki.
Fujiko F. Fujio (Writer) ISBN 978-4-09-388381-8
Adapted from the film
Released 18 February 2015 with PCXE-50408 (BD special version), PCXE-50409 (BD Normal version), PCBE-54251 (DVD Limit Version)

Cultural impact


On the Japanese talk show Room of Tetsuko, Doraemon in 3D image was invited to interview and was broadcast on television on 8 August 2014.[51]

The film helped ease diplomatic tensions between China and Japan.[52] Nagoya University professor Kawamura Noriyuki said that the film was able to help the Chinese people have a better look at the Japanese people.[53]


Sequel


On 12 December 2019, the sequel, Stand By Me Doraemon 2, was announced. Ryūichi Yagi and Takashi Yamazaki return as directors, with Yamazaki once again penning the script. Largely based on Doraemon's 2000 short film Doraemon: A Grandmother's Recollections, it was originally slated to be released on 7 August 2020,[54][55] but due to the COVID-19 pandemic the release was postponed to 20 November 2020.[56]


See also



References


  1. "Stand by Me Doraemon". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 3 July 2021.
  2. "Robot Cat Doraemon's 1st 3D CG Film Teased in Video". Anime News Network. 14 November 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  3. "Anime Robot Cat Doraemon Enters 3rd Dimension in 1st 3D CG Film". Anime News Network. 13 November 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2013.
  4. Beck, Jerry (9 March 2014). "Anime Trailer: "Stand By Me, Doreamon"". Animation Scoop. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  5. Debruge, Peter (11 May 2015). "Film Review: 'Stand by Me Doraemon'".
  6. Gavin J. Blair, Karen Chu (3 March 2015). "'Doraemon' Anime Film Scores Big in Asia with Record Hong Kong Run". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  7. 2014年邦画ベスト10、山崎貴監督2作品で171億円!" Eiga.com. (2014年12月16日) 2014年12月17日閲覧。
  8. "Doraemon, Kenshin, Thermae Romae II Rank in 2014's Top 5 Japanese Films". Anime News Network.
  9. 第38回日本アカデミー賞最優秀賞発表!、日本アカデミー賞公式サイト、2015年1月16日閲覧。
  10. "Stand By Me Doraemon 2 postponed to 20 November 2020" (in Japanese). Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  11. "映画『STAND BY ME ドラえもん』の主題歌に秦基博が決定!新曲を書き下ろし". Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  12. "「ドラえもん」が初の3DCG映画化 来夏公開へ". Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  13. "3DCG『ドラえもん』、藤子・F・不二雄先生も知らなかった物語". Retrieved 16 August 2014.
  14. "大人の心にも響く。3Dになった「ドラえもん」の世界". Archived from the original on 12 August 2014. Retrieved 12 August 2014.
  15. "Stand by Me Doraemon Free - Big Cartoon DataBase". Big Cartoon DataBase. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  16. Kusumanto, Dody (31 October 2014). "Sambut Stand By Me Doraemon 10 Desember 2014 (Welcome to Stand By Me Doraemon, 10 December 2014)". KAORI Nusantara (in Indonesian). Retrieved 30 April 2022.
  17. "Stand by Me Doraemon broadcast on K+NS cable" (in Vietnamese). K plus. 1 June 2015. Retrieved 2 September 2015.
  18. "Stand By Me Doraemon movie set to premiere in Philippine cinemas this June 17". Anime Pilipinas. 29 May 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  19. "Stand by Me Doraemon (2014) – Release Info". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 19 December 2014.
  20. Gavin J. Blair and Clifford Coonan (28 May 2015). "'Stand By Me Doraemon' Becomes First Japanese Movie in China in Three Years". The Hollywood Reporter. (Prometheus Global Media). Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  21. "3D Doraemon film coming to China – Entertainment News – SINA English". english.sina.com.
  22. 3DCG『ドラえもん』、興収80億円突破 ORICON STYLE 2014年10月23日
  23. "『STAND BY ME ドラえもん』21の国と地域へ進出! 海外バイヤーが大絶賛". Retrieved 19 August 2014.
  24. 3DCG『ドラえもん』世界へ 21ヶ国・地域で公開決定 ORICON STYLE 2014年8月19日
  25. "Stand By Me Doraemon 3D CG Film to Open in 57 Countries – News – Anime News Network".
  26. "STAND BY ME ドラえもん [ブルーレイ豪華版]" (in Japanese). Pony Canyon. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  27. "STAND BY ME ドラえもん [ブルーレイ通常版]" (in Japanese). Pony Canyon. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  28. "STAND BY ME ドラえもん [DVD通常プライス版]" (in Japanese). Pony Canyon. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  29. "YESASIA: Stand By Me Doraemon (2014) (DVD) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) DVD – Yagi Ryuichi, Yamazaki Takashi, Intercontinental Video (HK) – Japan Movies & Videos – Free Shipping". www.yesasia.com.
  30. "YESASIA: Stand By Me Doraemon (2014) (Blu-ray) (3D + 2D) (Multi-audio) (English Subtitled) (Hong Kong Version) Blu-ray – Yagi Ryuichi, Yamazaki Takashi, Intercontinental Video (HK) – Japan Movies & Videos – Free Shipping". www.yesasia.com.
  31. "Stand By Me Doraemon on iTunes" via itunes.apple.com.
  32. Nancy Tartaglione and David Bloom (10 January 2015). "'Transformers 4′ Tops 2014's 100 Highest-Grossing International Films – Chart". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 10 January 2015.
  33. "Box Office Leaders". Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  34. Clifford Coonan (29 June 2015). "China Box Office: 'Jurassic World' Unshakable Amid Surging Revenue". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  35. "Stand by Me Doraemon". www.boxofficemojo.com.
  36. Rob Cain (31 May 2015). "Japan's Unlikely Ambassador: a Cartoon Robot Cat From the Future Wins China's Hearts and Minds". Forbes. (Forbes, Inc.). Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  37. Rob Cain (2 June 2015). "Box Office Shocker: Japanese Film Wins at Chinese Box Office". forbes.com. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  38. Rob Cain. "China Box Office: "San Andreas" Rolls to Strong PRC Opening". Forbes. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
  39. "哆啦A梦:伴我同行(2015)". cbooo.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  40. "aramajapan". 16 August 2014. Retrieved 20 January 2015.
  41. "ルミエール・ジャパン・アワードグランプリは「ドラえもん」". 映画.com. 22 December 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  42. "山崎貴監督エンタメ貫き2冠/映画大賞". Nikkan Sports. 4 December 2014. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  43. "International 3D & Advanced Imaging Society Bestows 23 Honors at 6th Annual Awards Ceremony at Warner Bros. Studios". Business Wire. 19 January 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  44. 第38回日本アカデミー賞最優秀賞発表!、日本アカデミー賞公式サイト、2015年2月27日閲覧。
  45. "「アニメ オブ ザ イヤー」TAAF2015 「アナ雪」や「妖怪ウォッチ」がグランプリにノミネート". アニメ!アニメ!.
  46. "Frozen, Ping Pong, Tiger & Bunny Win at Tokyo Anime Award Festival". Anime News Network.
  47. "「STAND BY ME ドラえもん」など VFX-JAPANアワード2015最優秀賞決定". アニメ!アニメ!.
  48. ANIME NEWS: 'Yokai Watch', 'Aikatsu' among winners at AMD Awards Archived 11 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Truy cập ngày 8 tháng 4 năm 2015
  49. 第24回日本映画批評家大賞アニメ部門 作品賞 に「楽園追放」、監督賞に米林宏昌 (in Japanese). 10 May 2015. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
  50. "第34回藤本賞に「STAND BY ME ドラえもん」製作陣、続編製作に意欲". 映画.com. 4 June 2015. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  51. "ドラえもん、「徹子の部屋」に14年ぶり出 演!3DCG版では初!" (in Japanese). Cinema Today. 31 July 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2015.
  52. "Japanese robot cat Doraemon helps ease diplomatic tensions with China". The Guardian. 3 June 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  53. "Is a Time-Traveling Robot Cat Inspiring China and Japan to Bury the Hatchet?". 5 June 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  54. "Stand By Me Doraemon CG Anime Film Gets Sequel Film in August". Anime News Network. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  55. "映画『STAND BY ME ドラえもん 2』 映画化決定!! – ドラえもんチャンネル". 映画『STAND BY ME ドラえもん 2』 映画化決定!! – ドラえもんチャンネル. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  56. "菅田将暉「STAND BY ME ドラえもん2」主題歌「虹」を歌唱! 作詞・作曲は石崎ひゅーい : 映画ニュース". 映画.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 3 March 2022.



На других языках


- [en] Stand by Me Doraemon

[es] Stand by Me Doraemon

Stand by me Doraemon (STAND BY ME (スタンド・バイ・ミー) ドラえもん; Stand by me (Sutando · bai · mī) Doraemon, ''Stand by me Doraemon''?) (literalmente, Quédate conmigo, Doraemon); es una película japonesa en 3DCG, basada en varios episodios de Doraemon. Dirigida por Takashi Yamazaki y Ryūichi Yagi,[1] se estrenó el 8 de agosto de 2014 en Japón.[2][3][4]

[ru] Stand by Me Doraemon

Дораэмон: Останься со мной (яп. STAND BY ME ドラえもん Сутандо Бай Ми: Дораэмон) — японский анимационный фильм режиссёра Такаси Ямадзаки, выпущенный в 2014 году компанией Toho[1][2].



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