Scarlet backdrop
Scarlet

Scarlet

7.2 / 1020251h 52m

Synopsis

After failing to avenge her father's murder, Princess Scarlet, wakes up in the "Land of the Dead." In this world filled with madness, if she does not achieve her revenge against her nemesis and reach the "No End Place," she will become "Void" and cease to exist. Can Scarlet find a way to live at the end of her endless journey?

Genre: Animation, Action, Drama, Science Fiction

Status: Released

Director: Mamoru Hosoda

Website: https://scarlet.movie

Main Cast

Mana Ashida

Mana Ashida

Scarlet (voice)

Masaki Okada

Masaki Okada

Hijiri (voice)

Yutaka Matsushige

Yutaka Matsushige

Cornelius (voice)

Kotaro Yoshida

Kotaro Yoshida

Voltemand (voice)

Koji Yakusho

Koji Yakusho

Claudius (voice)

Masachika Ichimura

Masachika Ichimura

Amulet (voice)

Yuki Saito

Yuki Saito

Gertrude (voice)

Shota Sometani

Shota Sometani

Guildenstern (voice)

Munetaka Aoki

Munetaka Aoki

Rosencrantz (voice)

Kazuhiro Yamaji

Kazuhiro Yamaji

Polonius (voice)

Trailer

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

Based very loosely on Shakespeare’s “Hamlet”, this follows the perilous adventures of the princess “Scarlet” as she seeks retribution for the assassination of her kingly father by her uncle “Claudius”. He is aware that she is going to try something and so arranges for her to join him in the Land of the Dead. That plan doesn’t quite go to plan and though she ends up there, she is not yet consumed by it's nothingness. No sooner has she arrived than she encounters and allies with the confused young 21st century paramedic “Hijiri” and they both set about attempting to thwart the regicidal “Claudius” and his scheming wife “Gertrude”. The first thing I noticed watching this was how linear and two-dimensional the animation was. The backgrounds are uncomfortably static whilst the princess and her friend face many a foe, and there are too many rather bland music and dance numbers that really only serve to stagger this film’s already quite staccato pacing. Their adventures are presented in an curiously sterile and episodic fashion, almost emulating progressive gaming levels, and though there is an opportunity to develop both her and “Claudius” as characters, Mamoru Hisada seems to have decided to skip those stages and so leave us with something unfortunately undercooked. There are some action scenes now and again but they don’t really breathe enough life into this to raise it from the realms of the lacklustre. It’s watchable enough, but somewhat disappointing.