BLEACH: FADE TO BLACK - KIMI NO NA WO YOBU
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
ORIGINAL
RELEASE
December 13, 2008
LENGTH
94 min
DESCRIPTION
A mysterious figure has broken into Mayuri Kurotsuchi's laboratory in the Seireitei. Rukia witnesses this catastrophe, and the intruders abduct Rukia as she feels something inside of her fade away.
Meanwhile, in the World of the Living, Ichigo and Kon experience a strange disturbance and head to Kisuke Urahara's shop for some answers. When Kisuke informs them about the destruction of the Seireitei, the two set out for the Soul Society.
What awaits Ichigo in the devastated Seireitei, however, are Soul Reapers who seem to have lost all memory related to both him and Rukia. Ichigo must find out what happened to Rukia and try to save her before the two are forced to part ways forever!
(Source: Viz Media)
CAST
Ichigo Kurosaki
Masakazu Morita
Rukia Kuchiki
Fumiko Orikasa
Homura
Aya Hirano
Shizuku
Hiroshi Kamiya
Kisuke Urahara
Shinichirou Miki
Yoruichi Shihouin
Satsuki Yukino
Kenpachi Zaraki
Fumihiko Tachiki
Toushirou Hitsugaya
Romi Park
Byakuya Kuchiki
Ryoutarou Okiayu
Jirou Souzousa Shunsui Kyouraku
Akio Ootsuka
Renji Abarai
Kentarou Itou
Rangiku Matsumoto
Kaya Matsutani
Soi Fon
Tomoko Kawakami
Retsu Unohana
Aya Hisakawa
Mayuri Kurotsuchi
Ryuusei Nakao
Shuuhei Hisagi
Katsuyuki Konishi
Ikkaku Madarame
Nobuyuki Hiyama
Genryuusai Yamamoto
Masaaki Tsukada
Yachiru Kusajishi
Hisayo Mochizuki
Kon
Mitsuaki Madono
Nemu Kurotsuchi
Rie Kugimiya
Juushirou Ukitake
Hideo Ishikawa
Yumichika Ayasegawa
Jun Fukuyama
Sajin Komamura
Tetsu Inada
Hanatarou Yamada
Kouki Miyata
RELATED TO BLEACH: FADE TO BLACK - KIMI NO NA WO YOBU
REVIEWS
Toriko
35/100Completely hollow movie (pun intended).Continue on AniListFade to Black is a prime example of a Bleach universe expansion that simply doesn’t need to exist. There was not a single reason for this movie to be made other than milking the franchise.
I will elaborate on that.
Spoilers ahead but... nothing really happens in this movies so you may proceed anyway. This is not exaggeration.Fade to Black is a filler. Now, fillers can be great assets to a show, especially to one as rich as Bleach – but they must be done right, they must have a purpose. To pull off a good filler it is essential to focus on an already established aspect of the show’s universe, be it characters or the world, and further develop them. Also, fanservice. That is necessary part of a filler too. Simply put, take something from a show and expand it in an entertaining way.
Bleach has a history of fillers and I’d argue some of them are quite decent. Their fatal flaws tend to lie in the timing of the filler and weak characters, but there’s generally a great deal of good filler inputs. This movie is not one of them.
As I’ve stated above, what makes a filler a good addition to the main story is the fact it can go anywhere. Is there a quirky side character who doesn’t get much screentime? Take them and have them go on an adventure! Put them in a stressful situation to show who they are. Let them make decisions of their own. Filler is such a powerful tool since it is able to do all that without affecting the main plot while expanding said plot.
Fade to Black feels like a discount version of an actual filler arc that already aired. It is built on the premise of two characters who can alter other people’s memories. These two mysterious hooligans happen to be interested in Rukia and decide to erase her memories, kidnap her all while commencing an attack on Soul Society as they hate all Soul Reapers. So, as it turns out, everyone forgets about Rukia’s and Ichigo’s (because his powers were originally hers which makes them connected) very existence.
Thus, when Ichigo enters Soul Society to look for Rukia, everyone is after him since they don’t recognize him and suspect him of being the culprit behind the attack on Seireitei.
This has already happened in Bleach. Not to say the whole Soul Society arc is about Ichigo battling Soul Reapers to save Rukia, there is also this weird Shuusuke Amagai filler arc in which Ichigo is drawn into a noble family dispute and the Gotei 13 are chasing him down since they suspect him of intervening in the nobles’ wedding – it’s complicated, the fact remains that the concept of Ichigo having to battle Soul Reapers of Soul Society has been done before. This adds absolutely nothing to our experience with the world of Bleach.
Plot wise there is nothing of substance but Ichigo trying to prove himself as the ally of Soul Society could theoretically be amusing, you might say. Well, there is nothing like that. His attempts are pathetic, the only way in which he demonstrates his knowledge of Soul Society is calling people by their names. To give credit where credit’s due, he does tell Byakuya the name of his late wife, which was good and also (SURPRISINGLY!) worked and second point, he reveals that he knows of Renji’s bankai. Those are the only attempts to convince the Gotei 13 that he, in fact, knows them and they simply forgot about him.
The movie isn’t even entertaining fanservice-wise. There is a 30-second-long scene of Byakuya and Hisane back in the day and that is all. It feels more like – oh look! Komamura’s bankai! Oh, and look there – Byakuya’s bankai! Oh, and this? It’s Yoruichi carrying Soi-Fon!
This movie serves as pointless platform to show popular Bleach characters and that’s it. Literally. Some of those characters make appearance just for the sake of making appearance – we don’t even see them fight, we don’t see them interact with anyone, they are just there. Like hey! Ikkaku and Yumichika! Hitsugaya! Kenpachi! you like them, right?
That is best represented during the ending of the movie. One of the main focuses was the fact that neither Renji nor Byakuya could remember Rukia, their most important person. There is actual build-up for the moment they finally realize who Rukia is. I was genuinely interested to see both Byakuya and Renji deal with the situation and eventually react to the realization.
That doesn’t happen.
Eventually, everybody gets their memories back, obviously, but there is absolutely no conclusion to anything except for between Rukia and Ichigo. We don’t see Renji nor Byakuya react to what has transpired. We don’t see Gotei 13 react to the fact they were hunting Ichigo down. There is no rewarding conclusion to anything that has happened.
For a movie about memories I would expect more sentimental approach yet all we are offered are quick battle sequences and literally nothing but cameos. Fade to Black feels like every famous Bleach character got a cameo and that was all there was budget for.
If only I got at least some fanservice I would have rated this higher, however this movie doesn’t even have that. I definitely wouldn’t recommend watching Fade to Black - and not because it’s that bad, it’s just very empty. I can’t think of a single reason anyone should spend 94 minutes of their life on a movie so devoid of meaning.
That one episode about Yumichika, Rin and Hanatarou baking a cake for the first time had more substance than this.
(I mean it, that is an exceptionally well done filler I absolutely love, because it takes three side characters, places them in front of an unusual conflict, they have to work to resolve said conflict and ultimately it allows them to grow as people. The filler is structured like a regular story, there is build-up and pay-off while it also develops the characters in subtle yet meaningful ways. There is fanservice, humour and action as well. It is a filler with purpose and it's a fucking cake baking episode.)WhatAGoodShow
58/100Bleach movies are usually written like extended anime filler episodes. Does this apply to this movie too?Continue on AniListBleach Movie 3 Fade to Black is a movie where almost every character get amnesia forgetting about Rukia Kuchiki and since Ichigo's powers are still connected to her also about the main character. Thankfully Ichigo Kurosaki and Kon, a plush lion, remembered her thanks to a letter and go to Soul Society to safe her. Due to a crisis happening in the world of the shinigami that leads to a lot of misunderstandings with allies considering Ichigo as an enemy.
Basically the movie is about stopping the real badguys which are two siblings and rescue Rukia while also helping everyone to regain their memories.Simple concept and a simple premise which sounds great. Rukia and Ichigo's relationship are some of the best things about Bleach and having allies being enemies now gives the opportunity to see some fights we didn't see in Soul Society arc that could have happened. That is pretty much the main appeal of the movie and before its release it was advertised who will Ichigo encounter and fight.
Sadly that is also the weakness of Fade to Black and what many prior Bleach movies suffered: too many characters. Of the main characters that Kubo usually like to push but not really only Ichigo and Rukia are involved. No Sado. No Ishida. No Inoue.
Even then the cast is still crowded with the directors wanting Ichigo to get some favorites as his allies back to safe Rukia such as Renji. But considering the movie has only a runtime of about 90 minutes, nothing really stays long enough to leave an impact.
There are a bunch of powers used. A bunch of Bankais released. Seiretei gets endangered by something big like in the previous movies. It is pretty much a mess, even if the animation and soundtrack are stellar.
Honestly fanservice itself is kinda a mixed bag since whenever the captains release bankai or Kenpachi removes his eyepatch, we will see a generic slaughter you have probably seen for the 3rd time if you are watching Bleach movies in order. Even down to the disrespect put on Soifon having her make an amateur mistake so someone saves her.The enemies have the power to cut memories, bonds and a weird teleportation technique which might not be teleportation. It is weird and confusing. The memory cutting ability never plays a role in combat and while the final fight is entertaining to watch, it just doesn't stick even with the homage to episode 1 of the anime series.
Speaking of homages, there are a lot of nods to the first two Bleach arcs. We see also how Byakuya acts a bit different from his usual self we are used to and Rukia trying to figure out who she is.
Other characters aren't much different despite their memory loss.
The antagonists may be the weakest part of the movie. They are siblings who have a tragic past and have personal connection to Rukia, but they aren't very likeable. Especially the elder sister who is the only one calling the shots while the brother does what she says. He reasons sometimes but doesn't feel like he has any agency as a character himself.Overall this movie like all Bleach movies can't reach its full potential. It can't decide if it wants to tell a compelling story or put a bunch of fan service to fill the much needed runtime that could be used to give the younger brother more agency. And the ending while being symbolic is very confusing in why it worked and if other characters couldn't have done the same thing if Ichigo just told them.
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SCORE
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TRAILER
MORE INFO
Ended inDecember 13, 2008
Main Studio Studio Pierrot
Favorited by 297 Users