HASHIRE MELOS!
MOVIE
Dubbed
SOURCE
OTHER
RELEASE
June 25, 1992
LENGTH
110 min
DESCRIPTION
Melos is a good boy from Messina and has come to Syracuse, the magnificent city of temples, to buy a ritual sword for his sister's marriage ceremony. He meets a very talented sculptor and they become friends.
Later, the King's guards arrest Melos while he was having a walk in the castle's gardens and Syracuse's King, obsessed by the idea of assassins out to kill him, sentences him to death. Melos is desperate, but most of all he wants to be present at his sister's marriage, so he asks the King for three days to go to Messina for the celebration and then return to Syracuse where he will accept the death penalty. The King does not trust Melos, but, trying to demonstrate that nobody could trust him, asks him to find a volunteer substitute in case he breaks his promise. The sculptor accepts to be Melos' substitute in this case...
(Source: Anime News Network)
CAST
Melos
Kouichi Yamadera
Serinentius
Shinji Ogawa
Alexis
Yoshisada Sakaguchi
Dionysius II
Akiji Kobayashi
Lysa
Akina Nakamori
Phryne
Aki Mizusawa
Clair
Megumi Hayashibara
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REVIEWS
Galios
60/100An Ancient Adventure and the Power of Innocent Trust.Continue on AniList#__ 《 My Thoughts on 》 __ https://anilist.co/anime/4876/Run-Melos/
# An Ancient Adventure and the Power of Innocent Trust.
This movie was not what I expected, and unfortunately, not everything was positive. Let’s delve into the details.
Firstly, the film offers the most authentic atmosphere and scenery of ancient history I've seen in an animated movie. The ancient town of Syracuse is so lively and detailed that it feels like they screen-captured a real ancient city. From the markets, small streets, and various shops selling vegetables and livestock to blacksmiths, cockfighting rings, and stonemasonry, every background scene is great. It all has this ancient feel that really makes you want to see what the past looked like.
What I also liked was the main character, Melos. Melos is basically a huge, muscular, naive country bumpkin with the innocence of an 11-year-old, visiting the city of Syracuse to buy a ceremonial sword for his sister's wedding. His arrival in Syracuse was such a joy to watch; from being clotheslined by the entry guard to manhandling some cockfighting dealers to getting swarmed and robbed by the most evil creatures in human history... children. He then meets the always-drunk stonemason, Serinentius. These first twenty minutes felt like a city adventure in ancient Greece, and I really loved the "vibe" of it.
However, after meeting Serinentius and becoming best buddies instantly, Melos gets into big trouble with the King of the city. Roses are red, violets are blue, Melos needs to get his sister married as soon as possible and come back within three days before sunset to help his new friend Serinentius, who is set to be executed because of him. Yeah, it escalated quickly, but there's obviously more to it in the movie. I just skipped the details to simply explain the plot.
Even with this stated plot, fantastic atmosphere, and adventure-like feeling in the city, the biggest question for me was: what was this movie really about? I kept asking myself this during the first half, "What is the point of this plot?" and then the answer was presented on a silver platter. #
It is trust. Trust is the core message of this movie. It’s a word with many meanings and interpretations, but in this movie, the meaning is relatively simple at its core yet deeply explored in terms of what it means for the characters. Melos, for example, had nobody who really trusted him. To his sister and his village, he was just a big oaf who kept getting in trouble because of his naive nature. The first one to trust him wholeheartedly was Serinentius.
The reason Serinentius trusted Melos is also very interestingly written. It’s explained that Serinentius had a loving relationship with his father, who was the royal stonemason. Because of that, Serinentius wanted to make his father proud by becoming a stonemason himself. He became so talented that it was apparently set that he would be his father's successor. But his father grew jealous and tried to kill him by causing some rocks to fall on Serinentius. Luckily, Serinentius wasn't struck; just his father. His father then confessed to him in his last breath, and that broke Serinentius to the point of never trusting anyone until he met Melos. He decided he wanted to give someone the innocent trust his father and mother gave him when he was younger.
Then we have the antagonist, the King of Syracuse, Dionysius II. Because he is a king, he needs to be right all the time, and he thinks trusting someone is foolish, so he wanted to make an example of Melos by creating this charade. Overall, I see the connection and the writing logic behind all this, but I can't ignore that this was executed in such a convenient way that some scenarios are just not really believable, in my opinion. For instance, the old guy and Lyra always helping Melos very conveniently and even dramatically predictably, making the tension non-existent and boring.
Still, for me, the most positive and impactful aspect of the film was the monologue of Serinentius. It was very touching in how it conveyed the innocence of the message about trust. Melos's determination was also very effectively portrayed. However, overall, the film is still flawed in execution, and a lot of potential was wasted because of the convenient writing.
--- #My Final Thoughts --- __This movie, despite its incredible depiction of an ancient fictional city like Syracuse and its engaging early scenes, ultimately falls short due to its convenient and unbelievable plot developments. The core theme of trust is touching and well-explored, but in my opinion, the execution leaves much to be desired. __
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SCORE
- (3.3/5)
MORE INFO
Ended inJune 25, 1992
Main Studio Visual 80
Favorited by 26 Users