Английская Википедия:Brave Father Online: Our Story of Final Fantasy XIV
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox film Шаблон:Nihongo is a 2019 Japanese comedy drama film based on a Japanese television drama miniseries Final Fantasy XIV: Dad of Light, which is based on blog post Dad of Light written by Maidy.[1][2] The film stars Kentaro Sakaguchi, Kōtarō Yoshida, Maika Yamamoto and Naomi Zaizen.
Cast
- Kentaro Sakaguchi as Akio Iwamoto
- Kōtarō Yoshida as Akira Iwamoto
- Maika Yamamoto as Miki Iwamoto
- Naomi Zaizen as Yukiko Iwamoto
- Yui Sakuma as Satomi Ide
- Kou Maehara as Kensuke
- Yui Imaizumi as Kataoka
- Nonomura Hanano as Ogasawara
- Jundai Yamada as Kenichiro Mihara
- Masato Wada as Hidetaka Nakajima
- Ryuta Sato as Shintaro Yoshii
- Yoshino Nanjō as Maidy (voice)
- Minako Kotobuki as Aru-chan (voice)
- Aoi Yūki as Kirin (voice)
Production
Original story author Maidy said that they were happy to help create a film version of their story as there were still issues to explore not covered by the television series.[3] Differences from the television version of the story, Final Fantasy XIV: Dad of Light, include the addition of a fourth sibling to the family.[3] Another change was to have other characters play Final Fantasy XIV not just father and son.[3] Square Enix also gave the filmmakers their own game server to control the time of day and weather in order to film exactly the kinds of shots they wished.[3]
With the production crew filming on a private server, crew members created characters and appeared in the background to make the world feel like the regular game.[3] Since the television series was released, many features were added to make characters more expressive including group poses and facial expressions.[3] Game footage was recorded at 120 frames per second to allow for the seamless use of slow motion effects.[3] Changes were also made to a key story moment where the son is turned around by his father in game, changing the televisions wholly in-game perspective to one showing the father and son playing the game and deciding what to do.[3]
Release and reception
The film was released in Japan by Gaga on June 21, 2019, and on Netflix Japan on July 21, 2020.[4]
Famitsu recommended the film, saying that viewers familiar with the television version of the story or fans of massively multiplayer online role-playing games will particularly love the story.[5] The film ranked first in Japanese survey app Pia for audience satisfaction for the weekend it released.[6]
The South China Morning Post gave the film 3.5 out of 5 stars, saying the project was like a "glorified commercial" as well as a touching melodrama.[1] A special screening of the film was done in Japan after Maidy, the story's original author, died from cancer.[7]
References
External links
- Английская Википедия
- 2019 films
- 2019 comedy-drama films
- 2010s Japanese-language films
- Japanese comedy-drama films
- Films about father–son relationships
- Final Fantasy XIV
- Final Fantasy films
- Films about families
- Films about video games
- Films with live action and animation
- Comedy-drama films based on actual events
- Films based on role-playing video games
- Films based on television series
- Films based on diaries
- Works based on blogs
- Films based on multiple works
- Live-action films based on video games
- 2010s Japanese films
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