The Colors Within

2024 [JAPANESE]

Animation / Drama / Music

6
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 92% · 49 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 91% · 100 ratings
IMDb Rating 7.1/10 10 1265 1.3K

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Plot summary

Totsuko is a high school student with the ability to see the 'colors' of others. Colors of bliss, excitement, and serenity, plus a color she treasures as her favorite. Kimi, a classmate at her school, gives off the most beautiful color of all. Although she doesn't play an instrument, Totsuko forms a band with Kimi and Rui, a quiet music enthusiast they meet at a used bookstore in a far corner of town. As they practice at an old church on a remote island, music brings them together, forming friendships and stirring affections.

Director

Top cast

Nanako Mori as Ballet Instructor
Yui Aragaki as Sister Hiyoshiko
Yûko Sasaki as Totsuko's Mother
Minako Kotobuki as Sumika Yatsushika
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
925.19 MB
1280*692
Japanese 2.0
NR
Subtitles es  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 62
1.86 GB
1920*1038
Japanese 5.1
NR
Subtitles es  
23.976 fps
1 hr 40 min
Seeds 100+

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Michael-Chen_2005 7 / 10

Exquisite and heartrending

The friendship depicted in Yamada Naoko's works always shines with purity and beauty. With its fresh and healing visual style, expressive cinematography, and spiritually resonant premise, Your Colors locks in its position as an extraordinarily unique creation that stands shoulder-to-shoulder with her previous masterpieces. The three songs performed by the "Shironekodo" band during the film's climax poignantly correspond to "the radiant moments shared by the trio," "the melancholy of adolescence," and "the vibrant hues of Sakunaga Kimi that Higure Shiyo yearns for." Ultimately, every deception transforms into heartfelt confessions, every conflict resolves into reconciliation, leaving audiences bathed in sunlight and tenderness.The subtle narrative thread involving teacher Hiyoshiko-sensei, who secretly supports the three protagonists, emerges as the story's most moving undercurrent. Though she couldn't pursue her own rock band dreams, she becomes an umbrella sheltering the youths' musical aspirations. Her nun-like costume design poignantly hints at both her constrained nature and life circumstances beyond her control.The film unfolds with deliberate pacing, employing artful use of negative space that invites viewers to wander through imaginative possibilities. Certain sequences demand patient contemplation to fully absorb and comprehend. While it serves as a cerebral spa treatment in our fast-paced world, audiences should adjust expectations accordingly-this isn't a plot-driven anime feature with dramatic character arcs, but rather a meditative canvas where emotions flow like watercolors.
Reviewed by RegalsReelView 6 / 10

Starts Slow, but Ends Beautifully

Totsuko has the peculiar ability to see people as colors and is drawn to people with a beautiful color. As she searches for a classmate she is drawn to, Totsuko stumbles into a boy she is also drawn to. The three of them create a band together and begin making music. As they go through the creative process, Totsuko discovers that her friends are going through their own struggles, and music is their passion and an outlet.This coming-of-age anime is unique. The visual representation of how Tosuko perceives people as colors is well done. Overall, the animation is outstanding, from the characters to how they play musical instruments. Many can relate to the story as it deals with growing up, breaking away from expectations, and creating your own path. The film's pace is such that the one hour and forty-one minutes feel that long, starting slowly and moving faster closer to the story's climax. This is a great film, but it might be one that you enjoy from the comfort of your home.
Reviewed by Quinoa1984 7 / 10

Still not sure how the Theramin rocks, but this is heartfelt and subtle coming of age filmmaking

The Colors Within is tender, mostly adorable, and quite modest compared to other Anime films I've seen over the past several years; even compared to other coming of age stories tinged with longing and/or lots of vibes, what's striking about Yamada's direction is how she isn't forcing you into feeling a certain way through an abundance of style. The colors that Totsuko sees are fantastical but lightly so, and once it's established as a sort of "quirk" you can sink into the story of these three sorta-outsider-ish teens that form a band and who either don't fit in (for Totsuko because of her color sights and also because she can't stay on a bus without getting carsick) or just don't like school so they drop out.It's a movie based more around vibes than a really propulsive narrative, like the major conflict comes about that Totsuko and Kimi hang out overnight in the dorm and have (checks notes) lots of snacks and listen to that one song from the Trainspotting soundtrack (which becomes the basis of one of their three songs they work on and perform in the climax). But these are vibes that are vulnerable, or it's about how young people have so much vulnerability and social awkwardness until opening up, and there's no one here who stands out even as a threat or close to an antagonist.And sometimes that's... fine, especially if it's a squishy sort of coming of age story that (a semi running theme for this director after A Silent Voice) is about the effort in apologizing; in this case there's also the fact that it's about the art that can come out of that emotional register, and that's kind of cool. Some of it is so pleasant feeling that it may be easy to nod off (or it was for me), and yet that isn't a problem for me either because you click back in to it once Totsuko dances and that big performance climax comes and it all fits.So, even as this isn't quite a romance, it is about the love that comes with friendship in a sincere way, and I appreciate the total lack of irony and sweetness at its core.
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