Animation movies that make you want to be a better person on a sunday afternoon. Includes Look Back, New Gods: Nezha Reborn, How to Train Your Dragon: Homeco...
Some films leave you wanting more from yourself. These do that without lecturing.
Popular, outgoing Fujino is celebrated by her classmates for her funny comics in the class newspaper. One day, her teacher asks her to share the space with Kyomoto, a truant recluse whose beautiful artwork sparks a competitive fervor in Fujino. What starts as jealousy transforms when Fujino realizes their shared passion for drawing.
You finish this and feel a vague, good pressure to be more considered. That's the right feeling.
While living as an ordinary deliveryman and motor racing fan, Nezha encounters old nemeses and must rediscover his powers to protect his loved ones.
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
It's been ten years since the dragons moved to the Hidden World, and even though Toothless doesn't live in New Berk anymore, Hiccup continues the holiday traditions he once shared with his best friend. But the Vikings of New Berk were beginning to forget about their friendship with dragons. Hiccup, Astrid, and Gobber know just what to do to keep the dragons in the villagers' hearts. And across the sea, the dragons have a plan of their own...
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
Forcibly separated from her twin brother when they are orphaned, a melancholic misfit learns how to find confidence within herself amid the clutter of misfortunes and everyday life.
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
After receiving a warning that Yunyun's hometown is in danger, Kazuma's party is relieved to discover it's only a joke...until it isn't. The Demon King's general has just arrived to obtain The Mage Killer, a weapon with world-ending power.
You finish this and feel a vague, good pressure to be more considered. That's the right feeling.
Moral cinema works when it trusts the audience to draw their own conclusions.
Children's and family animation frequently does this better than adult drama.
Sunday-afternoon pacing. Unhurried and rewarding.
During the rise of fascism in Mussolini's Italy, a wooden boy brought magically to life struggles to live up to his father's expectations.
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
When K-pop superstars Rumi, Mira and Zoey aren't selling out stadiums, they're using their secret powers to protect their fans from supernatural threats.
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
The story of the last Seal Child's journey home. After their mother's disappearance, Ben and Saoirse are sent to live with Granny in the city. When they resolve to return to their home by the sea, their journey becomes a race against time as they are drawn into a world Ben knows only from his mother's folktales. But this is no bedtime story; these fairy folk have been in our world far too long. It soon becomes clear to Ben that Saoirse is the key to their survival.
You finish this and feel a vague, good pressure to be more considered. That's the right feeling.
A young man arrives at the last hometown of painter Vincent van Gogh to deliver the troubled artist's final letter and ends up investigating his final days there.
It shows someone doing something quietly right. No announcement. No reward. Just doing it.
An urban office worker finds that paper airplanes are instrumental in meeting a girl in ways he never expected.
You finish this and feel a vague, good pressure to be more considered. That's the right feeling.
Some films earn their effect. These do.
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