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+FULL+MoVIE!)*Mirai - 2025 FullMovie Download Mp4moviez Hindi Dubbed


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With great visuals and lessons, Mirai tells a beautiful family story.

Watch/Download Mirai FULL MOVIE

Despite this clearly be a Hosoda movie, it have a whole new aura, with more mature concepts and a more real approach to life. The film mostly is centenred in the challenge a child faces of sharing his parents with his newborn sister.


This kid didn't spoil everything to his parents or any grown ups. We continuously wonder if he'd end up in a psychiatric ward like western films portray to anybody making up stories they can't comprehend but thank God we get to see a happy ending to appreciate past, current & future family members. Just like "when marnie was here", I'm going to forgive how this kid manage to imagine his fantasy or even to the extent connecting to his mom's kid version or his great grandfather's young days. This movie is a must for people going to have second child & how we're going to treat the first child.

Here's a really fascinating story. Many years ago, film director Mamoru Hosoda noticed how badly his little son reacted to his then infant sister, thus inspiring him to create a film called Mirai. Released in 2018, the film was a critical hit to the point of being nominated for a Best Animated Feature oscar in 2019, despite losing to the superior Into the Spiderverse. Despite that, it has been ranked pretty high amongst the other works from Hosoda such as The Girl Who Leapt through Time and Wolf Children. Perhaps the main reasoning for its appeal lies in its themes of childhood growth over emotional reactions.

Centered around the life of a young boy named Kun who feels forgotten by his family when his little sister Mirai arrives, the film is structured in a somewhat repetitive nature. Essentially, Kun's tantrums cause him to nearly run away from home until he stumbles upon a magical garden that showcases where he encounters an alternate perspective on his world. These include seeing his pet dog Yukko as a human, Mirai in the future as a teenager, and his mother as a little girl. From that premise alone, Hosoda depicts the philosophies of consequences during youth as cautionary tales for what could lead into the future and how one's family can help you in the long run. Considering how little Kun knows about the world at age four, whatever happens around his family concerning Mirai is so foreign to him that even the simplest of hurdles feel detrimental to the little guy. Any parent who has struggled with their jobs and kids simultaneously can relate to Kun and Mirai's parents, but actually seeing how much Kun learns from his family history makes his struggles through childhood even more understandable.

Given that the film is brought to life through the art of animation, it would almost seem like the film's down to earth nature wouldn't really feel necessary in the medium. However, Hosoda and the team at Studio Chizu elevated the film's narrative through colorful visuals that metaphorically express Kun's imagination. Depending on the individual sequence, the film recaps past events in Kun's family tree through clever editing, painterly backgrounds and lighting tricks to give off the illusion that we're in a creative landscape interpretation of reality. Even the down to earth moments feel like contrasts compared to the occasional magical moments between Kun and the characters he interacts with, all of which range from soaring heights to transforming into bizarre creatures. With how much the film shows the lessons Kun learns in the end as opposed to merely explaining them, the viewers are able to comprehend Kun's inner emotions through what happens in his time travelling gateway. And how funny that it all started because of his reluctance to being a big brother?

There are only a handful of movies that explore childhood development as imaginatively as Mirai. As unconventional as its narrative may be, since it might as well be a five act movie instead of three, that makes it all the more unique as a story of maturity through past actions. We've all been there as trouble makers at our youth, but those past mistakes help us improve further down the road until we've eventually gotten to a better state in our later years. Give this film a viewing if you yourself would like to gain the experience of childhood wonderment and lessons in more ways than one.

Mirai is a film not just about a young kid learning to accept his sister and learn to understand others but also a film in which every character learns to as well. It is the perfect picture of the modern family featuring modern day kids who are spoiled and entitled making life hell for their parents, who are harsh on them and feel bad for doing such because they were scolded as kids. Not just these elements but also sibling rivalry and the mother and father learning to accept one another's flaws and move on as well. The characters have a lot of dimension to them as well. The film begins with Kun being an entitled brat but as you follow him you see him do various favors for other characters involving food and comfort to show that he is in fact a good kid just stubborn in terms of refusing to stop demanding love and attention. However this issue and the many others I spoke about are addressed in the form of Kun interacting with and learning from family members of both the past and the present directly and learning a thing or two. However a plot event doesn't always trigger a memory directly related to it but often brilliantly animated sequences like the sequence in the ocean, on the bike on the road by the bay, and the sneaking through the house sequence. This type of storytelling allows the story to be slowly told over time as we see Kun develop as a character and in some cases it works well. Not in all cases though as a time jump in the second act jarred the film a little bit after a slow building first half lead into a faster second half with an ending sequence that had a rocky start but a glorious conclusion. The pacing of the film was definitely a bit off as the first act dragged because of the difference in speed between the two halves of the film. The story within this pacing was very well told, through a decent frame of using future and past characters to help steer Kun in the right direction and past events to help steer the adults back in the right direction as well. In fact, I only have two complaints with the storytelling. The first being that the first half of the third act in a bizarrely animated train station that didn't connect to the previous acts very well. The second being that Kun's grandparents didn't seem too involved in the plot aside from being there when needed. In a film about familial issues and learning from the past to make a better future it would've been a bit nicer to see more from their perspective. Aside from that though, a rock solid story. The animation in this film was realistic when the film didn't jump in time but when it did, I mean, my god. The film wasn't afraid to do 180 degree turns to fully showcase the work that went into creating all of these unique times in the bay area. Whether it was the jungle, cliffside, ocean, temple area or train station the film was never afraid to show the details to the viewer in all their glory. I can't blame them either as I found myself clapping during the transition from present to past and future. It isn't just limited in 2D animation either as one of the crown jewel sequences is the ocean sequence in which the camera spins around to match what is going on inside Kun's head and you get to see schools of colorful fish with light creating a rainbow on their scales. Safe to say, the animation was great here like in most G Kids films. I also appreciated the music, especially during those transition sequences but even more so in the first act. When Kun touches the snowflakes for the first time or meets his sister Mirai for the first time, the music pulses with child like wonder. It actually made me remember what it was like to see snow and meet my sister Al for the first time. This film was great at showing just how much fun (or unfair) life is from a child's perspective. Lastly, I felt the script nailed people in the real world perfectly. In life, people work on their flaws to the best of their ability and often times have to compromise as well. There's often no storybook ending, just life going on into the future with constant work on flaws. As human beings we accept each others flaws, laugh, cry, love, hate and move swiftly towards the future and even the script had characters acknowledge their own flaws and each others but talk it out. The film's title "Mirai" means future and that's ultimately what the past helps us in the present gear up for. Was this movie perfect? Obviously not but it was still pretty good and I'm okay with that. I'm gonna give Mirai a 7 out of 10. F-F-FUUUTURRRREEE!!!!

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