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User Reviews for: Violet Evergarden: The Movie

Catsy
CONTAINS SPOILERS6/10  3 years ago
This movie just screams KyoAni.

Not 100% sure what to say about this. If you are not familiar with Violet Evergarden the anime, this movie will require a steep learning curve.

TLDR: Violet was a war orphan trained to fight against enemy soldiers. She was found abandoned on a battlefield and adopted by Gilbert Bougainvillia who showed her compassion and care. He and Violet are trapped in a bomb attack and he dies while she loses both of her arms, but he tells Violet something before he loses his life and she Carrie's that with her into her future. Violet now works as an auto memory doll, a person who writes letters from others who don't know how to express themselves.

This movie is essentially a check in on past characters from the series and the OVA from whenever. A lot of it is just feel good moments interwoven with two major plot lines:

1. Daisy attends her grandmother's funeral and while her neglectful parents go to work for the day, she finds a box of letters for her grandmother written by Violet on behalf of her deceased great-grandmother. Daisy becomes interested in Violet's story.

2. Phones have replaced letters and now the Postal company has closed. In the past we learn about why Violet left the postal company.

I felt like the little vignettes were so disconnected from the main plotline and really only served to hype up how great Violet is and how much she's grown as a person. When we check in with the past characters they've all achieved their dreams thanks to Violet and she goes on to help other characters. We meet these people in one or two scenes before they have a major emotional revelation and we are meant to empathise with them.

What really took away from these scenes is that the anime tropes were laid on so heavily. There are many scenes in this film where there is just no animation. Like still frames and single shots. It was meant to be poignant but they went on for too long. In particular when Violet remembers the day the Major died, she sits in the chair not moving for almost half a minute.

There are many many major close ups of eyes and wide shots to show the background artwork more.

With how gripping the main plotlines are I felt like these side stories were just there to pad the runtime and make the audience emotional. The movie really didn't shy away from showing graphic and traumatic content. Like dead children, or Violet's severed arms falling off. (At least those things don't move; you don't need to animate them.) Which I really appreciated, honestly. Maybe they censored the series for Netflix.

The conclusion gradually comes along and in a way I sort of didnt expect. Spoilers ahead beware.

[spoiler] Old mate Gilbert is alive and he is living on an island helping the locals. When he sends a letter on behalf of the children to someone but messes up the postal address, their mailing company intercepts it. Violet and the captain head to the island to meet Gilbert but he refuses. Through some very emotional scenes, Violet decides to leave but not before sending her letter to Gilbert. The letter is enough for him to change his mind so he races after Violet who is already on the ferry. She leaps off into the ocean, destroying her robotic arms and meets Gilbert on the beach. He confesses his love for her again and holds her while she cries, telling Violet he wants her by his side.[/spoiler]

I honestly felt pretty disgusted by this revelation. I can't believe they went there and Japan's sick fascination with this never ceases to disgust me. I loved the mystery of the anime series and how much Violet grew as a person but that same draw isn't here in this movie. They just cram feel-good/feel-bad moments down your throat until they made a 2-hour long movie.

Overall this movie doesn't have any development and is based on a light novel that collects a bunch of short stories about Violet. I am disappointed it ended this way but I liked the flash forward into the future. Good for fans of the series but I think I can't stomach anime anymore.
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Reply by Guenguer
3 years ago
@catsy "I honestly felt pretty disgusted by this revelation. I can't believe they went there and Japan's sick fascination with this never ceases to disgust me'<br /> <br /> Maybe I missed it in your post, but what are you talking about? <br /> <br /> I haven't watched the movie so far, it's on my list, but the series and ovas. Not on Netflix though :)
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Reply by Catsy
3 years ago
@guenguer marked spoiler below:<br /> <br /> [spoiler]Japan making adult men and children have romantic relationships. The major told Violet he loved her, she would have been like...11 to 14 and I was guessing he was in his early to mid 20s. In the future timeline when they meet, he is actually 29, which means my guess on his age was right cuz we know Violet is 18 when she leaves the mail company. So he admitted his romantic love for a CHILD. I thought he was a father figure to her but canonically they fall in love and live together.[/spoiler]
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Reply by Eco Chocolatcchi
3 years ago
@catsy I loved the overall mood of the series and thought the slow pacing helped it stand above the related TV series, but your issues with the cliches are spot on. Common themes such as hair ribbons/lost accessories, [spoiler] characters shouting their loves' names from far away while running, and other reoccurring situations do cheapen the impact. It is probably an effect from the popularity of Shinkai's and other films. I was fine with the major being too ashamed of his past to confront the present, but the whole turn around to give us the happy ending felt forced. Meanwhile the whole terminal illness boy subplot [/spoiler] is usually the type of emotional manipulation i hate but they handled it well, probably resulting in my score being so high along with the behind-the-scenes story of a studio rising from the ashes.
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Reply by Catsy
3 years ago
@eco-chocolatcchi So I also really liked the tv show and I would have preferred the tragic ending where they never meet again! It would have been a great redemption arc around ptsd, the use if children in war and how those survivors go forward. I found it pretty traumatic in that final scene where [spoiler]violet's arms rust off and fall into the ocean water[/spoiler]. She devolves into a child seeing someone from her past again. <br /> <br /> I felt the side stories were not developed enough for me to really care about the characters - and after seeing the OVA last year - it felt like they were ramming down our throats how good Violet is (after watching the TV series we would know she is good and not guilty of her actions in war). Regardless I'm glad you found much enjoyment in this movie.
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Lampjalg
9/10  2 years ago
A perfect ending for Violet. I adore it. It's so inspiring and I feel like getting up and doing something big, like Violet did, to be remembered. As I myself, who have spent hours and hours at my desk filling in my "thought diary", I had the thought that if I, too, could have brought out such a side in people. One that could change them. And also in me that someone will read this and look at me and ask, "Did you write that?" and realizes that I... I created what is so unique and different, and precisely because I did it. I've always known that a lot of people don't know me for who I am. I always let the situation direct my behavior. So Violet Evergarden is not just any anime, drama or story, it's like a part of my soul because I feel myself in Violet. What amazes me the most is that it is just a reunion between two individuals, and it can be so sad, happy, hopeful, comforting and fulfilling. It would be like a message about being human, you just have to bring out that humanity somehow. And I think I'm on my way there. But only at the beginning of the road. And I won't get there anytime soon.
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