If you loved InuYasha, film 4 : Guren no Houraijima, try Inuyasha, film 2 : Le Château des illusions
Un pont entre un film que tu as déjà vu et un que peu de gens ont croisé. Voici ce qu'ils partagent, et ce que le second fait que le premier ne fait pas.
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InuYasha, film 4 : Guren no Houraijima
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Inuyasha, film 2 : Le Château des illusions
Ce qu'ils partagent
Both films are directed by Toshiya Shinohara, and they both carry the epic, foreign gem mood tags, and they sit in Adventure / Animation / Fantasy territory. If that's the register that drew you to InuYasha, film 4 : Guren no Houraijima, the second film will land in a comparable space — through a different lens.
epicforeign gem
What Inuyasha, film 2 : Le Château des illusions is
You exist in feudal Japan, finally without Naraku. But a lunar princess appears, keen to remake the world in her image. The gang reunites. Shinohara's staging nods to classic fairy tales. The film conveys how quickly paradise gets lost.