A New Dawn Review: Berlinale Entry Is a Dreamy but Muddled Firework Tale
The Berlinale's decision to program a debut anime feature in competition signals continued festival-level recognition of Japanese animation as serious cinema, even when the film itself is deemed narratively uneven.
Reporting from 1 sources: The Hollywood Reporter Anime.
Yoshitoshi Shinomiya's feature debut "A New Dawn" premiered in competition at the Berlin International Film Festival, where it received a mixed review from The Hollywood Reporter. The film follows three childhood friends-Sentaro Obinata (voiced by Miyu Irino), his brother Keitaro (Riku Hagiwara), and their friend Kaoru Shikimori (Kotone Furukawa)-who band together to save a family fireworks factory from being seized by the municipality over unpaid debts. Shinomiya, a visual artist who worked on the watery flashback sequence in "Your Name," directed, wrote, and animated the film. The review describes the visuals as admirably original, with painterly backgrounds, traditional character animation, and claymation, but notes that the script lacks emotional heft. The climax features a massive firework device called the shuhari, executed with a mix of traditional and CGI animation. The film runs 75 minutes and was produced by Asmik Ace, Studio Outrigger, and Miyu Productions.
Yoshitoshi Shinomiya's "A New Dawn" bowed at the Berlin Film Festival on Thursday, competing for the Golden Bear alongside live-action entries. The Hollywood Reporter review calls the film "beautiful if somewhat baffling," praising its visual ambition while critiquing a script that "doesn't have the emotional heft" of crossover hits like "Your Name" or Studio Ghibli works. Shinomiya previously contributed to the distinctive watery flashback sequence in Makoto Shinkai's "Your Name."
The story centers on the Obinata family's fireworks factory, threatened by municipal seizure over debts-a plot point the review says involves "administrative subrogation," a phrase repeated throughout. The core trio of characters includes Sentaro (Miyu Irino), who later works for the same municipality that targeted his family; Keitaro (Riku Hagiwara), who remains in the house; and Kaoru (Kotone Furukawa), a university student known for light projection shows. Shuta Hasunuma provided an EDM-inflected soundtrack. The review advises viewers not to think too hard about the plot and instead enjoy the hallucinatory climactic firework sequence.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.
Sources
- The Hollywood Reporter Anime ‘A New Dawn’ Review: A Muddled but Strikingly Dreamy Animé About Firework Production