Review for Naruto The Movie: Road To Ninja

9 / 10

Introduction


Ever since I first heard of Road to Ninja: Naruto the Movie, I knew that this was one film that I had to watch. The average Naruto feature spin-off is pure filler, a fantasy story created by the animators to offer some theatrical quality animation, and rake in the profits off the back of the popularity of the ongoing series. The key being that the series is ongoing and nothing that the movies can do can have any effect on that storyline. A cynic would think of the Naruto movies; indeed any anime movie spun-off a long-running shonen property, as disposable entertainment. The difference between those prior eight movies and Road to Ninja is a fundamental one. This story is written by Masashi Kishimoto himself, the creator of the Naruto manga. This is about as canon as a feature spin-off can get, and if you are watching the ongoing series, this movie may as well be essential.

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The war continues, and in their latest battle, Naruto and his friends have just defeated the resurrected forms of Akatsuki. That’s worth celebrating, and proud parents in the Hidden Leaf village are lavishing praise on their offspring. For orphan Naruto, that only serves to remind him just what his life has been without. And then Madara appears before Naruto and Sakura, and unleashes his latest plan, with a new ninja power. Suddenly, the world has changed, literally so. It’s still the Hidden Leaf village, but everyone is behaving oddly. Kiba likes cats, Shikamaru is an idiot, Hinata is a bad-ass, and Rock Lee is a pervert. But more fundamentally, in this world, it’s Sakura who is an orphan. It was her parents that sacrificed their lives to protect the village, and she is lauded as the child of heroes.

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Given her recent friction with her parents, she’s keen on the idea of spending some time in a world without them, but Naruto has no intention in staying in a fake world, especially one that is part of Madara’s schemes. Only in this world, his parents are still alive. Fake they may be, but it’s still a compelling development. But there’s trouble in this world too, a masked ninja seeking a secret scroll with devastating power. The masked man might just be Madara again, and Naruto’s willing to fight, but his parents are surprisingly protective of their ‘son’.

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Picture


Road to Ninja gets a 1.85:1 anamorphic PAL transfer on this DVD. It’s also available on Blu-ray should you require the extra definition. It’s what you would expect for a Naruto movie, the comparatively simplistic character designs not exactly offering a theatrical level of detail, the clumsy blend of traditional 2D and 3D CGI is still apparent, but the film really impresses during the action sequences. Road to Ninja makes effective use of its colour palette to deliver some atmospheric scenes as the story unfolds, and generally it’s on a par with the usual Naruto features.

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Sound


You have the choice between DD 5.1 Surround English and Japanese, with optional subtitles and a signs only track. I only watched the film in the original Japanese for this review, and can’t comment on the dub. The dialogue is clear throughout, and the action scenes get effective support from the surround audio. Also the film’s music really does work well with the story to establish mood and carry the emotional weight of the story. The subtitles are timed accurately, but unfortunately have more than a few typos.

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Extras


Road to Ninja comes in an Amaray case, with some character art on the inner sleeve. The disc presents the film with a static menu.

In terms of extras, you get 2 Movie Trailers running to 2:59, two Movie Promos running to 1:12, and 9 Movie Commercials running to 2:16. You also get around 6 images in an Art Gallery.

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Conclusion


Damn you Naruto! You’re just a shonen series, designed to appeal to the young teen male demographic, full of action sequences and levelling up, pontificating villains and relatable heroes. You’re not supposed to elicit tears, and tug on the heartstrings. Road to Ninja does just that, and it is to date the best Naruto movie yet released. This is one film that appeals to the emotional side of the audience, and it’s all the better for it. To have a good movie, you have to care about the characters, and in the usual, disposable filler movie, we have 90-odd minutes to get to know a guest character to root for, as the main cast will not see any peril, and neither will their characters develop over the runtime. Road to Ninja is about Naruto, and it’s about Sakura, two characters that fans have been invested in since the start of the series, so this film instantly has a lot more weight behind it. It doesn’t hurt that with the story coming from Masashi Kishimoto, the film may as well be canon.

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Not that there isn’t any action. Far from it, as the film kicks off with a full on battle with the resurrected forces of Akatsuki, with a chance for the usual Hidden Leaf ninja to shine. But success in this battle once again brings into focus the difference between the orphan Naruto, and his friends that have families that love and cherish them. It sets up the tone of the film, but really this aspect of the Naruto story has been prevalent since the start of the series, been revisited time and again, and like all such heroes, Naruto’s tragic past defines him. This film examines the core of his character in a different way, almost a Capra-esque way, by showing Naruto what his world would have been like if things had turned out differently.

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The usual Naruto comedy is apparent in just how this world is different, how the characters that we’ve come to know and love have turned out given a different history. Personalities are different, there’s no little culture shock, and lots of silliness ensues as Naruto and Sakura get to know the new versions of their friends. But the film’s emotional weight really comes into focus when Sakura and Naruto go to their respective homes in the parallel world, Sakura to learn that she lives alone, an orphan in this world, and she’s quick to take advantage of her liberated status. Naruto on the other hand goes home to discover the parents that he never knew, who in this world raised him, nurtured him, and loved him. What’s interesting is that he doesn’t accept it straight away. There’s the instinctive mistrust of a world created by Madara, the expectation that it must be a trap that will turn sour. But there’s also a resentment of a world where things did turn out right for another Naruto. It takes time with his ‘parents’ for the cynicism to thaw, and there is a vicarious joy in seeing him finally get the family that he never had.

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Of course this wouldn’t be a Naruto movie without villains to fight, battles to wage, and there is still Madara’s plan to defeat. He’s using an arch-villain of this world, a masked ninja to further his ends, and while he may not be corporeal, the masked ninja certainly is, and he has to be defeated before Naruto and Sakura can return to their world. The masked ninja gets a good build up and development, but I have to say that the penny dropped as to his real identity a little too soon for me; the voice is unmistakeable, and I would have appreciated it a little more if the secret had been kept till the end of the film.

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The film’s ending could have been bittersweet for Naruto, but the film has one final moment, one final scene that will have you biting down on your lip to stop it quivering. Road to Ninja: Naruto the Movie is all about the characters, which for a Naruto movie is unprecedented. It’s a good story, told well, with all the familiar elements that you’ve come to expect from Naruto, but plenty more besides. It is the best Naruto movie yet, and the only indispensible one to complement your series collections.

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