Tokyo Godfathers
Middle-aged has-been Gin, aging transvestite Hana, and teenage runaway Miyuki are three homeless friends who have formed a kind of makeshift family structure. One night, they find an abandoned baby while searching for food in a garbage dump. Hana convinces the others to keep it overnight. The next day, using a key found with the baby, they start tracking down the parents, with many adventures along the way.
6 February 1980, Kanazawa, Ishikawa, Japan
24 November 1959, Tokyo, Japan
24 November 1959, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
1 September 1970, Nagasaki, Japan
27 April 1975, Albany, New York, USA
19 November 1970, The Bronx, New York City, New York, USA
18 December 1963, Kyoto, Japan
15 March 1948, Tokyo, Japan
16 December 1965, Tokyo, Japan
15 February 1977, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
18 October 1978, Bronx, New York, USA
23 May 1933, Fukushima, Japan
27 March 1928, Tokyo, Japan
14 February 1927, Tokyo, Japan
9 December 1982, Tokyo, Japan
13 August 1972, Nice, Alpes-Maritimes, France
9 February 1972, Chicago, Illinois, USA
December 07, 2007
The score grates in places but the script hits the mark, with the potty-mouthed vagrants certain to be a hit with older children.April 03, 2006
Depois do brilhante Millenium Actress, Kon conta uma história bem mais simples, mas igualmente tocante e mágica, brindando o público com uma belíssima animação de tirar o fôlego.December 06, 2005
It's a modern-day fable with a big heart...December 09, 2013
A likeably larky Yuletide yarn.September 07, 2008
Takes anime to a whole new level.February 09, 2016
Hana tends to swoon into stereotype, her theatricality and campiness infecting the other non-hetero characters here, with so many of them wailing or sobbing. The story's comedy and pathos can be similarly overwrought, too.March 25, 2004
One of the most moving, enjoyable and wholly unconventional Christmas stories to come along in a long time.December 09, 2013
No amount of shoehorned-in razzle-dazzle can keep this forced fable from feeling like a shadow of Kon's early work.December 09, 2013
Tokyo Godfathers becomes a clever and well-written parody of Christ's nativity.February 17, 2012
Japanese animator Satoshi Kon has a striking sense of composition, but I'm more impressed by his storytelling skills.February 27, 2004
Demonstrates an idiosyncratic human touch. Kon is unafraid of the unseemly and unsightly.December 09, 2013
In one sense the plot involves returning stolen goods to a thief, but Tokyo Godfathers is really about longing -- for family, for children, for parents and for the lost past.