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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Voice cast  





3 Production  



3.1  Development  





3.2  Music  







4 Release  





5 Notes  





6 References  





7 External links  














Inuyasha the Movie: The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from InuYasha Movie 2)

Inuyasha the Movie: The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass
North American DVD cover art
Kanji映画犬夜叉 鏡の中の夢幻城
Literal meaningInuYasha the Movie: Phantom Castle in the Mirror
Revised HepburnEiga Inuyasha: Kagami no Naka no Mugenjō
Directed byToshiya Shinohara
Screenplay byKatsuyuki Sumisawa
Based onInuyasha
byRumiko Takahashi
Produced by
  • Mikihiro Iwata
  • Michihiko Suwa
  • Masuo Ueda
  • Starring
  • Satsuki Yukino
  • Kumiko Watanabe
  • Kōji Tsujitani
  • Houko Kuwashima
  • Kenichi Ogata
  • Noriko Hidaka
  • Hisako Kyōda
  • CinematographyHirofumi Yagi
    Edited byShigeyuki Yamamori
    Music byKaoru Wada

    Production
    company

    Sunrise

    Distributed byToho

    Release date

    • December 21, 2002 (2002-12-21)

    Running time

    99 minutes
    CountryJapan
    LanguageJapanese
    BudgetUS$3.2 million[citation needed]
    Box office$7,506,630[1]

    Inuyasha the Movie: The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass[a] is a 2002 Japanese animated fantasy adventure film based on Inuyasha manga series written and illustrated by Rumiko Takahashi. The film is directed by Toshiya Shinohara, written by Katsuyuki Sumisawa, and produced by Sunrise. It was released in Japan on December 21, 2002.

    In the film, Inuyasha and his friends seemingly kill Naraku, and return to their normal lives, only to encounter a new enemy named Kaguya, a character based on the literary classic The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter.

    The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass is the second film of the Inuyasha series, following Affection Touching Across Time and followed up by Swords of an Honorable Ruler.

    Plot[edit]

    Half-demon Inuyasha, schoolgirl Kagome, monk Miroku, demon slayer Sango, and fox demon Shippo battle and defeat their archenemy Naraku. As a result, Miroku's Wind Tunnel that Naraku cursed his family with disappears from his hand, while elsewhere, Sango's brother Kohaku is freed from Naraku's grasp as a human puppet. With Naraku apparently defeated, Inuyasha, Kagome and Shippo part ways with Miroku and Sango, while searching for the shards of the Shikon Jewel. Miroku returns to his master, Mushin, and Sango returns to her village and finds the amnesiac Kohaku there. Mushin presents Miroku with a task that is to be given to the surviving descendant of his family who defeats Naraku: to destroy a yōkai who threatens to cast the world into eternal night.

    Kagura and Kanna, two of Naraku's incarnations, come across a mirror in a hidden shrine and awaken a maiden who declares herself to be Kaguya, Princess of the Heavens. In exchange for freeing her, Kaguya promises to give Kagura her true heart's desire; freedom. Kagura and Kanna set out to recover five items that will free Kaguya from her mirror completely.

    Inuyasha travels to the modern era looking for Kagome, alongside her brother Sota. In town, Kagome angrily hides Inuyasha from the public in a photo booth, which Sota jokingly puts coins into, taking photos of the two as they are arguing. Back in the Feudal era, Kagome takes their faces from one of the photos and places them in a heart-shaped necklace locket that she offers to Inuyasha, who seemingly rejects it. Later, they run into Kagura, Kanna and Kaguya, the former of which rips off a sleeve of Inuyasha's Robe of the Fire-Rat as it is one of the five items. Kagome forces the demons to flee after the battle, with Kaguya noticing the strange aura surrounding her that does not match the time of the Feudal era. Afterwards, Inuyasha, Kagome and Shippo meet Akitoki Hōjō, the ancestor of Kagome's classmate Hōjō, who plans to dispose a celestial robe into Mount Fuji.

    Miroku and his tanuki servant Hachi learn, while searching for the yōkai he is meant to destroy, that his grandfather defeated Kaguya, leading to her celestial robe being entrusted to the Hōjō family. With Kaguya and Kanna having found the remaining items, Kaguya goes to find the robe alone, fighting Inuyasha for it. She restrains him to a tree, and Kagome sacrifices herself to protect him from a sacred arrow that Kaguya deflected from her. Kaguya takes Kagome captive, offering to release her alive in exchange for Inuyasha becoming Kaguya's servant.

    Kaguya has begun to freeze time into eternal night. Kagura suspects that Kaguya is not who she says she is and tries to attack her, but Kaguya teleports Kagura and Kanna elsewhere. Following his escape, Inuyasha, Hōjo, and Shippo join with Miroku, Hachi, Sango, Kohaku, and Sango's nekomata companion Kirara to infiltrate Kaguya's mountain castle in Lake Motosu. Excluding Hachi and Hōjō, they use items from Kagome's first aid kit from the modern era to survive the time freeze, while Inuyasha remains unaffected having worn Kagome's locket. They battle Kaguya to no avail, and she transforms Inuyasha into a full-fledged demon. A restrained Kagome pleads Inuyasha to stop, but upon being freed by Shippo, she shares a kiss with Inuyasha to revert him back to his normal self; he promises to remain a half-demon longer for her sake.

    After Kaguya reveals that she is a demon who absorbed the real Kaguya, Naraku appears, having faked his death by hiding in Kohaku's back, waiting for Kaguya to come out of hiding to absorb her power and gain his own immortality. The heroes defeat Kaguya, before Naraku can absorb her, and she is killed by Miroku's restored Wind Tunnel. Everyone flees the collapsing castle through Kanna's mirror with Naraku taking Kohaku with him. The heroes return to safety with time being reverted to normal. Inuyasha, Kagome, Miroku, Sango, Shippo and Kirara resume their mission to find the Shinkon Jewel shards, and Hōjō discards the robe at Mount Fuji.

    Voice cast[edit]

    Character Japanese Voice Actor English Voice Actor
    Inuyasha Kappei Yamaguchi Richard Ian Cox
    Kagome Higurashi Satsuki Yukino Moneca Stori
    Miroku Kōji Tsujitani Kirby Morrow
    Sango Houko Kuwashima Kelly Sheridan
    Shippō Kumiko Watanabe Jillian Michaels
    Kikyō Noriko Hidaka Willow Johnson
    Myōga Kenichi Ogata Paul Dobson
    Naraku Toshiyuki Morikawa Paul Dobson
    Kagura Izumi Ōgami Janyse Jaud
    Kanna Yukana Janyse Jaud
    Kohaku Akiko Yajima Danny McKinnon
    Hachiemon Toshihiko Nakajima Terry Klassen
    Mushin Yuzuru Fujimoto Alec Willows
    Hōjō/Akitoki Hōjō Yūji Ueda Matt Smith
    Sōta Higurashi Akiko Nakagawa Saffron Henderson
    Yuka Kaori Shimizu Jillian Michaels
    Eri Yuki Masuda Saffron Henderson
    Ayumi Nami Okamoto Cathy Weseluck
    Kaguya Mieko Harada Nicole Oliver

    Production[edit]

    Development[edit]

    The film is produced by the same staff members from the previous film: Toshiya Shinohara directed the film at Sunrise, Katsuyuki Sumisawa wrote the screenplay, Hideyuki Motohashi designed the characters and acted as a chief animation director, and Kaoru Wada composed the music.

    Music[edit]

    The theme song, "Yurayura", is performed by Every Little Thing.

    Release[edit]

    The film was released in Japanese theaters on December 21, 2002.

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Also known as Inuyasha The Movie: Phantom Castle in the Mirror (Japanese: 映画犬夜叉 鏡の中の夢幻城, Hepburn: Eiga Inuyasha: Kagami no Naka no Mugenjō)

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "InuYasha the Movie 2: The Castle Beyond the Looking Glass".

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Inuyasha_the_Movie:_The_Castle_Beyond_the_Looking_Glass&oldid=1203264959"

    Categories: 
    2002 films
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