On Wednesday a Chinese captioned trailer of the 3D CG anime movie Human Lost was updated by the Hong Kong film distributor Neofilms. On February 20 the movie will be released in Hong Kong by Neofilms.
The movie was released in U.S and after that it was released in Japan. Last October the movie was screened in cinemas in U.S by Funimation with both English captions and English dubbing. Last November the movie was released in Japan.
Last July the anime was awarded with the: The Satoshi Kon Award for Excellence in Animation as a Special Mention at Montreal’s Fantasia International Film Festival. Last June the movie was also screened out of the contest at this year’s Annecy International Animation Film Festival.
The new science fiction cyberpunk movie project is the version of novel named No Longer Human by Osamu Dazai. The movie has been explained by Funimation in the following manner:
Presented by the main director of PSYCHO-PASS, director of Afro Samurai and by the studio that passed you the Godzilla: Planet of the Monsters.
It is 2036. An insurgency in medicinal treatment has vanquished passing by methods for inward nanomachines and the Shell System, yet just the most extravagant can bear to share.
Yozo Oba isn’t the most extravagant. Pained by abnormal dreams, he carelessly joins his companion’s biker pack on a disastrous attack to “The Inside”, where society’s first class lives. This impels an excursion of frightening revelation that will change Yozo’s life until the end of time.
The duty of executive director was fulfilled by Katsuyuki Motohiro. The movie was directed at Polygon Pictures by Fuminori Kizaki. The script was penned by Tow Ubukata. The characters were designed by Yūsuke Kozaki and the concept art was supervised by Kenichiro Tomiyasu. For planning MAGNET and Slow Curve are ascribed. The movie is being distributed by TOHO Visual Entertainment in Japan.
Dazai’s unique Ningen Shikkaku novel revolves around a youngster’s extending distance from the remainder of the world, notwithstanding his endeavors to keep up a sprightly veneer.