Junkers Come Here

1994
7.1| 1h43m| NA| en| More Info
Released: 20 July 1994 Released
Producted By: Bandai Visual
Country: Japan
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Hiromi appears on the outside to be a mature, resilient girl, but on the inside she feels like she's falling apart. She is having troubles at home mainly because of her parents wanting to separate. Her dog, Junkers, tries to comfort her in ways no other dog can. You see, he can talk and grant her 3 wishes.

Genre

Animation, Family

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Director

Junichi Sato

Production Companies

Bandai Visual

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Junkers Come Here Audience Reviews

PodBill Just what I expected
Matialth Good concept, poorly executed.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Rexanne It’s sentimental, ridiculously long and only occasionally funny
Irishchatter I would absolutely love to have a dog like Junkers because seriously, when I feel lonely or if I'm having a bad day, he would always be there for me. Plus a bonus of three wishes wouldn't be a bad idea too y'know!I liked how this film didn't make Hiromi into a whiny snobby 12 year old. They honestly did make her mature for her age and thats even better then the well-known anime film "My Neighbor Totoro" because seriously, it wasn't as mature as this film truly is! There was a scene that I nearly cried at. The scene consists of Hiromi telling her parents to stop getting a divorce in the place where the last spent time together as a family. It does break your heart actually, for real, a separation in any family is difficult especially if your parents were together for years! Well at least in the end, Hiromi's parents rekindled thanks to Junkers' magic!I really liked the film, it was different and plus, it was easy to follow! I think it should've won awards like some of Studio Ghilbi's films had done!
kkchismark I recently went and stumbled upon this movie at a used DVD and CD store and had to buy it. At first, I thought the movie was just about a dog. Then as ,i started to watch the movie ,i noticed it was about the relationship between a dog and his best friend and master Hiromi, whom is always alone. The whole time you see this character grow and grow and get sentimentally attached to her. I felt her loneliness the whole time. You can see she seems always happy and puts on a smile, but that only hides her true feelings. Because her parents aren't always around Junkers becomes her best friend, and the one and only friend she can share her feelings with. As time goes on she starts to grow and things get tougher with her parents bringing up the subject of divorce. After this one realizes there is more to Junkers then you think. This movie is good and the end made me cry. I highly recommend this movie it was a great family movie. This movie would also be good to show children that have a tough time with divorce. To show kids what to do and not to do and how to properly cope with divorce.
Jeremy Bristol Just imagine! It took around eight years for this movie to reach America? Why? This isn't an anime genre piece like Perfect Blue or Gundam or Battle Angel that people outside of anime circles would mock or not understand or be disgusted by; this is a wonderful fantasy grounded in a very realistic, contemporary, America-like Japan. With the exceptions of the samurai drama and the parody of a classic shojo-manga theme (falling in love with your teacher or older person--not unheard of in America but not something that routinely appears in children's cartoons), Junkers Come Here could take place in any upper-class American town, or in England, or in France, etc.The title character (though not main character) is a Schnauser named Junkers. Junkers is magical, reminding me a bit of Elliot from Pete's Dragon. He can talk and has the power to grant three wishes. As far as characterization, he's very laid back and easy-going, and he just loves period samurai TV shows (which makes me wonder if he's not some sort of reincarnated samurai himself), especially the over-the-top ones that are reminiscent of Sergio Leone's spaghetti westerns.The focus of the movie is Junkers' owner, Hiromi. She's a smart, well-behaved twelve-year-old who tends to take care of herself, since most times her parents are away on business, leaving her in the care of the daytime cook and a live-in college student who pays the rent by tutoring Hiromi. Of course, she falls in love with him, and that is probably the most cliched part of the story (though a dream she has of Junkers officiating her marriage to him is about as funny as can be). However, over the course of the movie, as it becomes clear that Hiromi's parents are heading for divorce, cracks in her projected self-reliance begin to appear.I don't want to spoil much more than that. Just know that her wishes are neither spectacles like Aladdin nor twisted (much) to make her miserable, like in "The Monkey's Paw." While the ending is predictably happy (but just fanciful enough to make it self-evident that this is still a fantasy and couldn't happen in real life), there is an intensity of emotion (in both the Japanese and the English versions) that puts it on a level high above the likes of "Irreconcilable Differences."The animation, though slightly "limited" like most anime, is not so distracting as even some newer anime (some of the crowd scenes in Perfect Blue come to mind, not to mention the Pokemon and Digimon movies). In fact, it has a beauty similar to the works of Studio Ghibli (most notably, Whispers of the Heart and I Can Hear the Ocean). Which is exactly why it is so universal, and why it is so surprising that the movie took so long, in this anime-obsessed nation, for it reach America. It is a wonderful film, even for those who normally dislike anime.
dballred After having turned into a Ghibli addict a few years ago, I have been a difficult person to impress. I am greatly impressed. Junkers Come Here is a jewel of a story that took me for the emotional ride of the year.The central character in the story is eleven-year-old Hiromi Nozawa. Her parents are successful professionals who love their daughter, but have little time for her--or for each other. They had been drifting apart over the previous few years and were on the verge of divorce. She has a pet Schnauser, Junkers (pronounced Yoonkers), who has the ability to speak and, as we learn, the ability to grant three wishes.Rounding out the central list of characters is the family's maid, Fumie, and a level-headed college student, Keisuke, who tutors Hiromi in return for room and board.Hiromi desperately wants to maintain a normal family, but had long since given up the idea that she and her parents would do something together. When her mother casually hints that she and her husband might get a divorce, she is devastated. She doesn't want to show it, though, as she didn't want to be the source of unhappiness.Junkers, who speaks only with Hiromi, offers to grant three wishes. Are Junkers gifts all part of Hiromi's imagination? Are they real? Get the DVD and find out. I give this a ten out of ten rating.