Naruto the Movie: Blood Prison
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Naruto the Movie: Blood Prison | |
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Directed by | Masahiko Murata |
Written by | Akira Higashiyama |
Produced by | Fukashi Azuma Naoji Hōnokidani |
Starring | Junko Takeuchi Mie Sonozaki Masaki Terasoma Yūichi Nakamura |
Music by | Yasuharu Takanashi |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Toho |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Box office | ¥800 million (US$9.1 million) |
Naruto the Movie: Blood Prison (Japanese: 劇場版 NARUTO ブラッド・プリズン, Hepburn: Gekijō-ban Naruto: Buraddo Purizun) is a 2011 Japanese animated film based on Masashi Kishimoto's manga and anime series. It was released in Japan on July 27, 2011, in North America on February 18, 2014 and in Indonesia on April 19, 2015.[1] Neon Alley began streaming the anime film on January 26, 2014.[2] The theme song "Otakebi" is performed by Yusuke Kamiji.
Plot[]
Naruto Uzumaki is arrested and sent to Hozuki Castle (鬼灯城, Hoozuki Jou) in the Hidden Grass Village, after he is mistakenly declared responsible for attacking the Fourth Raikage.
Mui (無為), the head of the prison, places the Sky Prison Control (天牢を使う, Tenrou o Tsukau) seal on Naruto and limits his chakra. Ryūzetsu (竜舌), a Hidden Grass Black Ops member, tells him that Mui used Hot Water villager Kazan to frame Naruto, and Mui's son Muku (無垢) was sacrificed and sealed into the Box of Paradise ten years ago. During the prison riot, Mui uses Naruto's fox chakra to unlock the box, only for the resurrected Muku to be possessed by the demon Satori (悟り) and invade the castle. Naruto and his friends fail to defeat Satori, but the dying Mui seals it within Muku with the formula and the victim returns to the box. As the group recapture the survived prisoners, Ryūzetsu dies using Dragon Life Reincarnation to save Naruto. The heroes then interred her and Mui, and place the sealed box at sea.
Tsunade informs the team that Naruto's false arrest was rehearsed.
Voice cast[]
Character | Japanese Voice Actor | English Voice Actor |
---|---|---|
Naruto Uzumaki | Junko Takeuchi | Maile Flanagan |
Sakura Haruno | Chie Nakamura | Kate Higgins |
Kakashi Hatake | Kazuhiko Inoue | Dave Wittenberg |
Yamato | Rikiya Koyama | Troy Baker |
Tsunade | Masako Katsuki | Debi Mae West |
Shikamaru Nara | Showtaro Morikubo | Tom Gibis |
Choji Akimichi | Kentarō Itō | Robbie Rist |
Kiba Inuzuka | Kōsuke Toriumi | Kyle Hebert |
Neji Hyūga | Kōichi Tōchika | Steve Staley |
Tenten | Yukari Tamura | Danielle Judovits |
Gamabunta | Hiroshi Naka | Michael Sorich |
Fourth Raikage | Hideaki Tezuka | Beau Billingslea |
Killer Bee | Hisao Egawa | Catero Colbert |
Samui | Hikari Yono | Cindy Robinson |
Omoi | Kunihiro Kawamoto | Ogie Banks |
Karui | Yuka Komatsu | Danielle Nicolet |
Mui | Masaki Terasoma | Matthew Mercer |
Ryūzetsu | Mie Sonozaki | Carrie Keranen |
Muku/Satori | Yūichi Nakamura Kengo Kawanishi (child) |
Grant George Bryce Papenbrook (child) |
Kazan | Kōsei Hirota | Steve Staley |
Maroi | Takaya Kamikawa | Andrew Kishino |
Might Guy | Masashi Ebara | Skip Stellrecht |
Sai | Satoshi Hino | Ben Diskin |
Rock Lee | Yoichi Masukawa | Brian Donovan |
Home media[]
The film was released on DVD on April 25, 2012.
References[]
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-08-05. Retrieved 2013-07-13.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ "Neon Alley to Premiere Naruto Shippūden: Blood Prison Dub on Sunday". Anime News Network. January 25, 2014. Retrieved January 25, 2020.
External links[]
- Official website
- Naruto the Movie: Blood Prison at Anime News Network's encyclopedia
- Naruto the Movie: Blood Prison at IMDb
- 2011 films
- Japanese-language films
- 2011 anime films
- 2010s prison films
- Films directed by Masahiko Murata
- Japanese films
- Japanese sequel films
- Naruto films
- Japanese prison films
- Toho animated films
- Viz Media anime
- Films scored by Yasuharu Takanashi