Doraemon Movie 44: Nobita no E Sekai Monogatari

映画ドラえもん のび太の絵世界物語 / Doraemon Movie 44: Nobita's Art World Tales
Doraemon Movie 44: Nobita no E Sekai Monogatari
Genres: Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Kids
Demographics: Kids
Studios: Shin-Ei Animation
Rating: 7.16 / 10
Rank: #3661
Popularity: #14943
Users Listed: 923
Users Scored: 163
NSFW: No
Last Updated: 12/08/2024
Aired: March 7, 2025 (Winter)
Type: movie
Source: manga
Age Rating: PG
Episodes: 1

Trailer:

Characters:

  • Chai (Main) - Voice Actors: Kuno, Misaki
  • Claire (Main) - Voice Actors: Watada, Misaki
  • Doraemon (Main) - Voice Actors: Mizuta, Wasabi, Wang, Youji
  • Gouda, Takeshi (Main) - Voice Actors: Kimura, Subaru
  • Honekawa, Suneo (Main) - Voice Actors: Seki, Tomokazu, Huang, Zhenji
  • Milo (Main) - Voice Actors: Tanezaki, Atsumi
  • Minamoto, Shizuka (Main) - Voice Actors: Kakazu, Yumi
  • Nobi, Nobita (Main) - Voice Actors: Oohara, Megumi
  • Pal (Main) - Voice Actors: Suzuka, Ouji

Staff:

  • Teramoto, Yukiyo (Director)
  • Aimyon (Theme Song Performance)
  • Fujiko, Fujio F. (Original Creator)
  • Hattori, Takayuki (Music)
  • Itou, Satoshi (Screenplay)
  • Tomozawa, Yuuho (Art Director)
  • Yamashita, Akira (Character Design)

Reviews:

  • User Typo_comma (Score: 7/10):
    Nobita’s Art World Tales isn’t what you’d call breathtakingly mature or complex. Some story beats are wrapped up a little too conveniently, and a few moments that caught my attention end up being waved away with the all-too-familiar “it’s for kids” excuse. But despite that, the film manages something that’s genuinely impressive: it juggles multiple narrative threads and pulls them together with real care. Plotlines converge at just the right moments, setups pay off smoothly, and even details that seemed irrelevant at first find their way back into the central narrative What’s even rarer is that, from Nobita’s perspective, this is a full arc—a story witha beginning, a return, and emotional movement in between. You can feel his mindset gradually shifting, almost without noticing, from self-doubt to a quiet, renewed sense of purposennIf Thunderbolts was about lonely souls becoming the shadows that darken New York, Nobita’s Art World Tales gives us a different kind of visual metaphor: colors—symbols of life and creativity—are being swallowed up, leaving behind a world washed out in blank white. And where shadows are heavy and suffocating, the absence of color feels like something else entirely—an emptiness, the kind that lingers when inspiration dries up and you start losing faith in yourself. Not pain, but silence, or a quiet resignationnnWhich is exactly why, when the film finally circles back to its core message, its resolution feels all the more genuine. Not grand, not flawless—but honest in a way that matters

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Related Anime/Manga:

  • Doraemon (2005) (anime - Parent Story)