IMDb RATING
8.1/10
9.9K
YOUR RATING
Follows 17-year-old Ryota Miyagi, who struggles to accomplish his late elder brother's dream of becoming a basketball star.Follows 17-year-old Ryota Miyagi, who struggles to accomplish his late elder brother's dream of becoming a basketball star.Follows 17-year-old Ryota Miyagi, who struggles to accomplish his late elder brother's dream of becoming a basketball star.
- Awards
- 1 win & 4 nominations
Shugo Nakamura
- Miyagi Ryôta
- (voice)
- (as Nakamura Shûgo)
Jun Kasama
- Mitsui Hisashi
- (voice)
- (as Kasama Jun)
Shinichiro Kamio
- Rukawa Kaede
- (voice)
- (as Kamio Shin'ichirô)
Subaru Kimura
- Sakuragi Hanamichi
- (voice)
- (as Kimura Subaru)
Kenta Miyake
- Akagi Takenori
- (voice)
- (as Miyake Kenta)
Yôhei Azakami
- Yasuharu Yasuda
- (voice)
Ben Balmaceda
- Hanamichi Sakuragi
- (English version)
- (voice)
Luis Bermudez
- Takashima
- (English version)
- (voice)
Paul Castro Jr.
- Ryota Miyagi
- (English version)
- (voice)
David Cui Cui
- Toki Kuwata
- (English version)
- (voice)
Darrel J Delfin
- Tetsushi Shiozaki
- (English version)
- (voice)
- (as Darrel Delfin)
Daichi Endô
- Satoru Kakuta
- (voice)
Abby Espiritu
- Haruko
- (English version)
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie is a blend of 3D CGI for the basketball scenes and hand-drawn 2D animation for daily life scenes.
- Crazy creditsAt the end of the closing credits, there is a brief scene in Ryota's empty home. Golden sunlight comes in through a window, shining on a shrine of sorts, made up of various family photos that include his deceased brother Sota and Sota's red wristband that Ryota wore throughout the match, signifying that the family has come to terms with Sota's death.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Slam Dunk (1993)
- SoundtracksLOVE ROCKETS
[Opening Theme]
Music by The Birthday
Arranged by The Birthday
Lyrics by Yusuke Chiba
Performed by The Birthday
Courtesy of UNIVERSAL SIGMA
Featured review
I gave this movie a 9/10 but to be honest, big part of the score goes to the original Slam Dunk manga, which is a legend, and big part of my youth growing up.
I seriously thought it was an April fool joke when I read 2 years ago Inoue-san announced he was going to make a movie version of slam dunk. And I've been looking forward to this then, and it did not disappoint.
The biggest headache for Inoue-san was probably how could he re-tell such a classic story, which the fans must have re-read hundreds or even thousands of times by now, without making the movie redundant and unnecessary. And he's made some really smart choices here. The smartest choice of all, imo, is to re-tell the Sannon battle from Miyagi's perspective, and adding a lot of backdrop stories.
And manga fans get to re-live the Shohoku - Sannon battle with new backdrop stories, and re-live all the monumental touching moments in the story. And for fans like me, the 2 hours in the theatre felt like re-watching my first love right in front of my eyes years later, feeling like it's just happening for the first time.
The movie is not without flaw. I think for people who have not watched the original manga, the movie will feel pretty choppy. The editing would feel awkward. Especially in the Mitsui story. That would feel so incomplete and even a lot of "WTH" moments. Or likewise when Sakuraki saw flashbacks from his past when he was injured. But maybe there isn't a flawless way to re-tell a 31 books manga (or even the Sannon battle is like 4-5 books?) in a 2 hours movie.
Which is not to say new audience cannot enjoy this movie, but this would simply be a good sports movie to those not being familiar with the original manga. For the fans though, this is an amazing movie.
I can only hope Inoue-san would come up with the Second slam dunk, the third slam dunk, the forth slam dunk .... but hopefully it won't take another 26 years.
I seriously thought it was an April fool joke when I read 2 years ago Inoue-san announced he was going to make a movie version of slam dunk. And I've been looking forward to this then, and it did not disappoint.
The biggest headache for Inoue-san was probably how could he re-tell such a classic story, which the fans must have re-read hundreds or even thousands of times by now, without making the movie redundant and unnecessary. And he's made some really smart choices here. The smartest choice of all, imo, is to re-tell the Sannon battle from Miyagi's perspective, and adding a lot of backdrop stories.
And manga fans get to re-live the Shohoku - Sannon battle with new backdrop stories, and re-live all the monumental touching moments in the story. And for fans like me, the 2 hours in the theatre felt like re-watching my first love right in front of my eyes years later, feeling like it's just happening for the first time.
The movie is not without flaw. I think for people who have not watched the original manga, the movie will feel pretty choppy. The editing would feel awkward. Especially in the Mitsui story. That would feel so incomplete and even a lot of "WTH" moments. Or likewise when Sakuraki saw flashbacks from his past when he was injured. But maybe there isn't a flawless way to re-tell a 31 books manga (or even the Sannon battle is like 4-5 books?) in a 2 hours movie.
Which is not to say new audience cannot enjoy this movie, but this would simply be a good sports movie to those not being familiar with the original manga. For the fans though, this is an amazing movie.
I can only hope Inoue-san would come up with the Second slam dunk, the third slam dunk, the forth slam dunk .... but hopefully it won't take another 26 years.
- sprayeddog-44263
- Jul 28, 2023
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Cú Úp Rổ Đầu Tiên
- Filming locations
- Tokyo, Japan(Studio)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,291,869
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $662,211
- Jul 30, 2023
- Gross worldwide
- $158,302,288
- Runtime2 hours 4 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
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