Crayon Shin-chan: Honeymoon Hurricane ~The Lost Hiroshi~ | |
Director: | Masakazu Hashimoto |
Starring: | |
Studio: | Shin-Ei Animation |
Distributor: | Toho |
Country: | Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
Gross: | $18.33 million |
is a 2019 Japanese anime film produced by Shin-Ei Animation. It is the 27th film of the popular comedy manga and anime series Crayon Shin-chan. The director is Masakazu Hashimoto.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
This is the last Heisei-era Crayon Shin-chan movie,[6] released weeks before the 2019 Japanese imperial transition.
This is the first Crayon Shin-chan film to feature Yumiko Kobayashi as Shinnosuke Nohara since July 6, 2018.
This is final Crayon Shin-chan film to be distributed by Odex in Singapore, Malaysia and Bruneibefore Crayon Shin-chan's film rights were transitioned to Taiwan-based Company Muse Communication in 2020.
Hiroshi and Misae have never been to a honeymoon trip to a foreign country. One day, Misae discovered an inexpensive and family-friendly holiday package to Australia and the Nohara family decided to make it their first honeymoon vacation.
Hiroshi gets kidnapped upon arrival to Australia, leaving Shinnosuke, Misae and others on a dangerous journey. It turns out that Hiroshi is the key to a secret treasure. The remaining members of the Nohara Family must rescue Hiroshi, while a mysterious masked man and treasure hunters from all over the world are after him. The struggle is among three different groups in this action-filled treasure hunting adventure.[7] [8] [9] [10]
The plot is slightly similar to the 1994 movie , including the concepts of "cheap foreign trip", "getting kidnapped and chased", and "key to treasure". In that movie, Misae had won a holiday package to Buri Buri Kingdom, Shinnosuke who gets kidnapped was the key to the secret treasure of that kingdom, and the family was chased by treasure hunters.
The film sold 242,000 tickets and earned 289 million yen (about US$2.58 million) to rank at #3 in its opening weekend.[11] By Seventh Weekend, the Film dropped out of the top 10 and earned overall total of 1,978,810,800 yen (about US$18.33 million) from Japan Box Office.[12] [13]
On television premiere, the film aired on TV Asahi on Saturday, September 12 and it earned a 4.4% rating.[14]