Upon a mountain, a monkey is born from stone—nameless, parentless, and friendless. That is, until one day, he encounters a young female monkey named RinRin, who offers to be his friend. Through RinRin's encouragement, he becomes king after a test of bravery; however, his personality sours. When RinRin tells him that humans are the most intelligent creatures on Earth, the monkey vows to become smarter than them. He leaves RinRin behind and trains with a mountain hermit who gives him the name Son-Goku. Following Goku's imprisonment for using his newfound powers to steal a celestial fruit from heaven, he is rescued by a monk. In exchange, he is asked to accompany the monk on a journey to India. This journey will prove to be yet another challenge for the monkey to overcome. [Written by MAL Rewrite]
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Saiyuki fans the world over, if you have not watched this than there is something missing from your fan obligations that need be filled in immediately. This beautifully animated film from 1960 depicts the famous “Journey to the West” in a classic style that has set the foundation for generations to come. The legendary Story of Son Goku: The Monkey King in his epic adventure “Journey to the West” has been retold many times over since its publication 1590 and since then has generated much popularity. Everything from Dragon Ball to Forbidden Kingdom has draw inspiration from this amazing story. The Monkey King/ Alakazamthe Great is one of the most well executed retelling of this classic tell and is a pillar of historical foundation for the 60’s as well as anime as a whole for coming along during the birth of this great genre’s lifespan. The animation for its time is quite advanced and done with great finesse. With the exception of a few other films, no other anime during that decade can match up to the beauty of this film’s animation and vibrancy. Voice acting during this day and age is not the best, but is easily over shadowed by its ability to continue on track telling its story. It fuses tasteful tid- bits of 1960 technology during the ancient times of this story such as telegraphs and pistols as well as things that haven’t even been created to this day like video telephones. All in good fun, of course. It’s a wonderful family film that is beyond enjoyable with lots of adventure, song, dance, mystery, magic and fantasy. Anyone who watches this film will quickly learn to grow with Alakazam/ Son Goku on his journey to learning humility, mercy and wisdom. I thoroughly impress upon any otaku or person who is interested in the “Journey to the West” story to enjoy this film and add it to your resume of films viewed. You won’t regret it.
I've seen this anime about 30 years ago. I still remember watching this movie on a Sunday afternoon. It was part of the Sunday matinee on TV. At the time I had no idea it was a Japanese cartoon, but the story and artwork was pretty good. I'm not here really to review this anime, more like rant nostalgically about an entertaining and well-done anime. If you ever have a chance to see this anime, do not pass it up if you believe you are a true fan of the sub-culture.
Let me begin my review by stating that I did not see this movie as a kid, and therefore have zero nostalgia goggles to work with. Saiyuuki, for lack of a better term, is not a very spectacular movie. The music is, for the most part, forgettable, and doesn't always work. The musical numbers are unneeded. The visuals are passable, but nothing special. The voice work is okay: again, nothing special. One of this movie's huge problems is getting me to care. I didn't care about the journey. I didn't care about the characters. In fact, I HATED most of the characters. The female love interestis a forgettable, bland cinnamon roll stereotype, and Son Goku is kind of a dick until very, very late into the film (and even then isn't that likable). The side characters are kind of neat on occasion, but most of them only show up for a few seconds aside from the guy who wanted to eat them, the pig, and the monk: and the monk is blander than water. Quite frankly, I went into this movie expecting a classic animation. However, as is sadly often the case with older Japanese animated movies, I instead found myself wondering why I was watching it, and constantly checking how far along I was (as early as 30 minutes into the film!). While not terrible, the film is certainly not good in my eyes. And on my ratings scale, that comes out to a 4/10. While I'm sure some people might enjoy it, with or without nostalgia glasses, I personally think you should give this one a skip.
Saiyuuki, aka Journey to the West, is not a great film by modern standards. But it's an important one in the history of anime. It's only the sixth anime feature film ever made and the first one to be released in the US. The substantially reedited American version was titled Alakazam the Great, in a dub featuring notable actors including Jonathan Winters and Dodie Stevens, the voice of Frankie Avalon singing the title part of Alakazam, and Sterling Holloway as the narrator. Because of its historical significance, it's a must-see for serious students of anime. (Alas, the original Japanese version seems to be unavailable, but thedub is available on Amazon Prime as I write this in December 2017.) For everyone else it's something that you might want to check out if you're curious. I admit to having a soft spot in my heart for it because it is the first anime I ever saw, during its original US release in 1961. The dates here are of my most recent viewing of the film. I couldn't put in 1961 if I wanted to; this site doesn't accept dates that far back!
I'm finding it really difficult to grade these early feature length animations - partly because most of the artists were still exploring the boundaries of what works and balancing a nascently developed industry's profitability - both when it came to the animation and the manga works they were bring primarily adapted from. A common problem that a lot of the animated films of this era seem to have is poor storyboarding and even poorer narrative coherence. While Hakujaden struggles to keep going and is just filled with padding, Sayuuki has the opposite problem. It attempts to cover material way more ambitious in scope and scale thanit has the time to cover while also balancing the extended fight choreography and typical animation tropes that the audiences of the time deemed necessary. The pacing is zippy and quickfire, but the structure is wildly incoherent - not to mention the source adaption material (Tezuka's manga inspired by the original Journey to the West) is in itself a poor adaptation of the Chinese classic. Elements of western mythology are mixed into a primarily Chinese/Buddhist setting and fable that eventually makes the entire world building incoherent. I was expecting a Chinese heaven filled with Chang'e and Immortals and Buddhas, not harp playing angels and astronomers lifted out of Georges Melies's space faring shorts. Action choreography is another issue with movies of this time. One that I suspect is an artifact of the Looney Toons and Hannah Barbara effect. Conflict in animation originated as a means of inducing slapstick humor. Combat rarely has stakes since both sides in any fight - be it the looney toons or their opponents, tom and jerry, are nigh invincible no matter what trick they throw at each other. This tradition has passed onto these films and even into the modern day, where prolonged physical conflict continues on for extended periods and the participants constantly shrug off physical damage. Those battles that Son Gokuu has end up taking me out of immersion and reduce my enjoyment of this particular film. The one thing I loved about this though was the sound design and the choice of music. I watched the Japanese original with subtitles, so I got to experience a lot of the Japanese songs and most were quite catchy. "Ore Wa Son Gokuu" will probably continue to echo within my mind for a few days to come with its deep sonorous, simply and yet catchy tune. Journey to the West as a story in itself is just too long to cover within the time frame of an hour. I think the better mode of approach would have been to pick a specific fable within the epic along the lines of Princess Iron Fan to adapt. None the less, the inspiration Sayuuki had on future animators is quite easy to see. There are clear inspirations drawn by Studio Ghibli from the washed out, yet natural looking peaceful background imagery that have come to define them and are clearly inspired from here and Disney movies.