![]() Her hobby is swimming.Īfter graduating from high school, Endō moved to Tokyo to become a voice actress. After Yūko Mizutani's death, she became the official Japanese dub voice of Minnie Mouse, and has taken over many of Mizutani's other roles. ![]() Dietfried, who dislikes Violet for many reasons, not the least of which has to do with his brother’s disappearance, comes to understand the value of kindness.Ī story about reclaiming, restoring and healing Violet Evergarden restores letter-writing, heartfelt communication, the joy of the written word and love.Description: Japanese voice actress and narrator from Yamagata Prefecture who is affiliated with Office PAC. Of course, not all the learning is from Violet’s side. With Leon Stephanotis (Yuto Uemura), she learns that recording words of the scholars past can preserve knowledge for time to come. With Luculia Marlborough (Azuka Tadokoro), Violet learns to write letters that while succinct touch the heart of the matter. Much of the story is then about rebuilding not just physically as a land but as a people. ![]() Since it is set right after the war, many of the letters have to do with coping with grief grief of loss, grief of surviving, grief of being unable to communicate and the grief of not knowing whether you could survive. Each letter writing experience helps the people involved tap into memories that they have not acknowledged to themselves and they also teach Violet how to understand her own emotions. Her inability to perceive emotions comes in the way of her relationships with people as well as her letter writing but her guileless responses and innocently worded thoughts have a piercing clarity to them. Startled at the child he beheld, he decides to teach her to read and write, treating her as a person even though no one else does. Growing up as feral child and branded a weapon by Dietfried Bougainvillea (Hidenobu Kiuchi) who hands her over to his younger brother Gilbert as a ‘present’ – a tool to use during the war. She feels if she does this, she may understand why Gilbert told her, “I Love You” – words she finds hard to comprehend.Ī child soldier and an orphan, raised on the battlefield and growing up under violent circumstances that are barely hinted at but obvious in how she seems emotionless like the doll she looks like and is referred to due to her occupation. Her reason to become one has to do with the fact that she wants to be able to understand people’s emotions. She decides to work for his company as an Auto Memory Doll – a female scribe who write letters on behalf of other people. Especially if he did not return after the war. Colonel in the army who started a postal company decides to help her gets settled in because Gilbert asked him to look out for her. His friend Claudia Hodgins (Takehito Koyasu), a former Lt. The one person who did, her superior officer Gilbert Bougainvillea (Daisuke Namikawa), is nowhere to be found and no one tells her where he is. Post the war, she suffers from PTSD but doesn’t know it purely because no one has treated her like a person. A battle she witnessed at close quarters as the Leidenshaftlich soldier maiden or as she was considered, a weapon. She lost her arms in the final decisive battle between Leidenshaftlich and the Gardarik Empire. Not the least of which is Violet (Yui Ishikawa) herself. The war has ended but not without leaving its scars on the people. Set in an alternate steampunk world with kingdoms that was torn apart by a four-year war. Violet Evergarden begins where the war that ravaged the continent ends. Voice cast: Violet Evergarden – Yui Ishikawa Gilbert Bougainvillea – Daisuke Namikawa Claudia Hodgins – Takehito Koyasu Cattleya Baudelaire – Aya Endo Benedict Blue – Koki Uchiyama Erica Brown – Minori Chihara Iris Cannary – Haruka Tomatsu Dietfried Bougainvillea – Hidenobu Kiuchi Luculia Marlborough – Azuka Tadokoro Leon Stephanotis – Yuto Uemura Directed By: Taichi Ishidate Haruka Fujita
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |