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| lang="ja" | 牧瀬里穂 | | lang="ja" | 牧瀬里穂 |
Revision as of 01:23, 21 February 2009
Jirachi: Wish Maker 七夜の願い星 ジラーチ Wishing Star of the Seven Nights: Jirachi
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Premiere
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Home video
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English themes
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Japanese themes
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Ratings
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Jirachi: Wish Maker (Japanese: 七夜の願い星 ジラーチ Wishing Star of the Seven Nights: Jirachi; Official: Wishing Star of the Seven Nights) is the first Advanced Generation movie, and sixth of all Pokémon movies. It was first shown in Japanese theaters on July 19, 2003. It was released on video and DVD for North American audiences on June 1, 2004.
This move was first aired in Latin America in 2008, with different production and voice actors, and it was never seen in Spain.
Summary
Template:Incomplete synopsis While Ash and his friends are at a carnival celebrating the appearance of the Millennium Comet, they befriend Jirachi, a Pokémon that awakens every thousand years alongside the comet. Of the trainers, it is Max who Jirachi becomes friendly with. However a former Team Magma scientist, working as a magician at the carnival, wishes to use Jirachi to bring forth Groudon.
Characters
Humans
Pokémon
- Pikachu (Ash's)
- Meowth (Team Rocket)
- Wobbuffet (Jessie's)
- Taillow (Ash's)
- Treecko (Ash's)
- Corphish (Ash's)
- Torchic (May's)
- Beautifly (May's)
- Forretress (Brock's)
- Lotad (Brock's)
- Mudkip (Brock's)
- Jirachi (anime)
- Mightyena (Butler's)
- Kirlia (Butler's)
- Dusclops (Butler's)
- Salamence (Butler's)
- Absol
- Flygon
- Groudon (fake)
Pokémon debuts
- Jirachi
- Absol
- Flygon
- Kirlia
- Dusclops
- Salamence
- Tropius
- Linoone
- Breloom
- Electrike
- Swablu
- Altaria
- Skitty (intro only)
- Delcatty (intro only)
- Numel (intro only)
- Camerupt (intro only)
- Manectric (intro only)
- Solrock (intro only)
- Groudon (intro only)
- Kyogre (intro only)
Cast
出演 | |||||
Ash Ketchum | Veronica Taylor | Satoshi | Rica Matsumoto | サトシ | 松本梨香 |
Pikachu | Ikue Ohtani | Pikachu | Ikue Ohtani | ピカチュウ | 大谷育江 |
May | Veronica Taylor (speaking) KAORI (singing) |
Haruka | KAORI | ハルカ | KAORI |
Brock | Eric Stuart | Takeshi | Yuji Ueda | タケシ | うえだ ゆうじ |
Max | Amy Birnbaum | Masato | Fushigi Yamada | マサト | 山田ふしぎ |
Jessie | Rachael Lillis | Musashi | Megumi Hayashibara | ムサシ | 林原めぐみ |
James | Eric Stuart | Kojirō | Shin'ichirō Miki | コジロウ | 三木眞一郎 |
Meowth | Maddie Blaustein | Nyarth | Inuko Inuyama | ニャース | 犬山イヌコ |
Butler | Wayne Grayson | Butler | Koichi Yamadera | バトラー | 山寺宏一 |
Diane | Megan Hollingshead | Diane | Riho Mahise | ダイアン | 牧瀬里穂 |
Jirachi | Kerry Williams | Jirachi | Tomiko Suzuki | ジラーチ | 鈴木富子 |
Absol | Eric Stuart | Absol | Megumi Hayashibara | アブソル | 林原めぐみ |
Flygon | Shinichirō Miki | Flygon | Shinichirō Miki | フライゴン | 三木眞一郎 |
Narration | Mike Pollock | Narration | Unshō Ishizuka | ナレーション | 石塚運昇 |
Trivia
- The prologue for this movie shows the main legendary Pokémon from the first five movies. It shows Mewtwo, Lugia, Entei, Celebi, Latios, and Latias. However Mew, the legendary birds, and Suicune were absent.
- This is the first Pokémon movie to go directly to video for its American release.
- The events of this movie happen between the episodes Having a Wailord of a Time and Win, Lose or Drew!, and premiered in Japan between those episodes.
- The ending song, Make a Wish, is the first time that the U.S. dub left the original Japanese lyrics performed by Asuca Hayashi. It was also combined with English lyrics performed by Cindy Mizelle.
- This movie manifests itself in the form of a cameo in Pokémon Colosseum. The trainer is named Rider Zalla, and owns a Jirachi (the star), Flygon, Absol (wild Pokémon befriended during the movie), Kirlia, Mightyena, and a Dusclops (Pokémon belonging to Butler). Interestingly enough, she (possibly a reference to Max's motherly role for Jirachi, or Diane, as the trainer also has blonde hair) can be found as the 77th trainer on Battle Mode's Single Battle Mount Battle.
- Also, in Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, the two Ace Trainers that appear on the southernmost part of Route 229 have their teams based on those of Butler and Diane. In fact, in the Japanese version, they are have the same names as them, but the English translation team did not notice the relation to the movie characters.
- Two of the main non-legendary Pokémon of the movie, Absol and Flygon, are eventually both obtained by Drew and then used to battle May in the Kanto Grand Festival.
- Even though Treecko and Mudkip appear on the box cover, they never even appear in the movie. In fact, out of all their Pokémon, Pikachu and Torchic were the only two to appear, with the exception of the ending beach scene.
- When traveling to Forina, an instrumental version of Advance Adventure is played in the background and on the DVD main menu.
- This is the last Pokémon movie released to UK DVD until The Rise of Darkrai years later.
- This is the only Advanced Generation series movie in which Munchlax does not appear, as well as the only AG movie in which a Generation IV Pokémon does not appear, for that matter.
- This was the last movie that Tomiko Suzuki lent her voice. Tomiko died of a heart attack a week and a half before the cinema release.
- While the previous two movies kept the original Japanese background music for the main feature, this is the first movie to also keep the title sequence music.
Errors
Dub edits
- In the beginning, Ash says the person who last comes up the hill is a Slowpoke (May calls Max a Slowbro). However, in most translations from English, the joke was eliminated, replacing "slow" to each language's response.
- In the dub when Ash is talking with Max, he makes a reference to Misty, though not by name.
In other languages
- Portuguese (Brazil): Pokémon 6: Jirachi - Realizador de Desejos
- Chinese (HK): 七夜的願望之星
- Chinese (TW): 七夜的許願星 基拉祈
- Spanish (Latin America): Jirachi y los deseos