News Reporting

Dragon Quest: Your Story Film Gets New Trailer & Visual


Content Warning: Contains descriptions of Koichi Sugiyama’s political views, which include war crime denial and views toward LGBT+ individuals.

Earlier today, the official website for upcoming film Dragon Quest: Your Story updated with a new trailer and key visual.

We break the details down below.

Trailer

The 92-second promo introduces the major plot elements, from the Hero’s tragic childhood, to his whirlwind adventures, to his romantic experiences with Bianca and Nera. The franchise theme song plays as a background track.

Key Visual

The image features the main cast, posing against a white background.

Dragon Quest: Your Story Key Visual

Dragon Quest: Your Story will hit Japanese theaters on August 2. The film will be based on the events of 1992’s Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride.

Takashi Yamazaki (Space Battleship Yamato [live-action], Stand By Me Doraemon) will serve as chief director the project and write the screenplay. The team of Ryūichi Yagi (Stand By Me Doraemon, Friends: Mononoke Shima no Naki) and Makoto Hanafusa (Air Bound) will direct the project.

Series creator Yuji Horii will serve as supervisor for the project, and is credited with the original concept. Series composer Koichi Sugiyama will score the film’s soundtrack.

The confirmed voice cast includes:

  • Protagonist/Ryuka: Takeru Satoh
  • Bianca: Kasumi Arimura
  • Nera/Flora: Haru
  • Prince Harry/Henry: Kentaro Sakaguchi
  • Pankraz/Papas: Takayuki Yamada
  • Sancho: Kendo Kobayashi
  • Dr. Agon/Pusan Ken Yasuda
  • Bjørn: Arata Furuta
  • Rodrigo Briscoletti/Ludman: Suzuki Matsuo
  • Rocket/Surarin: Kōichi Yamadera
  • Nimzo/Mildrath: Arata Iura
  • Madalena/Martha: Chikako Kaku
  • Ladja/Gema: Kōtarō Yoshida
 Dragon Quest Your Story Promo Photo - Takashi Yamazaki - Yuji Horii
Takashi Yamazaki (left) & Yuji Horii (right)

Dragon Quest made its debut on Nintendo’s Famicom console on May 27, 1986. The series is one of Japan’s most popular game franchises, with eleven main-line games, more than thirty spin off titles, a 43-episode anime series, and a 1996 anime film from Nippon Animation. More than 76 million units have been sold worldwide to date, and the title is often touted as “Japan’s most popular series” or “Japan’s favorite series” by games media outlets.

Dragon Quest XI PS4 BoxartThe most recent game, Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age, hit Japanese retailers on July 29, 2017, with versions released for both Nintendo’s 3DS handheld and Sony’s PlayStation 4 console. The PlayStation 4 version made its way to western markets on September 4, 2018.

A new version of the game, Dragon Quest XI: Echoes of an Elusive Age S – Definitive Edition –, is currently in development for Nintendo’s Switch console. The SKU will hit stores on September 27, and will sport additional story content, as well as the “2D” mode found in the 3DS version of the game. The title has sold more than four million copies worldwide across both SKUs.

Series composer Koichi Sugiyama is a co-host on Channel Sakura’s Hi Izuru Kuni Yori program. Japanese politician Mio Sugita was a guest on an episode in 2015, during which she claimed that LGBT+ education was unnecessary in Japanese schools, and made light of the high suicide rates within the Japanese LGBT+ community. Sugiyama was shown agreeing with the politician’s views in the episode, and laughing at Sugita’s comments regarding LGBT+ suicide.

In 2007, Sugiyama opposed a resolution by the United States seeking an official apology from Japan regarding “comfort women,” who were used as sexual slaves by Japanese soldiers in World War II. In a response published in The Washington Post, Sugiyama stated that he felt the evidence around the Nanking Massacre, and “comfort women” as a whole were flawed and selective.

Source: Comic Natalie

About the author

Samantha Ferreira

Samantha Ferreira is Anime Herald’s founder and editor-in-chief. A Rhode Island native, Samantha has been an anime fan since 1992, and an active member of the anime press since 2002, when she began working as a reviewer for Anime Dream. She launched Anime Herald in 2010, and continues to oversee its operations to this day. Outside of journalism, Samantha actively studies the history of the North American anime fandom and industry, with a particular focus on the 2000s anime boom and bust. She’s a huge fan of all things Sakura Wars, and maintains series fansite Combat Revue Review when she has free time available. When not in the Anime Herald Discord, Samantha can typically be found on Bluesky.

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