So today I'm not going to introduce you to an artist, but an original soundtrack of a movie. The movie itself was heart-wrenching, and a big part of it was due to the soundtrack. Many times, the original score of the movie can significantly alter the audience's reception of the movie, like what Hanz Zimmer did with The Dark Knight.
The name of the movie, is 5 Centimeters Per Second: an animation movie directed by Shinkai Makoto. It chronicles the story of a boy and a girl, whom are best friends, and also are in love, ever since from elementary school. Throughout the movie, they drift apart, entering a long distance relationship where their feelings for each other are tested. To avoid spoiling the movie, I shall now shift my focus onto the music.
The movie's title comes from the speed of a cherry blossom falling, and Tenmon, the composer of the soundtrack, certainly had captured the image of cherry blossoms gently floating in subtle breeze. This one, is called Cherry Blossom Extract.
The piano melody, is simple and subtle, yet searingly poignant, and penetrates deep into the emotions. It makes one remember certain things, tugs at their soul to bring certain moments back, and quietly contemplate them to the point where it begins to hurt, like someone is gripping one's heart.
That's the kind of soundtrack this movie has, and it makes the atmosphere of the movie so much more touching. This next one, is called The Feeling That Doesn't Reach.
This one somehow always reminds me of my first love. That first time, when I truly looked at someone, and said to myself, 'I would give anything to be with that person.' It's a rare feeling, and it has visited me very few times after the first, that I can count the moments of its coming in my one hand. What really makes my appreciation for this piece truly heartfelt, is that my first love never came out to be anything. It comes back time to time to haunt me, to remind me of how happy I would've been, had I been something else than what I was back then, and was able to be with her. That's the sort of feeling I get, when I listen to this.
This piece, is another gem in the soundtrack as well, if not the best one out of all the gems in the score. It's the one that gives me the shivers every time. The melody is very uncomplicated, yet it's deeper than how most piano compositions can be, and combined with the visual experience of the movie, the sense of longing the characters harbor in their chests, their desperate hope to see each other, can be felt through the screen.
So before I further shove myself into the well of depression and sadness, I'm going to call it a day, with this one last song. It's called, One More Time, One More Chance, by Yamazaki Masayoshi. He is a Japanese singer-song writer, and this song was written for his girlfriend, who passed away in an earthquake of 1995. The lyrics depict how he constantly searches for her, even though he knows he will never find her.
Meanwhile, I strongly recommend this movie if you haven't watched it yet. It is by far one of the best anime movies out there, and among the non-Miyazaki films, possibly the best. No matter how strong, how sturdy your heart is, this movie is certain to move you from the base of your soul, and make you think about it for days after it, bringing out your memories of past moments, when you fell in love at 5 centimeters per second.
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