Your Name Returns to Theaters in 4K for Its 10th Anniversary

Makoto Shinkai's "Your Name" returns to theaters in 4K for its 10th anniversary.

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A decade after captivating audiences worldwide, Your Name is coming back to the big screen—and this time, in stunning 4K.

Makoto Shinkai's 2016 phenomenon will begin its theatrical re-release on August 14, marking a major milestone for the film that became a cultural juggernaut. The 4K remaster represents a chance for longtime fans to experience the film's intricate animation and sweeping landscapes with unprecedented clarity, while newcomers get to discover why this particular anime film transcended the medium entirely.

Distributor GKIDS, known for bringing Japanese films to international audiences, is handling the re-release alongside new home video editions. A Blu-ray and 4K UHD Steelbook will both be available, giving viewers options depending on their setup and collecting preferences.

For those who've already streamed the film on HBO Max or YouTubeTV, the theatrical experience offers something fundamentally different—the kind of immersion that Shinkai's meticulous direction demands. Your Name tells the story of two strangers whose bodies mysteriously swap, forcing them to navigate each other's lives across Japan's urban and rural landscapes. It's a premise that could feel gimmicky in less capable hands, but Shinkai uses it to explore connection, identity, and the strange intimacy of knowing someone through their daily existence.

The film's success was staggering. It became the highest-grossing anime film of all time upon release, a record it held for years, and resonated so deeply that it sparked genuine cultural conversations about destiny, technology, and human connection. The soundtrack by Radwimps became equally iconic, inseparable from the film's emotional beats.

A 4K re-release isn't just nostalgia—it's recognition that some films improve with time and technology. Shinkai's visual storytelling, already meticulous in 2016, gains new dimension when rendered in higher resolution. Details in backgrounds, the play of light through windows, the texture of rain on streets—all of it becomes richer.

For a film that spent a decade proving its staying power, this feels like the appropriate celebration.

Source: Polygon

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