Search - Kino's Journey - Not Without Reservation (Vol. 4) on DVD


Kino's Journey - Not Without Reservation (Vol. 4)
Kino's Journey - Not Without Reservation
Vol. 4
Genres: Television, Anime & Manga, Animation
UR     2004     1hr 15min


     
4

Larger Image

Movie Details

Genres: Television, Anime & Manga, Animation
Sub-Genres: Television, Anime & Manga, Animation
Studio: Adv Films
Format: DVD - Color - Animated,Subtitled
DVD Release Date: 06/29/2004
Release Year: 2004
Run Time: 1hr 15min
Screens: Color
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaDVD Credits: 1
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
MPAA Rating: Unrated
Languages: English, Japanese
Subtitles: English
We're sorry, our database doesn't have DVD description information for this item. Click here to check Amazon's database -- you can return to this page by closing the new browser tab/window if you want to obtain the DVD from SwapaDVD.
Click here to submit a DVD description for approval.

Similar Movies

Kino's Journey - Warning Curves Ahead
Vol. 3
4
   UR   2004   1hr 15min
Kino's Journey - Emerging Lanes
Vol. 2
5
   UR   2004   1hr 15min
Black Cat Vol 5 - The Cataclysm
3
   UR   2007   1hr 40min

Similarly Requested DVDs

Little Women
Collector's Series
Director: Gillian Armstrong
   PG   2000   1hr 55min
   
Johnny English
Widescreen Edition
Director: Peter Howitt
   PG   2004   1hr 27min
   
Frankenfish
Director: Mark A.Z. Dippé
   R   2004   1hr 24min
   
American Dad Vol 1
   UR   2006   4hr 44min
   
Hoodwinked
Widescreen Edition
Directors: Cory Edwards, Todd Edwards, Tony Leech
   PG   2006   1hr 20min
   
The Hunt for Eagle One Crash Point
Director: Henry Crum
   R   2006   1hr 26min
   
Spirited Killer
Director: Panna Rittikrai
8
   UR   2006   1hr 25min
   
Grindhouse Presents Planet Terror - Extended and Unrated
Two-Disc Special Edition
Director: Robert Rodriguez
   UR   2007   1hr 45min
   
 

Movie Reviews

Wonderful Conclusion
Kalika | Canada | 07/05/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Though the third disc of the series was rather a drop in caliber and cohearence, the fourth and final disc of the series does not, in any way, disappoint. The first episode was interesting in its theory.. but it was not especially spectacular. The second episode is a magnificent example of the more disturbing qualities of this show. Something is very very wrong... and no one sees it but the traveller. The last episode will have you suspicious for the first half, expecting the "other shoe to drop" so to speak, but it will make you cry. One, because it's that sad, two.. because it's over! *sniffle* Kino's Journey was a magnificent, deep, and altogether too short, series. The last disc gives some more hints into Kino's past, with the "master" being seen for the first time. However, nothing is truly revealed -- it's up to the viewer to invent the rest of the story. If you have liked the series thus far, this disc is an absolute must, showcasing two of the best episodes since the first disc. Definitely worth watching over and over again.
...Kino's Journey is still continuing on....."
I'm Taking My Journey Consciously...
Bryan Weber | San Angelo, TX | 07/15/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The final installment of Kino's Journey is a beautiful close to what has been a wonderful journey.
The first episode is a set of tales on the road. We meet a man who has served a long prison sentence for murder, and wants to make amends to the woman whose fiance he killed. But is redemption through survivors of your violence just, or selfish. We meet a woman who preaches pacifism after her lover was slain by a gun, and her traveling companion who secretly slays any who would dare harm her. We meet "The Master" who taught Kino to live on the road. We meet a wise man who is the first to tell you that he is nothing of the sort. Is self-consciousness the cause of human evil, or is desire? What does it mean to be without desire?
The second episode takes us to a country that claims to be utterly peaceful. Kino soon learns that the peace has come at a monstrous price. Two nations on the verge of annihilation had concocted a twisted resolution to their problem. Rather than kill each other, they would kill an unarmed innocent race, and tally the score for the war. Is the sacrifice of the innocent justifiable when it saves the lives of others?
The final episode of Kino's Journey is set before the first. We had heard of a country where Kino had wanted to stay longer than the normal three days. In this episode, we find Kino journeying to that land. She had heard of a country where the people were inhospitable to travelers, and wanted to see for herself why that was. There, she encounters a nation of kind people, and meets a young girl who is not that different from herself before her travels began. Kino and Sakura become fast friends. But the country has a sad secret, and when the three days are over, Kino learns that it was the pride of the people that made them what they were. Kino vows to continue the journey, and we leave where we came in, with Kino and Hermes in the desert, silently waiting in the rain."
"Just don't get yourself killed."
Marc Ruby? | Warren, MI USA | 01/24/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)

"This is the last DVD is this series, based on the novels of Keichi Sigsawa. They feature Kino, an anomalous traveler and Hermes, the motorcycle that doubles as a companion. This pair follows the road, moving from place to place and never staying for more than three days. Each story finds Kino confronting many of the mysteries that make up human nature. Some are sarcastic, some chilling, some humorous, but all are views of the human condition, seen as a faceted gem, and from a distance.

The three-day limit is Kino's way of avoiding entrenched complications. While we never do learn why Kino avoids extended relationships (other than with Hermes), the traveler is very much in control of her fate. Kino never goes somewhere by accident, she can take care of herself, and she is doing what she wants to do. The mystery that surrounds this figure becomes part of the atmospherics of the series, rather than a story arc of any consequence.

The final stories are all very strong ones. The first episode is a pastiche of a disquieting tale of revenge and atonement that seques into a visit with a wise mane who has somehow relinquished and clinging to the world. When we discover that appearances are not quite what they seem we have to decide what is the nature of this kind of 'wisdom' when it serves an unexpected purpose.

The second episode tells of how two countries avoid the continuance of a 200-hundred-year war. Or rather, how they avoid having that war take their own lives. This is a dark story, one that turns on the unwillingness of people to take any but the easy route. For some people, change is simply not an option.

This is the bleakest DVD of the collection, and the third tale is what makes it so. Kino decides to visit the country with the unfriendliest reputation to travelers, only to discover that everyone is going out of their way to be friendly. Naturally, nothing is as it seems, but the twist in this tale is a double one. This isn't an easy ending for the series and viewers will find more to think about than they bargained for.

This series gets an 'A' for going into emotional nooks and crannies that are most often avoided by both life and animated film. Sometimes there is a strong lesson behind the episodes, but often we are just left with a poignant feeling and a question or two. I like this sort of thing, but many may prefer stronger story arcs and solider conclusions. One thing you can count on, though is thoughtful work and many unexpected twists.

One last note - as another reviewer has mentioned, the Japanese is more ambiguous than the norm. In this last DVD this surfaces as a large number of glaring differences between the subtitles and the dubbing. Since neither is completely wrong this is one of those cases where it is best to experience both."
Consistently Good
Hiyo_2366 | Texas, USA | 07/17/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

""Kino's Journey" is an introspective show of the highest quality, though one does have to get used to the peculiar 'fairy-tale' quality of the stories, which involve modern technology and engage some very modern issues, but somehow seem to have taken place long ago in a far country. The story as a whole has no plot and I think the disks could actually be watched in any order, but it's best to start the series with disk 1, because having gone through all that, by the time you get to this disk you'll be so primed for the sort of things that happen in Kino stories, that you'll be on the edge of your seat for the entire last episode, waiting for the axe to drop. Due the highly ambiguous style of the Japanese dialogue, the dub and subtitled translations differ significantly from each other and are somewhat like watching two different variations of the same story, like different performances of the same music. Definitely a show worth watching multiple times."