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The Wind Rises is a 2013 Animation, Biography, Drama film. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki. A brief summary of The Wind Rises; A cross-check the continuation of Jiro Horikoshi, the grown-up person who intended Japanese fighter planes for the duration of World War II.

Watch The Wind Rises Online Free

 

Watch The Wind Rises Online Free



The Wind Rises received generally positive reviews from film critics; Rotten Tomatoes sampled 42 reviews and judged 81% of them to be positive, and the consensus: “The Wind Rises is a fittingly bittersweet swan song for director Hayao Miyazaki.”.[22] Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score, rated the film 84 out of 100 based on 18 reviews.[23]

Watch Free Movies Online Without Downloading or Signing up, The Japan Times gave the film a 3 1/2 stars out of 5, and states “So, yes, The Wind Rises is an old-fashioned tearjerker, but it is also a visually sumptuous celebration of an unspoiled prewar Japan.”[24] In a review for The Asia-Pacific Journal, Matthew Penney wrote “What Miyazaki offers is a layered look at how Horikoshi’s passion for flight was captured by capital and militarism,” and “(the film) is one of Miyazaki’s most ambitious and thought-provoking visions as well as one of his most beautifully realized visual projects.

 The Wind Rises is a 2013 Animation, Biography, Drama film. Directed by Hayao Miyazaki. A brief summary of The Wind Rises; A cross-check the continuation of Jiro Horikoshi, the grown-up person who intended Japanese fighter planes for the duration of World War II.

The Wind Rises received generally positive reviews from film critics; Rotten Tomatoes sampled 42 reviews and judged 81% of them to be positive, and the consensus: "The Wind Rises is a fittingly bittersweet swan song for director Hayao Miyazaki.".[22] Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score, rated the film 84 out of 100 based on 18 reviews.[23]

The Japan Times gave the film a 3 1/2 stars out of 5, and states "So, yes, The Wind Rises is an old-fashioned tearjerker, but it is also a visually sumptuous celebration of an unspoiled prewar Japan."[24] In a review for The Asia-Pacific Journal, Matthew Penney wrote "What Miyazaki offers is a layered look at how Horikoshi's passion for flight was captured by capital and militarism," and "(the film) is one of Miyazaki's most ambitious and thought-provoking visions as well as one of his most beautifully realized visual projects.