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The Wolf Children are a Japanese drama movie directed by Mamoru Hosoda. It tells the story of two children, Hana and her older brother, Yuki. Hana has white fur on her back with black spots while Yuki has black fur on his back with white spots. Their parents are an ordinary human couple that separate when the kids are young and then travel around Europe while trying to have a family. Eventually, they give up their travels in exchange for living in the wilderness of Hara Mountains where "the children" become howling wolf kids. They go through many trials and tribulations in their life. After about 17 years, they find their father who is now married to another woman and has a daughter. Yuki goes to live with his father while Hana stays behind in Tokyo. She tries to find her own life in the city until she meets a man, Keizo Murase, who is later found out to be a "werewolf husband." In March 2011, it was announced that Mamoru Hosoda would direct a live-action movie based on an original work by Sayo Yamamoto entitled "Wolf Children". Yamamoto worked with producer Masahiro Tanaka on the script for the film. Production I.G has been involved from the beginning of production. While the film is a live-action version of Yamamoto's manga, the film features a different ending from that of the manga. Production on the movie took four years. In an interview with "The Japan Times", Hosoda said there were some concerns about casting for the film's two lead child actors: "I got some interesting auditions from Mongolia, China and Taiwan, but I needed Japanese or Korean actors because they had to speak in Japanese in the movie." He also stated that he needed two children who could both act and sing because many scenes required them to sing. In another interview, Hosoda stated that he chose Miura and Kaneko due to their "innocent" appearance. Yusuke Yamada, the director of the movie "I Want to Eat Your Pancreas" (2009), was able to direct Hosoda for this film, but he could only go on the condition that Hosoda make his own script for it. The film was shot in Sapporo, Hokkaido and Ōita Prefecture. Production designer Shōji Yonemura brought ideas from Japan's natural landscape into his designs for this film. He also used motifs inspired by the Hara mountains of northern Honshu. It took three months to finish translating each character's dialogue into English. The film debuted at the Tokyo International Film Festival in 2013. It was released theatrically in Japan on November 2, 2013, and grossed US$35 million at the box office. The film won four awards at the 35th Japan Academy Prize: Best Soundtrack (Kōichi Ikeda), Best Costume Design (Shōji Yonemura), Best Makeup (Takashi Tanigawa and Masako Katsuki), and Best Movie. It was nominated for Best Picture and Best Director but lost to "The Last Princess". However, it received awards for its sound design and the costumes. cfa1e77820
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