This review may contain spoilers
Watch until the very end
"Go Away Ultramarine" is one of those movies that you must watch until the very end. It begins with a big mystery, and initially, nothing really makes sense. The characters seem uninterested in exploring the stranger events around them, which makes the viewer wonder about what's really happening. However, in the last 30 minutes of the movie, everything clicks into place. You finally understand why things occurred as they did and why the film was filled with question marks.
**Possible Spoilers.**
The entire movie is about a mysterious island where 2,000 people live, and not a single one knows how or when they ended up there. They just found themselves on this island, which is overseen by a witch. According to the lore, the only way to leave safely is to find what you have lost. Although the island appears to be shrouded in mystery, its residents have accepted their fate and show little interest in discovering how they arrived there—until a new girl named Manabe joins the island. Manabe is determined to uncover why she’s there and encourages those around her to ask the same questions, but no one seems truly interested.
As Manabe embarks on her journey to find these answers, we gradually learn what this island really is.
**Spoiler!!**
It's an island created from discarded personalities—parts of ourselves that we let go of when we feel they no longer serve us. One character, Nanakusa, who was plagued by pessimism, decided to leave that side of himself behind, leading to that pessimistic trait becoming embodied in the island. When he meets Manabe, he realizes that in the real world, she's let go of her idealistic, carefree personality. This revelation drives Nanakusa to try to save Manabe. While Manabe believes that side of her personality has no value, it’s that very trait that made Nanakusa love her in the real world. As he encounters her on the island, he sees that she has abandoned what made her beautiful, so he seeks to help her return to the real world, ultimately trying to show her that she should not discard that part of her.
I think the movie does a wonderful job of illustrating how, in the process of growing up, we often let go of parts of ourselves that no longer serve us or even hinder us. Instead of focusing on how letting go changes a person, the film highlights those discarded personalities, showing why they were cast aside and how sometimes what we perceive as useless or negative traits can actually be the most beautiful. It’s definitely a movie worth watching, and you absolutely need to stick it out until the very end to fully grasp the story.
**Possible Spoilers.**
The entire movie is about a mysterious island where 2,000 people live, and not a single one knows how or when they ended up there. They just found themselves on this island, which is overseen by a witch. According to the lore, the only way to leave safely is to find what you have lost. Although the island appears to be shrouded in mystery, its residents have accepted their fate and show little interest in discovering how they arrived there—until a new girl named Manabe joins the island. Manabe is determined to uncover why she’s there and encourages those around her to ask the same questions, but no one seems truly interested.
As Manabe embarks on her journey to find these answers, we gradually learn what this island really is.
**Spoiler!!**
It's an island created from discarded personalities—parts of ourselves that we let go of when we feel they no longer serve us. One character, Nanakusa, who was plagued by pessimism, decided to leave that side of himself behind, leading to that pessimistic trait becoming embodied in the island. When he meets Manabe, he realizes that in the real world, she's let go of her idealistic, carefree personality. This revelation drives Nanakusa to try to save Manabe. While Manabe believes that side of her personality has no value, it’s that very trait that made Nanakusa love her in the real world. As he encounters her on the island, he sees that she has abandoned what made her beautiful, so he seeks to help her return to the real world, ultimately trying to show her that she should not discard that part of her.
I think the movie does a wonderful job of illustrating how, in the process of growing up, we often let go of parts of ourselves that no longer serve us or even hinder us. Instead of focusing on how letting go changes a person, the film highlights those discarded personalities, showing why they were cast aside and how sometimes what we perceive as useless or negative traits can actually be the most beautiful. It’s definitely a movie worth watching, and you absolutely need to stick it out until the very end to fully grasp the story.
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