Jumping
Jumping
| 12 August 1984 (USA)
Jumping Trailers

A boy walks down the street and as he goes along his strides increase. Eventually he leaps over towns, forests, and oceans, seeing many things and surprising many people along the way.

Reviews
InformationRap This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
Bessie Smyth Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.
Marva-nova Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.
Nicole I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Jumping" is a 6.5-minute animated short film by the late Japanese writer and director Osamu Tezuka. He made it in 1984, five years prior to his death, so this one is already over 30 years old. It is basically about a child jumping, but the action turns quickly away what happens in the street where the child lives. Instead, it takes audiences to a journey across the entire globe. I must say this does not make any sense really as the child has never seen these places and it cannot jump as high as it does in this film. My only explanation is that Tezuka wanted to show us that there are no boundaries to the creativity of a child's mind, but even with that approach I cannot say it worked well and comes off as slightly pretentious. The animation is decent for 1980s, nothing too great or bad. But the story in here is really just a collection of mostly forgettable impressions that don't make any sense really in the whole context. I do not recommend the watch.
Rectangular_businessman A funny and original gag-short directed by the Astroboy creator Osamu Tezuka in the eighties, being one of his most creative experimental animations.Even when the premise seems like something far too simple, it is how it is presented what this short work so well: "Jumping" takes a first person perspective in order to show what the main character of the short (A kid, apparently) finds as he starts to make higher and higher jumps, going to several different places, always with funny and surprising results.The animation of this short is pretty well done, having a unique and atypical visual style which is completely different to any other Japanese animation that I've seen before; having a completely different aesthetic of what is commonly associated with anime. There sceneries are particularly well done, having some of them details that could be appreciated after several viewings.This is a great example of experimental animation from the world, being highly imaginative, unpredictable and entertaining.
MartinHafer What an incredibly cool story!! Without any words and a simple plot, the film makers were able to make an incredibly compelling and exciting animated story. The film begins like either a dream or a world where you have Flubber in your shoes. As the unseen protagonist is bouncing down the road, a car quickly approaches and he/she jumps over it! Then, throughout the film, the person jumps higher and higher and higher. Because they include lots of cute little scenes, believe it or not, this does not become repetitive! For example, if you watch closely you can see C-3PO and R2-D2 in a very brief scene, a naked lady sunbathing, a man being captured by cannibals, a war and even a quick jump down into Hell!! It's so surreal and strange but you just can't stop watching. And, to make it even better, the animation quality is very good and the film bears up to repeated viewing. A wonderful and one of a kind short film.PS--Keep watching the final credits and you'll see them jumping as well!
tavm Directed by Osama Tezuka, Jumping is one of the best entirely hand drawn animated shorts from the late '80s. After the title sequence with the credits quickly going up and down, we see point-of-view jumping shots going from the suburban neighborhood to some forests to some seascapes to over some tall city buildings to many war-torn areas to a giant mushroom cloud to hell twice with both times the devils trying to get you with their pitchfork to finally back to the beginning neighborhood where we hear a little child joyously crying, happy to be back in familiar terrain. Then the credits again jump as we fade to black...This short is most highly recommended to any animation fan. I first saw this in a VHS collection called The International Tournee of Animation, Volume 1 when I checked it out in the Jacksonville Public Library in the late '80s in that city's downtown area.