Marco: Carry a Dream (1999)
April 1, 1999Release Date
Marco: Carry a Dream (1999)
April 1, 1999Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Rumi Sakakibara
Anna
Rocío Garcel
Marco Rossi
Chieko Higuchi
Marco
Yoshiko Matsuo
Marco
Takayuki Sugo
Pietro
Kazuyuki Sogabe
Tonio
Osami Nabe
Peppino
Urara Takano
Pablo
Yukiko Nikaido
Anna
Kiyoshi Kawakubo
Pietro
Kazuo Fukazawa
Writer
Ichiro Nagai
Peppino (Fiolina's father)
Kozo Kusuba
Director
Toshitsugu Saida
Animation Director / Key Animation
Noriko Ohara
Conchetta (Fiolina's sister)
Ken Shintani
Key Animation
Mieko Nobusawa
Fiolina
Kenji Kodama
Key Animation
Takumi Kamiyama
Leonardo
Hiroki Kawazoe
Key Animation
Sachiko Chijimatsu
Julietta (Fiolina's sister)
Mitsuo Tano
Key Animation
Kazuko Maejima
Key Animation
Kenji Mizuhata
Key Animation
Kazunobu Hoshi
Key Animation
Yuuko Watabe
Key Animation
Michiko Igarashi
Key Animation
Shiro Kudaka
Key Animation
Yuji Hamano
Key Animation
Masahiro Kase
Key Animation
Yukiyoshi Hane
Key Animation
Junko Ikeda
Key Animation
Media.
Details.
Release DateApril 1, 1999
Original Name劇場版 MARCO 母をたずねて三千里
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 37m
Content RatingG
Genres
Wiki.
3000 Leagues in Search of Mother (母をたずねて三千里, Haha o Tazunete Sanzenri) is a Japanese animated television series directed by Isao Takahata that aired in 1976. It is loosely based on a small part of the Italian novel Heart (Cuore) created by Edmondo De Amicis, i.e., a monthly tale (racconto mensile) From the Apennines to the Andes (Dagli Appennini alle Ande), widely expanded into a 52-episode epic.The series was broadcast on World Masterpiece Theater (Calpis Children's Theater back then), an animation staple that showcased each year an animated version of a different classic book or story. It was originally titled From the Apennines to the Andes. Nippon Animation, producers of World Masterpiece Theater, adapted Cuore into a second anime television series in 1981, although this second series was not part of the WMT.
The series was dubbed into several languages and became an instant success in some countries, such as Portugal, Brazil, Peru, Spain, Venezuela, Colombia, Germany, Chile, the Philippines, Malaysia, Turkey, Iran, the Arab world, and Israel. In Hebrew, the series is called HaLev (הלב), meaning The Heart (the name of the original novel that the anime series is based on; the latter was translated into Hebrew and was extremely popular in the 1990s in Israel). In some European and in Latin American countries the series is simply known as Marco. In Arabic the series was a huge success; it was called Wada'an Marco (وداعاً ماركو), meaning Goodbye Marco.