Stand by Me Doraemon (2014)
Stand by Me Doraemon (2014)
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Currently Stand by Me Doraemon is available for streaming online, rent, buy or watch for free on: Netflix, Netflix basic with Ads
Streaming in:🇺🇸 United States
Cast & Crew.
Wasabi Mizuta
Doraemon (voice)
Megumi Oohara
Nobita (voice)
Yumi Kakazu
Shizuka (voice)
Subaru Kimura
Gian (voice)
Tomokazu Seki
Suneo (voice)
Satoshi Tsumabuki
Adult Nobita (voice)
Vanilla Yamazaki
Jaiko (voice)
Sachi Matsumoto
Sewashi (voice)
Shihoko Hagino
Dekisugi (voice)
Aruno Tahara
Yoshio Minamoto (voice)
Kotono Mitsuishi
Tamako Nobi (voice)
Miyako Takeuchi
Gian's Mom (voice)
Wataru Takagi
Teacher (voice)
Yasunori Matsumoto
Nobisuki Nobi (voice)
Tony Oliver
Director
Takashi Yamazaki
Screenplay / Director
Media.
Details.
Release DateAugust 8, 2014
Original NameSTAND BY ME ドラえもん
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 34m
Content RatingG
Budget$35,000,000
Box Office$83,100,000
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
Wiki.
Stand by Me Doraemon (Japanese: STAND BY ME ドラえもん, Hepburn: Sutando Bai Mī Doraemon) is a 2014 Japanese animated science fiction comedy-drama film based on the Doraemon manga series and directed by Ryūichi Yagi and Takashi Yamazaki. It was released on 8 August 2014. It is the highest-grossing film of the Doraemon franchise. Bang Zoom! Entertainment premiered an English-dubbed version of the film at the Tokyo International Film Festival on 24 October 2014. The English version features the cast of the Disney XD show Doraemon: Gadget Cat From the Future. A different English version with local actors was distributed by Multivision Pictures Entertainment and VIVA International Pictures for a Filipino audience in 2015, however is currently lost. It is therefore the first of 2 Doraemon films to be dubbed in English.
Stand by Me Doraemon was commercially successful in Japan. It was number one on the box office charts for five consecutive weeks and was the second highest-grossing Japanese anime film of 2014 in Japan, with a box office total of $183.4 million, behind Disney's Frozen. In February 2015, the film won the Japan Academy Prize for Animation of the Year at the 38th Japan Academy Prize.
A sequel was released on 20 November 2020 in Japan.
The film is primarily based on the first chapter of the manga "All the Way From the Future", the 1973 chapter "Mountain Rescue", the 1980 chapter "Goodbye Shizuka", the 1984 chapter "Imprinting Shizuka", the 1998 short film "Doraemon Comes Back" and the 1999 short film "Doraemon: Nobita's Night Before a Wedding", though several other chapters are briefly brought up as well.