Box office The film was
#1 at the Japanese box office during its opening weekend, replacing
Avengers: Age of Ultron, and earning approximately on 492,000 admissions from 457 screens. In its second weekend,
The Boy and the Beast earned $3.89 million, marking a 29.1% decline and dropping to number two, overtaken by
Hero 2. The film was Japan's second highest-grossing film in the year 2015 with a total box office gross of (converted from yen) . The film ranked #28 at the American box office during its opening weekend on March 4, 2016. As of March 16, 2016, the film has an American box office gross of $474,308.
Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 65 out of 100 based on 15 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Mark Schilling of
The Japan Times said that the film "has more in common with the "Harry Potter" series than the usual female-centered
Miyazaki fantasy" and would later say that the storyline "stays centered on Kyūta's long, vexed struggle to become not only strong, but also whole." Richard Eisenbeis of
Kotaku said
The Boy and the Beast "is an entertaining coming-of-age adventure on one hand and an excellent thematic exploration on the other. This is one of those films that is perfect for any age group—there's something for everyone in this one." Charles Solomon of the
Los Angeles Times said the film "is a bracing tale of two flawed individuals who find the love and discipline they need to assume their rightful places in their respective worlds." Peter Debruge of
Variety called it "an action-packed buddy movie that strategically combines several of Japanese fans' favorite ingredients: conflicted teens, supernatural creatures and epic battles." Peter Keough of
The Boston Globe gave the film 2.5 out of 4 stars and wrote that Hosoda "does know how to mix an eclectic array of film plots and concepts into a mish-mash that seems original." Pat Padua of
The Washington Post wrote, "But it is the world of man, not beast, that makes this coming-of-age movie most touching." While popular in Japan, in the west the film has a more mixed reaction. Andy Webster of
The New York Times was more critical of the film, saying "Mr. Hosoda is skilled with fight scenes, and his settings — the pastel-hued Jūtengai and the drab Shibuya, evoked at times with surveillance-camera perspectives and crowd-paranoia angles — are impressive. But the characterizations and conflicts here are strictly generic." Sherilyn Connelly of
The Village Voice said that the film "works with many common anime tropes but doesn't find anything new to say about them." Marc Savlov of
The Austin Chronicle gave the film 2.5 out of 5 stars and said "A huge success in Japan, this thrilling, if overlong, epic from director Mamoru Hosoda (
Wolf Children,
Summer Wars) is part
Karate Kid and part Japanese folklore." Jacob Chapman of
Anime News Network had a mixed response to the film and said "
The Boy and The Beast is the kind of movie you put on to please a kid with its loudness and color, but promptly leave the room to do something else. ==References==