Yumi

The Modern Life of a Teenage Vampire is a 2000 Japanese adult-animated horror teen black comedy film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. Produced by Studio Ghibli for Tokuma Shoten, Nippon Television Network, Dentsu, Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Tohokushinsha Film, and Mitsubishi. It received acclaim from critics, who praised its animation, characters, story, voice acting, humor, visuals, musical score and motifs of grief, and self-deception. The film was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and Best Original Score at the 73rd Academy Awards.

Plot
The film follows a 16 year-old vampire named Yumi Katsuhiro who spends the night as any normal vampire would, drinking the blood of mortal souls. When she meets a 14 year-old girl named Himari, the two form an unlikely friendship.

Cast
Christina Ricci as Yumi Katsuhiro, a 16 year-old vampire who spends the night as any normal vampire would, drinking the blood of mortal souls. She also likes to tells the story of the little girl named Akagi who was bitten by a vampire and became one herself.

Lindsay Lohan as Himari Okunaga

Natalie Portman as Ichika

Matthew Lillard as Daichi Watanabe

Tom Hanks as Officer Okudera

Tara Strong as Akagi

Release
The film was released on July 14, 2000.

Music
The film's score was composed by David Julyan, making it his first animated film score and Miyazaki’s second film not to be composed by Joe Hisaishi following The Castle of Cagliostro. It is also the first anime film composed by a non-Japanese composer. Julyan composed the film's synthesized score. Julyan acknowledges several synthesized soundtracks that inspired him, such as Vangelis's Blade Runner and Hans Zimmer's The Thin Red Line. Since he describes the entire score as "Yumi's Theme", Julyan says, "The emotion I was aiming at with my music was yearning and loss. But a sense of loss you feel but at the same time you don't know what it is you have lost, a sense of being adrift."

Transcript
The Modern Life of a Teenage Vampire/Transcript

Opening logos




Critical reception
The film holds an approval rating of 93% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Trivia

 * The film's score was composed by David Julyan, making it Miyazaki’s second film not to be composed by Joe Hisaishi following The Castle of Cagliostro. It is also the first anime film composed by a non-Japanese composer.