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Labyrinth (2026)
Science fiction anime directed by Shôji Kawamori, following high schooler Shiori (Aoi Itô) who enters a vast mechanical world inside her smartphone while chasing online stardom. Co-starring Taizô Harada and Show Hayami. Kawamori's first original feature-length film, produced by Sanzigen.
Science fiction anime directed by Shôji Kawamori, following high schooler Shiori (Aoi Itô) who enters a vast mechanical world inside her smartphone while chasing online stardom. Co-starring Taizô Harada and Show Hayami. Kawamori's first original feature-length film, produced by Sanzigen.
The film's core conflict examines the harmful effects of social media on identity and mental health, resolved by the protagonist's journey toward self-acceptance and rejection of virtual superficiality, presenting a balanced critique without favoring partisan ideologies.
The anime features a standard Japanese cast without notable diversity in representation or intentional recasting for equity. Its narrative examines digital-age identity and social media impacts on youth, framing personal growth neutrally without addressing or critiquing traditional social identities.
The film portrays a nuclear family dynamic where the father's pressure on his daughter to inherit the family judo dojo leads to her resentment and rejection of traditional expectations, while parents remain oblivious to her identity crisis. This framing subtly questions parental authority and conventional roles without making family central to the narrative.
The film features no LGBTQ+ characters or themes, focusing instead on social media and digital realities without queer representation.
The film contains no identifiable transgender characters or themes, focusing instead on digital identity and social media perils in a story about a high school girl's online ambitions leading to a surreal entrapment.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Labyrinth presents original characters in an anime setting without adaptations from prior source material, so no characters undergo gender swaps from established canons.
Labyrinth features original characters created for this anime film, with no prior canon or source material establishing racial baselines for the cast. Japanese voice actors portray Asian high schoolers in a new story, avoiding any race swaps.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources























