Spirit of Wonder: Miss China's Ring

1992
6.4| 0h45m| NR| en| More Info
Released: 03 June 1992 Released
Producted By: Toshiba EMI
Country: Japan
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Sometime during the late 19th century, a young Asian girl has made a place for herself in a seaside town as the owner and operator of the Tenkai restaurant and boarding house... Yet "Miss China," as the locals call her, is in the dumps. She's got a Mad Scientist named Breckenridge living upstairs who is chronically late with the rent, and she's pining for Jim, a handsome watchmaker's apprentice whom she mistakenly believes is pursuing the local flower girl. But this isn't our world. It is a world that has the Spirit of Wonder, where every so often, just occasionally mind you, amazing things happen. The Mad Scientist actually has come up with an incredible invention, and Jim has an unbelievable plan to use it to give Miss China the most beautiful ring in all the World.

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Director

Mitsuru Hongo

Production Companies

Toshiba EMI

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Spirit of Wonder: Miss China's Ring Audience Reviews

Beystiman It's fun, it's light, [but] it has a hard time when its tries to get heavy.
Huievest Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.
Sammy-Jo Cervantes There are moments that feel comical, some horrific, and some downright inspiring but the tonal shifts hardly matter as the end results come to a film that's perfect for this time.
Portia Hilton Blistering performances.
macdonald-guo First thing first, there's some mixed up in this entry's reviews. 'The Spirit of Wonder' is the title of a collection of OVAs. There are 5 of them, published in 1992 ('China-san no yûutsu'), 2001 ('Shōnen Kagaku Kurabu', two other China-san shorts), and 2004 (yet another China- san short). Brian Camp's review is about the right one, but Gordon Cheatham's review is about 'Shōnen Kagaku Kurabu' (Scientific Boys Club). Actually I can't find the entries for the other four OVAs on IMDb, so I guess it's easy to get confused.Secondly, about the 'Space Reflex Telescope'. According to Mr. Breckenridge, this invention creates a magnified (eg. China-san) or shrunken (eg. the Moon) DUPLICATE of the original item, and any physical changes made to the duplicate affect the original. Yeah, this thing doesn't create images, it creates MATTER. So the words on the moon? Actually written on the real Moon surface! The final kung-fu moves performed by China-san? China-san destroyed the real Moon and creates a ring for the Earth! Pretty crazy, huh?Finally, my take on this OVA: It's great! The setting, the characters, the animation, the voice-over, the music, all these elements blended perfectly and created a magical world toward which I am happy to suspend my disbelief. Sure, under their various names and faces are typical Japanese anime characters, and the technology is more fantasy than science, but isn't this the exact thing we are looking for in anime? A mixed-up imaginary world through the eyes of some great Japanese minds. In fact, a British pub run by a Japanese- stereotyped-Chinese girl is among the most genius places I can imagine where a steampunk-style story could happen in anime. And they create a ring for the earth!
Brian Camp THE SPIRIT OF WONDER: MISS CHINA'S RING (1992) is an odd piece of made-for-video anime, a gentle drama that lasts 42 minutes and involves a spunky Chinese girl, known locally as Miss China, who runs a tavern/restaurant/inn on Prince of Wales Island. She has a tenant named Professor Breckenridge, a middle-aged inventor who's behind in his rent as he puts the finishing touches on a machine that promises "trips to the moon." The professor has an assistant in town, a handsome young man named Jim Floyd, whom Miss China is clearly attracted to. His feelings for her are not as visible, especially when his mysterious visits to a cute blond florist at an outdoor market in town make Miss China jealous. There's a trio of adorable local children who hang around Miss China as well.I'm not sure what Breckenridge's invention is meant to accomplish. It's called a Space Reflex Telescope and makes some kind of connection to the moon, but it's never adequately explained. At some point, Jim and Breckenridge use the machine to project the words, "Happy Birthday Miss China" onto the surface of the moon, as seen from the town. A neat trick, to be sure, but what's the value in it? Later, Jim and Miss China sit atop a miniature boulder-sized version of the moon trapped somehow in the professor's projector. Near the end, the machine does something, with the help of Miss China's martial arts skills, with a result that would normally have catastrophic implications for everybody—on the planet!--but nobody addresses these implications nor does anyone seem to care. Weird. And not terribly satisfying as entertainment.Breckenridge acts a like a typically blustery and lecherous older Japanese male, as seen in so much anime, and nothing like an eccentric English inventor. (Check out Katsuhiro Otomo's STEAMBOY for a more believable take on this character type.) Twice in the film Breckenridge touches Miss China quite inappropriately. She acts startled both times and tells him to stop it the second time, which may be enough for some viewers, but not for others. Noriko Hidaka, who does the voice of Miss China, does a fine job and sings a very pretty end song.The film takes place on Prince of Wales Island, which is off the coast of Alaska, but the setting looks less like a cold, rocky Alaskan town than a quaint, provincial English town, set amidst rolling hills and green meadows, as seen in an era before cars or telephones. Miss China even serves kidney pie to the sailors at her lunch counter, an English dish not likely to be served in Alaska.In the Japanese language/English subtitled VHS tape edition of this film (from AnimEigo), all the characters speak Japanese. (I did see an English-dubbed version 15 years ago at an anime convention, but I don't recall if the accents were correct.) Some English words are heard in the Japanese dialogue. All the signs and most of the writing are in English. (Miss China does write in Chinese at one point.) Miss China has the most detailed character design in the film. She wears some beautiful cheongsam dresses in the course of the film, one with a rose embroidered on it and one with stars. She makes herself up one night for a date on a hill in the moonlight with Jim. She'd be quite pretty if she didn't have such a prominent nose (a quirk afflicting all the characters in the film). The animation is otherwise consistently pleasant to look at, but not terribly distinguished.
Gordon Cheatham (cheathamg) The stories revolve around a group of people living in the late fifties who get involved with scientific experiments that are based on a science that doesn't really exist, or rather ideas that have been discredited by modern technological advancements, which these people simply ignore. Of course, their enthusiasm causes the experiments to be successful. For them, the etheric current is real. For them, reality can be easily twisted to meet their desires. The art work is marvelous. The action is top notch. The story lines are a little erratic, as might be expected when they lose touch with reality so often, but they're fun. The people are believable and worth caring about. If you are an animae fan you can't go wrong with this.