Trailers
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Description
The spirited Boruto Uzumaki, son of Seventh Hokage Naruto, is a skilled ninja who possesses the same brashness and passion his father once had. However, the constant absence of his father, who is busy with his Hokage duties, puts a damper on Boruto's fire. He ends up meeting his father's friend Sasuke, and requests to become... his apprentice!? The curtain on the story of the new generation rises!
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Key opinion
Boruto: Naruto the Movie is highly polarizing, viewed by some fans as a satisfying, canonical expansion of the franchise, while others criticize it as a disjointed and poorly executed exploitation of the Naruto legacy. The film struggles to balance the established older generation with a new, often underdeveloped cast, leading to significant frustration regarding character consistency and plot logic.
| Screenplay | The narrative relies heavily on thin, unmotivated villains that lack the depth of the original series' antagonists. | |
| Theme | The film fails to adequately develop the new generation, rendering most secondary characters as one-dimensional background figures. | |
| Adaptation | The portrayal of legacy characters feels inconsistent, with many original cast members appearing regressed or stripped of their defining traits. | |
| Runtime | The film's ambitious scope suffers from a condensed runtime that makes the plot feel fragmented and reliant on external series knowledge for coherence. | |
| Originality | Opinions on the film's canonical value and nostalgic appeal are split; some see it as a rewarding look at the next generation, while others view it as a hollow attempt to capitalize on the franchise. |