Doraemon the Movie: Nobita's Secret Gadget Museum | |||||
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Japanese name | |||||
Kanji | ドラえもん のび太のひみつ道具博物館(ミュージアム) | ||||
Literal meaning | Doraemon: Nobita's Secret Gadget Museum | ||||
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Directed by | Yukiyo Teramoto | ||||
Written by | Higashi Shimizu | ||||
Based on |
Doraemon by Fujiko F. Fujio | ||||
Starring | |||||
Narrated by | Shiori Suzuki | ||||
Music by | Kan Sawada | ||||
Production company | |||||
Distributed by | Toho | ||||
Release date |
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Running time | 104 minutes | ||||
Country | Japan | ||||
Language | Japanese | ||||
Box office | $43.2 million |
Doraemon: Nobita's Secret Gadget Museum (ドラえもん のび太のひみつ道具博物館(ミュージアム), Doraemon: Nobita no Himitsu Dōgu Museum), also known as Doraemon and Nobita Holmes in the Mysterious Museum of the Future and Doraemon the Movie: Nobita in the Secret Gadget Museum, [1] is a 2013 Japanese anime science-fiction mystery comedy film.[ not verified in body] It is the 33rd film[ not verified in body] of the Doraemon film series. [2]
The movie starts with two robbers stealing a sculpture, but then, Nobita appears as Sherlock Holmes and defeats the robbers, but it was just a dream from Nobita while he was sleeping in school. When he returned home, Nobita discovers that Doraemon's cat bell isn't in Doraemon's neck. Nobita says that Deluxe, one of the most famous gadget robbers from the future, where Doraemon lives, must had done it. Nobita, Doraemon, Shizuka, Suneo and Gian went to the gadget museum to save it.
In 2013, the film grossed ¥3.98 billion in Japan and became the country's 5th highest-grossing film of the year. [4]
The weekend gross of this film in its first eleven weeks was as follows:
Weekend | Rank | Dates | Weekend gross | Cumulative gross |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | March 9–10 | ¥667,291,850 ($7.2 million) | ¥667,291,850 ($7.2 million) |
2 | 1 | March 16–17 | ¥426 million ($4.53 million) | ¥1.23 billion ($15.4 million) |
3 | 2 | March 23–24 | ¥285 million ($2.98 million) | ¥2.00 billion ($22.8 million) |
4 | 3 | March 30–31 | ¥292 million ($3.1 million) | ¥2.90 billion ($32.6 million) |
5 | 3 | April 6–7 | ¥185 million ($2.0 million) | ¥3.59 billion ($39.6 million) |
6 | 5 | April 13–14 | ¥97 million ($1.0 million) | ¥3.72 billion ($40.9 million) |
7 | 9 | April 20–21 | ¥44 million ($450,000) | ¥3.78 billion ($41.6 million) |
8 | 11 | April 27–28 | ¥73 million ($797,000) | ¥3.91 billion ($42.7 million) |
9 | May 4–5 | ¥30 million ($1,301,000) | ¥3.945 billion ($43.1 million) | |
10 | May 11–12 | ¥20 million ($2,201,000) | ¥3.965 billion ($43.2 million) | |
11 | May 18–19 | ¥3 million ($31,000) | ¥3.968 billion ($43.2 million) | |
Final total | ¥3.98 billion |
Overseas, the film grossed ₩781,495,500 (US$713,790) in South Korea, [5] and $2,169,164 in Spain, Hong Kong, and Thailand. [6]
Doraemon