IMDb RATING
5.0/10
9.2K
YOUR RATING
Underneath the sands of Egypt, Anubis, an ancient evil spirit, has awakened. It's up to Yugi, who defeated Anubis centuries ago, to use his skill and determination to rid the world of evil o...Read allUnderneath the sands of Egypt, Anubis, an ancient evil spirit, has awakened. It's up to Yugi, who defeated Anubis centuries ago, to use his skill and determination to rid the world of evil once again.Underneath the sands of Egypt, Anubis, an ancient evil spirit, has awakened. It's up to Yugi, who defeated Anubis centuries ago, to use his skill and determination to rid the world of evil once again.
Eric Stuart
- Seto Kaiba
- (voice)
Amy Birnbaum
- Tea Garnder
- (voice)
Gregory Abbey
- Tristan Taylor
- (voice)
- (as John Campbell)
Ben Baron
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Madeleine Blaustein
- Solomon Moto
- (voice)
- (as Maddie Blaustein)
Christopher Collet
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- (as Andrew Paull)
Wayne Grayson
- Joey Wheeler
- (voice)
Ted Lewis
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
- (as Ed Paul)
Lisa Ortiz
- Additional Voices
- (voice)
Mike Pollock
- Newscaster
- (voice)
Scott Rayow
- Anubis
- (voice)
- (as Scottie Ray)
Charles Rocket
- Narrator
- (voice)
Tara Sands
- Mokuba Kaiba
- (voice)
- (as Tara Jayne)
Kenjirô Tsuda
- Seto Kaiba
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThough elements of the Dawn of the Duel story arc from season 5 of the show are used, the plot of this film greatly mirrors that of season 4. An ancient enemy arises and uses the Pharaoh's power against him in some way, they wear powerful stone and use its card counterpart to surround the field and prevent any interference, Yugi is prevented from using the God Cards until the end, after the enemy loses the final duel from a combined attack of 3 Legendary Monsters they take the form of or combine with a great beast to attack Yugi and his friends (Joey even uses some of the same monsters to fight both), the enemy uses Pegasus to manipulate Kaiba when he seeks him out for answers, Pegasus later shows up to provide background information and other answers for Yugi and/or his friends, and Yugi and the Pharaoh are separated for a sizable portion of the story and are only reunited once the enemy suffers some form of defeat and loses what was originally going to be the source of power for their attack on the world.
- GoofsWhen Yugi uses Kaiba's "Return from the Different Dimension", he mentions how Kaiba wanted 'a perfect victory', but Kaiba never said that - he only thought it.
- Quotes
Joseph "Joey" Wheeler:I coulda been a contendah...
- Alternate versionsFor the theatrical and TV version aired in Japan, all the cards were translated into Japanese, using the Japanese sound effects, using the Japanese character names using the Japanese soundtrack and adding 12 minutes of footage.
- ConnectionsEdited intoYu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Movie(2007)
- SoundtracksYou're Not Me
Written byJohn Sieglerand Norman J. Grossfeld
Produced byJohn Siegler
Performed by Marty Bags
Featured review
I probably spent 5 minutes debating how many stars I should give this. =/ I have mixed emotions on this movie. The villain was horrible. And not horrible in a villainy sense. He was just plain sucktastic, and the whole basic idea behind this movie deviates from the original plot so much it isn't even funny. Yes, even in the Japanese version (though things do tend to make a little bit more sense in that one, and I would recommend finding a sub of it if you possibly can).
However, most people reading this will be viewing the English version, so I'll just stick to that. =3
The soundtrack was horrible, as is the soundtrack to the dubbed anime in general. The animation could have been better, due to the fact that they had waaay more than just one week to work on it, unlike the TV series episodes. But it wasn't the worst animation I've seen. It did look a bit pointier than usual, though. But the art is kind of pointy in general.
Now... I still recommend this for anybody who is a fan of the series. It's so horrible, it's great to mock and laugh at. But it also has some highly amusing quotes and character interactions. And some of the new monsters are pretty spiffy as well. It's so stupid it's hilarious, and the sheer hilarity of it is doubled for any fan who sees it.
Heck, I think I was rolling even in the first scene. XD
(Though, there was no excuse for them leaving out Bakura yet AGAIN. Poor kid never gets any screen time.)
However, most people reading this will be viewing the English version, so I'll just stick to that. =3
The soundtrack was horrible, as is the soundtrack to the dubbed anime in general. The animation could have been better, due to the fact that they had waaay more than just one week to work on it, unlike the TV series episodes. But it wasn't the worst animation I've seen. It did look a bit pointier than usual, though. But the art is kind of pointy in general.
Now... I still recommend this for anybody who is a fan of the series. It's so horrible, it's great to mock and laugh at. But it also has some highly amusing quotes and character interactions. And some of the new monsters are pretty spiffy as well. It's so stupid it's hilarious, and the sheer hilarity of it is doubled for any fan who sees it.
Heck, I think I was rolling even in the first scene. XD
(Though, there was no excuse for them leaving out Bakura yet AGAIN. Poor kid never gets any screen time.)
- howlingshadowfox
- Apr 24, 2005
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Movie - Pyramid of Light
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $20,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $19,887,556
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $9,485,494
- Aug 15, 2004
- Gross worldwide
- $29,266,490
- Runtime1hour40minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85: 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content