Tunnel- Sayonara No Deguchi - Natsu E No
The animators use color like a language. The real world is warm and vibrant. The tunnel’s interior is cool, blue, and dreamlike. And the "exit" (the sayonara no deguchi ) is blinding white—representing not just the end of the tunnel, but the finality of a goodbye you never got to say. This is the question the film leaves you with. Unlike many time-travel stories, The Tunnel to Summer doesn’t offer a clean "fix." There are no paradoxes to untangle. There is only loss and choice . “If you could see the person you lost for just five minutes, but it cost you five years of your future… would you do it?” The film’s devastating answer? Probably yes. And that’s the tragedy. We would all risk our tomorrows for one more yesterday. But the film’s beautiful, bittersweet resolution argues that while you can’t get back what you lost, you can still choose not to lose what remains. Final Verdict: A Must-Watch for Fans of Your Name or The Girl Who Leapt Through Time Don’t go into The Tunnel to Summer, the Exit of Goodbyes expecting a high-energy adventure. It is slow, contemplative, and occasionally brutal. But if you have ever lost someone, if you have ever wished for a do-over, or if you just need a good cry wrapped in stunning animation—this is your movie.
Some stories grab you by the heart, squeeze hard, and refuse to let go long after the credits roll. Natsu e no Tunnel, Sayonara no Deguchi (The Tunnel to Summer, the Exit of Goodbyes) is precisely that kind of film.
The chemistry between them isn’t loud or dramatic. It’s in the shared silence of a train ride, the hesitant offer of a homemade bento, and the quiet terror of watching someone you love walk toward self-destruction. Anzu’s arc is a masterclass in showing how connection—messy, flawed, real connection—is the only true antidote to isolation. Directed by Tomohisa Taguchi and produced by CLAP (known for Hinamatsuri ), the film is a feast of summer melancholy. The golden hour light bleeds into every frame. Cicadas scream in the background. The tunnel itself is a stunning contrast: a wet, black maw lined with rusted train tracks, leading to a horizon that glows with impossible colors. Natsu e no Tunnel- Sayonara no Deguchi
Every second Kaoru spends inside is a second of his high school life—his friendships, his remaining family, his chance with Anzu—vanishing forever. The film’s greatest strength is how it visualizes . We all have a "tunnel" we want to run into: a past mistake we’d do anything to undo, a person we’d give anything to see again. But this story warns us that the past is a jealous lover. It will take everything you have left. The Heart: Anzu Hanashiro While Kaoru is the driver, Anzu is the soul. An outcast due to a visible scar on her face and a painfully blunt personality, she has built walls around herself that rival Kaoru’s. Her art—manga panels filled with surreal, floating figures—is her own tunnel.
Rating: 9/10 Best watched on: A rainy evening, with tissues nearby. The animators use color like a language
It reminds us that summer ends. People leave. But the exit of goodbyes isn’t a wall. It’s a door. And on the other side, there is still life. Still art. Still love.
When the enigmatic and isolated Anzu Hanashiro—an artist carrying her own deep scars—discovers Kaoru’s obsession with the tunnel, they strike a dangerous bargain. Together, they will explore the tunnel to reclaim what they’ve lost. But as they venture deeper, the film asks us: Are some doors meant to stay closed? On the surface, the Urashima Tunnel (named after the Japanese folktale of the fisherman who visited an undersea palace and returned centuries later) is a fantasy device. But in practice, it’s a brutal mirror. And the "exit" (the sayonara no deguchi )
Based on the award-winning novel by Mei Hachimoku, this 2022 anime movie is not just a summer ghost story or a sci-fi romance. It’s a raw, visual poem about grief, guilt, and the impossible cost of running away from pain. The story follows Kaoru Touno, a boy haunted by the sudden death of his younger sister. Unable to move past his guilt, he discovers the "Urashima Tunnel"—a legendary local passage that grants a wish to anyone who enters. But there’s a terrifying catch: the tunnel steals time. A few minutes inside could mean months, even years, lost in the real world.