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Ећџиџњд№ѓиџї Nanoka Hara - Suzume Гѓ™гѓљг‚ѓ (lyrics Video)гђњгѓ™гѓљг‚ѓгѓ®ж€ёз· Гѓѕг‚љ | Suzume No Tojimari Ostгђќ Apr 2026

Ећџиџњд№ѓиџї Nanoka Hara - Suzume Гѓ™гѓљг‚ѓ (lyrics Video)гђњгѓ™гѓљг‚ѓгѓ®ж€ёз· Гѓѕг‚љ | Suzume No Tojimari Ostгђќ Apr 2026

While cycling to school, Suzume passes a handsome young man named . He asks her if there are any ruins in the area. Intrigued, she directs him to an abandoned hot springs resort but finds herself drawn there shortly after. In the middle of the rotting bathhouse, she finds a lone, weathered white door standing upright.

The song "," performed by Nanoka Hara (the voice of Suzume herself) and RADWIMPS , captures this emotional weight. The lyrics speak of the "red and blue lines" within us—the connections to our past and the courage needed to face our grief. Coming Home While cycling to school, Suzume passes a handsome

Experience the hauntingly beautiful theme and the emotional journey of Suzume through these videos: In the middle of the rotting bathhouse, she

Soon, a massive, smokelike pillar known as the "Worm" erupts from the door, visible only to Suzume and Souta. If the Worm falls, it causes devastating earthquakes. Souta reveals he is a "Closer," tasked with locking these portals to the to protect the world. Coming Home Experience the hauntingly beautiful theme and

In a chaotic turn of events, the mischievous Daijin curses Souta, trapping his soul inside Suzume’s three-legged childhood chair. Now, Suzume must team up with a walking, talking chair to chase the cat across Japan and close the doors before a massive disaster strikes. A Journey of Memory

In the quiet town of Kyushu, a seventeen-year-old girl named lived a life that felt as steady as the ocean breeze—until she met a mysterious traveler searching for a door. The Encounter

The journey eventually leads Suzume back to her hometown in Tohoku, a place she hasn't visited since a great disaster claimed her mother’s life years ago. By confronting the literal and metaphorical doors of her past, she finally understands that the "meadow" she saw as a child wasn't a dream, but a promise of hope from her future self.