TL;DR – Beautiful and yet also a bit melancholy. It takes what is a quite tired trope of cinema and breathes new life into it.
Score – 4 out of 5 stars
Post-Credit Scene – There is no post-credit scene

Review –
Last week I managed to catch a showing of a new anime film Weathering
With You. It was beautiful, bittersweet, visually stunning, and
emotionally resonate. Well after having such a profound experience with that
film I had a look back at director/writer Makoto Shinkai’s filmography and came
across Your Name. I had missed it
when it can out in cinemas, so I made sure to check it out as soon as I could.
Well one week later and what would you know, here it was live on the SBS Movie
channel here in Australia and boy was it worth the watch.
So to set the scene, Mitsuha Miyamizu (Mone Kamishiraishi) lives in a quiet
village in the mountains of Japan’s Hida region. Itomori is a town with a long
history of tradition but also of tragedy with fires destroying much of the town’s
history. Mitsuha is a Miko (shrine maiden) in the Shinto temple that her family
runs under the watchful hands of her grandmother Hitoha (Etsuko Ichihara).
Mitsuha is frustrated with her life and where it is going and dreams of leaving
her small town and moving to the big city in Tokyo. Well one day she gets her
wish, but when she wakes up in the body of Taki Tachibana (Ryûnosuke Kamiki) a
high school boy living in Tokyo, things don’t quite go the way she plans.