The Super Dimension Fortress Macross: Do You Remember Love? ( , Chjik Ysai Makurosu: Ai Oboete Imasu ka), also known as Macross: Do You Remember Love? (commonly referred to by the acronym "DYRL?" among Western fans) or Super Spacefortress Macross, is a 1984 Japanese animated space opera film based on the Macross anime television series.

The movie is a film adaptation of the original Macross series, with new animation. The storyline of the film does not fit directly into the Macross chronology, and was originally an alternate universe retelling of the story, but was later established as part of the Macross universe. Within the Macross universe, it is a popular movie (in other words a movie within a television series), shown in Macross 7. However, later Macross productions like Macross Frontier have used elements from both the first TV series and this film. In Macross tradition, it features transforming mecha robots, Japanese pop music, and a love triangle. The movie gets its name from its romantic themes and also by the song sung during its climactic battle sequence by Lynn Minmay (voiced by Mari Iijima). In Macross Frontier, a later series in the Macross universe, the first few episodes use re-animated key scenes from this film and Flash Back 2012 to give viewers glimpses of past events.


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The film begins in medias res with the space fortress SDF-1 Macross trying to evade the Zentradi at the edge of the Solar System. The Macross houses an entire city with tens of thousands of civilians who are cut off from Earth, after it had executed a space fold on the first day of the Earth/Zentradi war - taking the city section of South Ataria Island with it. During the latest assault, Valkyrie pilot Hikaru Ichijyo rescues pop idol Lynn Minmay, but are both trapped in a section of the fortress for days. Even after their eventual rescue, this fateful meeting leads to a relationship between the singer and her number one fan.

Shoji Kawamori, Kazutaka Miyatake and Haruhiko Mikimoto worked on the mecha and character designs for the film.[1] Narumi Kakinouchi, one of the creators of Vampire Princess Miyu, was the assistant animation director for this movie.

The film was produced on a budget of 400 million,[2] then equivalent to $1,684,000 (equivalent to $5,200,000 in 2023). It was the second most expensive anime film up until then, after Hayao Miyazaki's Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro (1979).[3]

The film's soundtrack was composed by Kentaro Haneda, featuring new orchestral tracks and some music from the original TV series. The theme song "Ai Oboete Imasu ka" ("Do You Remember Love") was composed by Kazuhiko Kat and performed by Mari Iijima. The ending theme "Tenshi no Enogu" ("An Angel's Paints") was composed and performed by Iijima.

The film premiered in Japanese theaters on July 7, 1984. It received a huge marketing campaign that generated very long lines of fans; many of them camped outside cinemas the night prior to the film. These events were dramatized in the anime comedy Otaku no Video from 1991.[citation needed] In the 1984 edition of the Anime Grand Prix, the film was ranked second, behind Nausica of the Valley of the Wind.[4] The film's theme song was also ranked first.[4]

Do You Remember Love? is a reinterpretation of The Super Dimension Fortress Macross in a feature film format. Almost all of the characters featured in the TV series appear in the film. Most of the voice actors from the TV series reprised their roles for the film. The love triangle and the various relationships are intact.

Macross 7 describes a film called Do You Remember Love? within the fictional world of Macross. Series creator Shoji Kawamori also gave an explanation about the differences in the television and film depictions of Space War I: "The real Macross is out there, somewhere. If I tell the story in the length of a TV series, it looks one way, and if I tell it as a movie-length story, it's organized another way...".[7]

Many ships, mecha, and characters were redesigned for the film.[1] These designs have been featured in later entries of the Macross franchise. The Zentradi were given a language of their own and most of the dialogue of Zentradi characters is in that language.

According to Carl Macek, when asked by Cannon Films to produce a film version of Robotech, he mentioned he was interested in dubbing and localizing Do You Remember Love? with the voice cast from the series, but Harmony Gold USA was unable to license the film for "political reasons." Megazone 23 Part 1 was used instead.[9]

Originally, two versions of a Toho International-commissioned dub had been released in the United States throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s. The Toho dub (named Super Spacefortress Macross in its on-screen title and Japanese packaging) had been created for export sales in Hong Kong by Matthew Oram and his wife Elizabeth's dubbing company. The better known of the two US releases of the dub is an edited-for-television version prepared by Peregrine Film Distribution, Inc. for its broadcast syndication package Dynamagic, which was released by Celebrity Home Entertainment's "Just for Kids" label in the late 1980s, renamed Clash of the Bionoids.[10] The ending was modified from the original Japanese version: the scene with Hikaru calling the Macross after Boddole Zer's explosion was removed, giving the false impression that Hikaru died in the blast. Later, a subtitled version was briefly released before being suppressed due to the ongoing legal battles between Big West/Studio Nue, Tatsunoko and Harmony Gold. Robert Woodhead, head of AnimEigo, has said publicly that he would like to release the film (AnimEigo released the first pressings of the Macross series in the US), but believes it will most likely never get a proper DVD release in the United States due to the legal disputes surrounding the film. The movie was released in widescreen in both dubbed and subtitled format by Kiseki Films in the UK on video in the 1990s, but was notably one of their few catalog titles not being released on DVD.

The first release, which had a special price of 8000 yen, had 2 printings which can be found on the last page

59/12/10 and 59/12/30 (Showa year of 59 = 1984)

This is the only version that had the poster AND the film strip, and seems to be the most popular variant by far

You'll know to expect the 35mm film strip if you see it mentioned on the front right corner of the Obi, or if you see the back price is 8000 Yen.


Then in late 84/(or even 85?) there was the normal release, which removed the mention of the film strip on the obi, and the back price is 8800 yen

This release only comes with the poster. This is the rarest of the releases in my experience. I don't have one to note the printing date.

Lack of the 35mm note on the obi means don't expect a film strip


Thanks for all the input. The way I was thinking about it the Boldoza glitch didn't show up until around the time of the Perfect Edition, but if it is on the original theatrical release as well, then the error may have existed much longer than I previously thought. I just find it odd that certain film prints have the error and others do not.

Interesting news on the age of the error. It definitely means they're working with two prints. Do you know if the error only appears in Perfect Edition copies? It's possibly it was introduced through the adding of An Angel's Paints. Still, good to know it wasn't a recent mistake as previously though. Still, they corrected other errors in the film, why not this?

When working with digital transfers there is no quality loss unless you compress the video with a codec. It is possible to get a 1:1 rip of the DVD, however it will be the same size as what's on the DVD (which is about 5 - 7GB these days). That would be the maximum quality you could hope for from a DVD as it is also compressed from a higher definition master (35mm film or HD video).

To get a proper remaster, BigWest needs to first get a near perfect print of the film. Take a lossless transfer of it digitally and then clean up that transfer digitally (like what was done with the Indiana Jones trilogy). After which they will have a file probably in the range of about 100 - 150GB. Then they'll need to do any edits (additions like the Angel Paint ending, etc...) Once the movie is color corrected, enchanced, any new audio tracks added and finalized, then it is ready for DVD and Bluray transfers, which will shrink the masters down to the appropriate sizes.

I think the remastered version was probably done in Japan were there is limited experience with digital film restoration, unlike the US. I am surprised that they didn't tap Animeigo to do their remastering. They did a hell of a job on the SDFM remaster and they had much less to work with!

I don't think the issue is knowledge of film restoration. I have plenty of remastered anime DVDs from Japan that look awesome. It's more often what materials are available for restoration work. That said I have no idea what happened with the remaster version release. My Perfect Edition Japanese DVD (IIRC released back in 2000) has excellent video quality. In fact, far better than the newer remaster version when viewed on a HDTV. However, the remaster version has better color. I believe the fx bootleg is simply a rip of the Japanese PE DVD.

DYRL? is great, but in different ways. The story of SDF Macross I prefer better, but so much of DYRL? takes the aspects of SDF Macross and improves them. If DYRL? felt more like a feature film rather than a 2 hour recap made just for fans, I'd choose DYRL? no contest. As it is, I love SDF Macross better as a coherent whole. 589ccfa754

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