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<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Koe no Katachi</title>
</head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="effect2.css">
<body>
<header>
<button class="butn"><a href="1stHTML.php">CATALOGUE</a></button>
<u><i>
<h2>A SILENT VOICE</h2>
</i></u>
<h4>(koe no katachi)</h4>
<p>Japanese teenager Shōya Ishida sets his affairs in order and walks to a bridge, intending to commit suicide.
Coming to his senses at the last minute, he hears fireworks as he recalls his days in elementary school and
the events that have led him
to this point in his life. In those days, Shōya was an indifferent child, one who viewed his fellow students
as a way of staving off his boredom. The entry of a new student named Shōko Nishimiya into his class piques
his interest when she
informs the class that she is deaf. She tries her best to live normally and integrate with the class.
However, when the other students and the teacher come to believe her presence is upsetting the social
balance, Shōya and Naoka Ueno begin
to bully her. When word of the bullying reaches the principal, Shōya is singled out as the culprit. He names
his friends as accomplices, but they turn on him, denying their involvement. <br> Soon, the class's bullying
is directed toward him, subjecting
him to the same treatment he gave to Shōko. Shōya blames Shōko and the two fight after he finds her doing
something to his desk. She is subsequently transferred to another school, and he discovers that she was
erasing hateful messages his
classmates left in chalk on his desk. <br>Shōya finds himself alone, relegated to the role of a tormented
outcast. After being thrown in a pond by his classmates, he finds Shōko's notebook. Now in high school,
Shōya remains a social reject, having
grown to accept his past as punishment. Full of guilt and anxiety, he blocks out the faces of those around
him, unable to look them in the eye. Despite his isolation, Tomohiro Nagatsuka, another loner, befriends him
and quickly comes to consider
him his best friend. <br>Shōya visits the sign language center to return Shōko's once-waterlogged notebook
in
the hopes of making amends. The two begin meeting at a bridge to feed bread to koi. Yuzuru, Shōko's younger
sister, strongly doubts Shōya's
intentions. One day, Shōya jumps into a river after Shōko does the same to retrieve a notebook, which
happens to be prohibited. Yuzuru secretly takes a photo of Shōya jumping in, and posts it online. Shōya is
suspended for the act, and Yuzuru
reveals that she was responsible; instead of getting angry, Shōya brings her to stay at his house. When she
leaves in the middle of the night, Shōya follows and tells her that he is genuinely remorseful for the way
he treated Shōko. <br> Shōko
soon gives Shōya a gift and confesses her feelings for him, but because she tries to verbally communicate
her affections rather than signing it out, Shōya does not understand her. Worried that the misunderstanding
upset her, Shōya invites
her to go to an amusement park with him and his group of classmates. There, Naoka finally voices her
feelings of hatred in secret to Shōko. In class, desperate to remain blameless for Shōko's bullying, Miki
Kawai, another former classmate,
exposes Shōya's past to the remaining students who were still oblivious to it, while downplaying her own
involvement. <br>The group has a heated confrontation about each member's level of responsibility, ending
with
Shōya calling out every one
of them for who they really are. To cheer Shōko up after her grandmother's death, Shōya takes her to the
countryside, where he begins to understand how much she blames herself for everything that has happened to
him. Desperate to reassure
and change her mindset, Shōya contrives to regularly meet with the sisters. During the fireworks festival,
Shōko goes home under the guise of finishing some schoolwork. Shōya follows when Yuzuru asks him to get her
camera. When he arrives,
he finds Shōko standing on the balcony, on the verge of throwing herself to her death. Shōya succeeds in
grabbing her and pulls her back up, but he falls over the side into the river and slips into a coma. One
night, Shōko dreams of receiving
a farewell visit from Shōya.<br> Horrified, she runs to the bridge where they fed the koi and collapses in
tears. Shōya, awakening from his coma in a state of panic, stumbles to the bridge himself and finds her
there, huddled in despair. He formally
apologizes to her for the way he treated her, and for the many things he did which may have caused her to
hate herself. He asks her to stop blaming herself, and also admits that, while he once considered giving up
himself and ending his own
life, he has since decided against it. Shōya then asks her to help him continue to live. When Shōya goes to
the school festival with Shōko, he finds out how much his friends from elementary school still care for him
and all of them are reconciled.<br>
Afterwards, Shōya requests them that the group should go to the school festival together. During the
festival, Shōya finally overcomes his past mistakes and is finally able to look at other people's faces, as
he cries and realizes that he
has obtained redemption and found forgiveness at last.
</p>
<br> <br> <br>
<center><button style="color: black"><img src="downloads.jpg"> <a
href="https://drive.google.com/open?id=1gh1nwYxjygev3uqUaolmbIW-Cxdt_5kk"></a> Download</button>
</center>
</header>
</body>
</html>