Takumi-kun Series 5: That, Sunny Blue Sky poster
#8326 This Week

Takumi-kun Series 5: That, Sunny Blue Sky

Takumi-kun Series 5: That, Sunny Blue Sky  ·  2011, Japan
6.9
2,080 ratings
1
Film
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2011

It's June of their third year of high school, and Takumi has an important anniversary to attend back in his hometown. He wants to invite Gii along for the trip, but time and scheduling and possibly broken promises stand…

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (5)

As the final chapter of the beloved *Takumi-kun* series, *That, Sunny Blue Sky* finds our couple in June of their third year of high school. Takumi has an important anniversary to attend back in his hometown and longs to bring Gii along. But the trip stirs up old wounds and unresolved promises, forcing Takumi to confront the trauma of his past—including the childhood sexual abuse that shaped his fear of touch. Gii, meanwhile, must prove that his love is steadfast even when trust is tested. With mature themes handled sensitively, this installment offers the deepest emotional payoff of the franchise. Fans praise the acting growth of Hamao Kyousuke and Watanabe Daisuke, whose chemistry finally feels effortless and raw. Expect beautifully melancholic music, a stunning train-station climax, and the romantic closure that will leave longtime viewers reaching for tissues.

Episode data is coming soon.

6.9
out of 10
10
347
9
260
8
607
7
520
6
208
CB
cherryblossom_bliss
March 14, 2024
9/10
I've been following Takumi and Gii since the first film, and this finale made all the angst worth it. The way Takumi finally stands up for himself and forces Gii to prove his love—my heart couldn't take it. The train station scene had me sobbing. This is what a proper BL conclusion looks like.
LO
logic_over_fluff
August 2, 2023
6/10
As a standalone film, the pacing drags and the flashbacks are confusingly edited. I appreciate the attempt to tackle sexual abuse trauma, but the writing feels clunky. The music carries a lot of emotional weight that the dialogue doesn't earn. Still, the leads' chemistry is undeniably better than in earlier entries.
SL
social_lens_watcher
December 10, 2024
8/10
I appreciate how this film handles consent and trauma recovery. Takumi's phobia isn't just a cute quirk; it's rooted in past abuse, and Gii learns to respect his boundaries. The power dynamic shifts in a healthy way by the end. It's not perfect—Gii's privilege is barely examined—but for 2011 Japanese BL, it's surprisingly thoughtful.
SS
soundtrack_scribe
January 5, 2025
8/10
The violin music in this movie is heartbreakingly beautiful. Every time Takumi picks up his instrument, the score swells with melancholy and hope. The soundtrack really does the heavy lifting for the emotional scenes. I wish they'd release a proper OST—I'd listen on repeat. Minor gripe: Takumi's bowing technique is laughable, but the music makes up for it.
FG
film_grain_fan
July 23, 2024
7/10
The cinematography is the most polished of the series—soft sunlight filtering through sakura, rain on train windows, the blue sky of the title. There are some genuinely beautiful shots that feel like still photos. But the constant refilmed flashbacks (with no visual cue) break the flow. A better editor could have made this a visual gem.