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  1. Because Kubo is one of the three strings, and the other two strings are his two parents, represented by a Monkey and a Beetle. That would be “Kubo and the two other strings” if Kubo is also a string. Unfortunately for your smart response, this is the correct answer.

  2. TL;DR - Kubo's grandfather was once a normal dude with three daughters. One daughter (Kubo's mother) marries Hanzo. Hanzo dies. This causes Kubo's mother to go into a depressed state. Kubo's grandfather lets go of all emotion because he sees what love and grief can do to people.

  3. Jan 31, 2017 · Kubo smiles and laughs as he strums the strings and tells one of many stories. He is most himself when he is creating and telling them. He’s essentially a beat poet with a banjo. But what Kubo represents is the power of telling stories.

  4. Kubo and the Two Strings represents the gold standard in narration, paired with an incredible animation style that engrosses audiences in a scene and story, like a kid around a campfire. "If you must blink, do it now"- narration as a storytelling tool.

  5. Plot. In feudal Japan, a 12-year-old boy with only one eye named Kubo tends to his ill mother in a mountain cave near a village. He earns their living by magically manipulating origami with music from his shamisen for the village folk, telling the tale of his missing father Hanzo, a samurai warrior.

  6. Aug 18, 2016 · Find out everything you need to know about this mystical journey before you see Kubo and the Two Strings, opening this weekend in theaters nationwide.

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  8. Apr 9, 2019 · As represented by an animate origami samurai, Kubo's version of his father is a heroic figure, a slayer of monsters and master of sword and bow.

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