Go! Princess PreCure the Movie: Go! Go!! Gorgeous Triple Feature!!!

is a 2015 Japanese animated action fantasy film based on Pretty Cure franchise created by Izumi Todo, and its twelfth series, Go!

The film is divided into three segments: Cure Flora and the Mischievous Mirror, Pumpkin Kingdom's Treasure and Leff's Wonder Night!.

Each segments are directed by Yukio Kaizawa, Akifumi Zako, and Hiroshi Miyamoto respectively, and produced by Toei Animation.

Cure Flora enters a room, admiring her flower tiara, and comes across a mirror where a group of ghosts try to play a prank on her by copying her appearance.

As the girls participate in various contests, Towa suspects something is amiss, prompting Haruka, Pafu, and Aroma to follow a trio of fairies to the kingdom's true princess, Pumplulu, who is being held captive.

Upon hearing that the kingdom's minister, Warp, had locked Pumplulu up and caused her parents to forget about her, Haruka decides to help her out, learning that the citizens are being forced to make pudding nonstop.

As Warp traps the other girls after they win their respective contests, Haruka makes her family's special pudding for the king and queen, restoring their memories of Pumplulu.

This creates the Halloween Dress Up Keys and gives the Cures the power to defeat Warp and restore peace to the Pumpkin Kingdom.

One day, a doll on Haruka's desk named Leff comes to life and asks her and the other Cures to help her stop Night Pumpkin, who plunged her kingdom into darkness.

After learning that Leff is the kingdom's princess, the Cures soon fight against Night Pumpkin, who overwhelms them and takes the Miracle Light.

); and a 5-minute CGI short film Cure Flora and the Mischievous Mirror (キュアフローラといたずらかがみ, Kyua Furōra to Itazura Kagami).

It would have given the children a sense of incongruity to show them anything "unlike what they see on TV", but when I thought about the future, I was ready to take on the challenge.

Incorporating the essence of song, dance, and fashion, I would like to offer everyone a new form of challenge in the +10-year [Pretty Cure] series.

Washio described the reason of making the feature-length fifty-minutes long: I challenged this time, thinking that it would be 50 minutes for the children to concentrate and see until the end.

[16] This was the final work recorded in the old studio of Tavac in Shinjuku before the franchise's move to Toei Digital Center in Higashiōizumi, Nerima, Tokyo; Yu Shimamura said: I was really happy to take the movie version at the end of the site where [Toei Animation] recorded Pretty Cure for many years.

[8] Washio said: Girls who are slightly above the original target are attracted to SD [super deformed] characters.

[18]The cell-based feature length second part, The Pumpkin Kingdom's Treasure, is an ōdō-like story where the Cures have an isekai adventure.

Kana Hanazawa, who voices the film-only character Princess Pumplulu, said: I was very happy to be involved in a show I've longed for.

The Pumpkin Kingdom, the fairies, Pumplulu's costume, everything is pretty, and the film grasps the point where you think "It's a nice girl!!"

I want to make it a song that reminds our generation of nostalgia and admiration.Washio said: I asked for ELT's music to be a mixture of strength and kindness, and to be perfectly in line with the image that the film aims for.

[10]According to Miyamoto, this work was originally not related to Pretty Cure, and was planned to be created as an original work on the theme of Halloween with Leff as the protagonist, but since the release of the Pretty Cure movie was on the day of Halloween, Takeshi Himi, who was in charge of production management, asked if it would be merged with that movie.

Uegaki had played a young Nala in the Shiki Theatre Company's production of The Lion King and was the winner of Kanjani no Shiwake∞ [ja]'s "Musical Kids NO.1 Ketteisen".

Sakurako Akino said that she had talked to the person in charge of Kodansha's paperback division, a friend of her husband Keisuke Ishida, about a novelization of the film.

Every Little Thing alongside Pretty Cure kigurumi and the seiyu at the 2015 Tokyo International Film Festival .