Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Spirited Away directed by Hayao Miyazaki


Miyazaki, Hayao (Director). Spirited Away.
Studio Ghibli. 2003.
Screenplay: Hayao Miyazaki.
Run time: 125 minutes.
Rating: PG.

Watcher’s Annotation
Chihiro's parents have become pigs after eating food meant of the spirits, but with the help of Haku she will be able to restore them and escape back into her own world.

Plot Summary
10-year-old Chihiro is moving from her home. During the drive to their new house, her parents get lost. The find the ruins of an old amusement part. The smell of food draws her parents. They find a market place full of stalls with no people present. Her parents sit down and begin to eat everything. Chihiro does not join them and becomes increasingly alarmed when they begin to transform into pigs. To save her parents Haku, a boy she meets, tells her she will have to go to the bathhouse and ask Kamaji for work. Kamaji sends Chihiro to Yubaba (the witch) who runs the bathhouse. Yubaba agrees to hire Chihiro to save her parents, but only if she gives Yubaba her name. Chihiro becomes Sen. The Bathhouse and the marketplace where her parents ate all belong to the spirits. At first Chihiro is frightened but she is soon befriended by Lin. Haku, who is really a water spirit, helps Chirhiro save her parents, and in doing so has his own name restored. Chihiro saves her parents and they return to the mortal world.

Critical Evaluation
Miyakai is famous for his beautifully animated films, and this is one of his best. He takes Japanese myths and legends, and brings them to the screen. The color styling for this film is vibrant, and the scenes in the bathhouse are realistic. His protagonist, Chihiro is spunky and single-minded in her determination to save her parents from becoming bacon. Along the way she also helps Yubaba’s baby son grow up a little. The voice talents are also very good. Miyazaki has chosen actors with many credits to their names. Suzanne Pleshette’s gravelly voice is perfect for the dual roll of twin witch sisters. His choice of Daveigh Chase is inspired. She has just the right amount of stubbornness and appeal to create a character that the audience will care about. This film won the Academy Award for Best Animated film in 2003, and to date it is the highest grossing non-American film in history. I would recommend this film to any young person who loves anime, or graphic novels because it has the same vibe and unique storyline.

Genre
Animation, fantasy, adventure

Curriculum ties
None

Challenge Issues
Some scary images for younger children.

Challenge defense ideas
· Become familiar with the film and its content.
· Refer to the collection development policy of the library.
· Refer to reviews from Internet Movie Database (IMDb) at http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0245429/externalreviews
· Try to get reviews of the film from teens that have seen it.

Why I included this title
I like the film and it is included on the ALA 2009 Best Films for Young Adults.

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