Best Animated Movies Ever
My Neighbour Totoro (1988)
The Lasting Legacy of 'My Neighbor
Totoro'
Exploring the way Hayao Miyazaki’s
1988 masterpiece has aged perfectly.
Two children stand waiting at a bus stop out on a quiet country road.
It’s getting late and beginning to rain. The younger girl begins to sag under
the weight of all the waiting and the lateness, the way small children do. Her
sister hoists her up on to her back to let her rest, her own posture soon
beginning to sink sleepily as well. And then he appears. And the next few
minutes are pure cinematic magic.

It is the kind of unique, wondrous scene that remains nestled in the
hearts of viewers for weeks, months and years after they first see it. It’s the
kind of scene that makes you fall in love with a movie, or with cinema on the
whole. It saw the film inaugurated into Roger Ebert’s “Great Movies” collection
and inspired Pixar’s John Lasseter so much he gave the film’s furry hero a
plushy 3D cameo in Toy Story 3.

And, on the seventh of May, it will be 30 years old.
First released in 1988, My Neighbour Totoro catapulted Studio Ghibli and
director Hayao Miyazaki towards the legendary status they now enjoy. Totoro
himself would become the studio’s logo and ascend to the highest echelon of
Japan’s pop cultural pantheon, as ubiquitous there as Mickey Mouse in America
and as beloved as Winnie the Pooh in the UK. It would also showcase perfectly
the patient, compassionate style of filmmaking which has become synonymous with
both Ghibli and Miyazaki.

My Neighbour Totoro is a film almost entirely devoid of plot. A family
moves into a house in the country. The children encounter a magical spirit with
a booming laugh, a bulging belly and a love of raindrops and acorns. He doesn’t
seek them out to solve their problems, they don’t save the world or battle
evil. Mostly, we just watch a family going about its daily business in
beautiful hand-drawn detail. The fantastical moments are delightful for the
intricacy of their design and the sheer force of their imagination, we don’t
need any great dramatic stakes to appreciate them.

In an interview with Roger Ebert, Miyazaki described his approach
through the Japanese word “ma”, translating roughly as “emptiness”. Clapping
his hands three times, he explained that “The time in between my clapping is
ma. If you just have non-stop action with no breathing space at all, it’s just
busyness, But if you take a moment, then the tension building in the film can
grow into a wider dimension. If you just have constant tension at 80 degrees
all the time you just get numb.” This appreciation of the moments in between
things and the desire to capture them in the fullest detail is characteristic
of Miyazaki’s astonishing filmography.
A few years ago, I sat down for a screening of My Neighbour Totoro in a
small independent theatre. The audience was mostly drawn from my demographic
(read: hipsters and assorted arts nerds) but there was also a handful of parents
dutifully toting small children. On top of being a slow and quiet film, this
screening would be in Japanese so the pre-reading age kids would be asked to
sit for a movie comprised in large parts of polite conversations that they
couldn’t understand. As the lights went down, I was fascinated to see how this
played out.
For 86 minutes, they sat totally enthralled. Not a peep or a fidget,
just silent sets of wide eyes fixed firmly on the screen, lost in its gentle,
generous world.
In the West, animation is still regarded by many as largely a children’s
medium, hence the wave of candy-colored feature films which arrive each year
marketed as “family films” but designed with young children most firmly in
mind. Most of them represent the exact antithesis of Miyazaki’s filmmaking
philosophy: flooding the screen with color and motion, assaulting the audience
with a non-stop barrage of slapstick gags and action sequences. They are
designed based on an understanding of children as tiny people with the
attention span of a goldfish on a sugar high, unable to sit still for longer
than three seconds unless you appease them bright lights and loud noises.
Even Pixar, the bastion of Western animated cinema, is able to follow
Miyazaki’s lead only in part. Up! can begin with a tender montage depicting a
relationship’s bloom and slow demise, but only if it works in a squeaky-voice
evil pup and a prat-falling tropical bird later on. Wall-E can open as lonely
silent film and center around a wordless romance, but only if there are a sea
of obese humans in brightly colored space suits in the latter half. Coco
contains heart-breaking ruminations on the power of music and memory, and also
a moronic, googly-eyed dog, Pixar’s quieter, compassionate moments might take
their cues from Miyazaki, but they are carefully packaged alongside the
standard cartoon antics expected by the parents who pay the ticket price.
When small children play, they don’t need a game with rules and goals. They
don’t need conflict or competition to invest in what they are doing. Their play
is based on exploration and experimentation, the simple pleasure of seeing,
feeling and moving things in different ways. My Neighbour Totoro doesn’t need a
villain, a MacGuffin or a plot because it understands this. It’s most famous
scene is just three characters waiting for a bus, enjoying the sound of rain
dropping onto an umbrella. One of the three is a giant, fluffy forest spirit
and one of the buses is a cat, not for any reason other than such things are
fun to imagine.
Those who saw it as children in 1988 can watch it again today with the
same enjoyment because it appeals to a part of us that is present from
childhood and never really disappears. We don’t grow out of wonder, even if we
become more wearied by the idea of it.
My Neighbour Totoro hasn’t really aged in thirty years. It’s the kind of
movie that probably won’t really have aged in another thirty either.
02
Japanese anime classic ‘My Neighbour
Totoro’ to be released in China in December
Thirty years after it was released, Japanese filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki’s
1988 anime classic My Neighbor Totoro will open in theatres in China on
December 14, The Hollywood Reporter said. The digitally restored film will have
a subtitled Japanese original version and a dubbed Chinese version, the
publication added. This will reportedly be the first film by Japanese animation
giant Studio Ghibli to get a large-scale theatrical release in China.
Set in postwar rural Japan, My Neighbor Totoro is centred on two girls
who encounter friendly spirits in the woods. When the film was released in
1988, it earned only $5 million at the Japanese box office but became a fan
favourite over the years, fetching more than $250 million from home
entertainment releases and more than $1 billion from merchandise sales.
A restored version of My Neighbor Totoro was released in the United
States of America in 2014 and in the United Kingdom in 2015.
My Neighbor Totoro.
03
My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
No result found, try new keyword!This kiddie classic is master Japanese
animator Hayao Miyazaki's most impossibly charming film. Two little girls move
to a rural house to be near their ailing mother and are soon befriended by a
giant ...
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