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Spirited Away (2001)

Director: Hayao Miyazaki

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2 reviews

Movie review

From Time Out Film Guide

Miyazaki's first digitally animated feature (the highest-grossing Japanese film ever) initially seems like a Through the Looking-Glass fantasy, but rapidly picks up a resonance, weight and complexity that make it all but Shakespearean. Chihiro, a sullen and resentful 10-year-old, is moving house with her parents when they stumble into the world of the Japanese gods - where the greedy parents are soon turned into pigs. Chihiro bluffs her way into a job in the resort spa run by the sorceress Yubaba, but at the cost of her human name and identity; she becomes Sen. With her links to her own past slipping away, she finds an ally in Yubaba's factotum Haku, a mysteriously powerful boy who also has a lost identity behind him. Never remotely didactic, the film is ultimately a self-fulfilment drama that touches on religious, ethical, ecological and psychological issues. (There's also an undercurrent of satire: Miyazaki admits that Yubaba's bath-house is a parody of his own Studio Ghibli.) No other word for it: a masterpiece.

Author: TR 0000-00-00 00:00:00

Time Out Film Guide


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User reviews of this film

  • Elia said...
    Posted on Nov 28 2009 11:00 i love all the films from Hayao Miyazaki Spirted away is really mysterious and its a lot diffrent than other films
    i <3 Hayao Miyazaki....ox
    Report as inappropriate
  • Charles666 said...
    Posted on Oct 08 2009 00:09 This film is fantastic, Found it by accident on Sky one evening and was transfixed. I look forward to showing it to my daughter when she is a little older.
    Report as inappropriate

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