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User Reviews for: My Neighbor Totoro

enry_cami
8/10  2 years ago
DISCLAIMER: I did not see this movie in its original language(Japanese), but in a dubbed version(Italian). I may have missed some nuances.

After watching two or three other Studio Ghibli movies, I was very curious to see _My Neighbor Totoro_, having seen the titular character at the start of those movies, in the studio's logo. I had also heard very good praise about it, which only piqued my curiosity even more!
And I can say it did not disappoint. I loved every second of this movie; I didn't want it to end!

The brilliance with which it captures the innocence and magic nature of childhood is extraordinary. It's such a sweet and fun tale, told in a beautiful and whimsical way. I liked the pace of the plot, it wasn't rushed but yet it wasn't too slow, it was just right, moving exactly at the right speed. The fact that it interlaced some heavy themes (a sick parent) and the fairy tale like adventures of the two sisters made it more enjoyable for me. There's no real villain either, it's just two children exploring like only they can do, seeing the world with innocent eyes. I also enjoyed how the movie is purposely vague on whether Totoro and his friends are real or a product of Mei and Satsuko's imagination.

The animation is, no need to say it, beautiful. The character design is well thought out; the humans are all unique and realistic. But the real stars are Totoro and his little companions. So adorably cute! I even liked the peculiar sound design for Totoro's voice. I just wished it was more present in the movie.
I wish I had a neighbor Totoro; maybe I need to look better!

In the end, this is a wonderful movie that I can recommend without reservation to anyone, of any age. Maybe it doesn't have the depth of other Studio Ghibli's movies, but there is always space for a fairy tale, whether you're a little kid or a grown adult.

8.5/10
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Jordyep
6/10  10 months ago
Cute, and probably a good entry point for Ghibli films, but ultimately nothing special and a fairly predictable story. As an adult I don’t get as much out of this as a child probably would. It’s very whimsical and light, cozy and pleasant in the moment but nothing will stick with me for a longer time. The ending is a little more melancholic, but because the direction the story is headed into is so obvious it doesn’t entirely hit the mark. I don’t know if I’d even recommend this if Miyazaki didn’t nail the technical aspects. The animation and music are a lot more atmospheric than his previous Ghibli films, it’s a very vibey, gorgeous movie. Like with many Miyazaki films, it’s a world that’s very easy to get lost in. Thematically it’s nowhere near as ambitious as _Nausicaä_ or _Castle in the Sky_, it’s a pretty simple film about the imagination of a child. Again, it feels like this is more specifically aimed at children and because of that it plays it safe. It doesn’t have enough structure, the main characters can be annoying (though you’ll grow to like them more by the end) and I generally wish it took more risk. I’d probably like it more if it had included more comedy, fantasy and/or action. All in all, this one’s not for me, but I get why the general audience loves it.

5.5/10
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AndrewBloom
CONTAINS SPOILERS8/10  4 years ago
[8.4/10] *(Note: This review is of the Disney dub.)* So much of *My Neighbor Totoro* is slow and deliberate. It is a sumptuous film, largely content to let its audience enjoy the slice of idyllic life it presents in wondrous tones. It takes time to let us see the Kusakabe family unpacking and settling into their new home and for Satsuki and Mei to wait for their father in the rain, without hurrying either. It wants us to feel the time pass, to revel in the quiet and leisurely moments of rural splendor and domesticity. Everything here moves at its own pace.

And then it doesn’t. The power of the film’s final act comes from that contrast. After so much unhurried living and gentle vignettes, writer-director Hayao Miyazaki’s story explodes with urgency in the shadow of a sick parent and a lost child. There are no confrontations here, no villains or fistfights to clinch the climax of the film. Instead, there’s a well of pent up fear and intensity, bubbling under the surface all this time, that be restrained no longer. Those expressions of anxiety and longing soon become more piercing and blood-pumping than any pugilistic showdown.

What unites both parts is not only a unity of emotion, but also utterly gorgeous artwork and animation. Outside of a couple of vaguely unsightly character designs, *My Neighbor Totoro* is a feast for the eyes. Miyazaki and his design team offer up beautiful landscape after beautiful landscape. There’s a watercolor feel to the invitingly verdant flora surrounding the Kusakabe farm, from the shrubbery that flows in the wind to the towering camphor tree that watches over their family. In sunset and twilight, the animators leave each image awash in color, as soothing hues fade into one another amid a rural paradise.

But as well as the movie does at representing an idealized version of real life sky and soil, it does even better in the imaginative creatures and fantasies it conjures. The titular totoros -- big fluffy feline pudges -- hop and lurch and float with a lumbering grace, with big eyes, toothy grins, and bulbous but huggable forms that welcome our heroes into their wonderland. Puffy soot spirits swarm and cluster and disappear with movements that are half-insect and half-force of nature. A cheshire-like cat bus bounds invisibly over hill and dale, using its too many limbs to leap with balletic grace and fluffy comfort. Rising branches and enchanted spindletops keep the movie’s imaginative corners as vibrant and full of life as its more down-to-earth visuals.

What keeps the fantasy and the reality glued together are Satsuki and Mei. It’s remarkable how much the two of them genuinely feel like little kids in this movie, not just the junior comedians or all-too-perfect children who show up so often in family movies. They run around and scream. They are loud and occasionally obstinate. The turn on a dime from being joyous to being scared to erupting with laughter. There’s a vibrance and truth to each of them, that provides a foundation when the movie turns from imaginative play to more serious worries.

The Disney dub in particular benefits from having real life sisters Dakota and Elle Fanning play the on-screen sisters. It lends an air of lived-in plausibility to their dynamic, at once playful, helpful, and sometimes frustrated. Their experiences, in trying to look after one another, play with one another, and support one another, are the heart of the film. That the connection feels so real is subtly *My Neighbor Totoro*’s greatest strength.

It’s so much fun to see them summon billowing trees or float above the field with their magical animal companions in tow. It’s so warm to see the two girls interact with their endlessly patient, unfailingly encouraging father or the wise and gentle “granny” next door. It’s so familiar to see them shift from wild horsing around to sisterly annoyance to sibling love. For some time, *My Neighbor Totoro* looks like it’s just going to be a series of vignettes, a “scenes on the farm” mood piece more than a story. And I’d be hard-pressed to complain if it were just that, given the sweetness and splendor of those sketches.

But their flights of imagination, accepted and fed by the adults around them, mask something darker underneath -- the emotional struggles of being a young child with a sick parent. At times, *My Neighbor Totoro* calls to mind later works like *Pan’s Labyrinth* where a young girl processes difficult family circumstances in fantastical tones, or *Life Is Beautiful* where grown-ups turn a harrowing experience for a little boy into an inventive game that masks the hardship around.

Miyazaki never belabors the struggles that Satsuki and Mei are going through given their hospital-ridden mom, or the extra care and leeway they receive from their dad and other kindly adults who look after them. It just slowly emerges in the girls’ choice to wait dutifully at the bus for their father, to imagine ways they can make time and nature move faster, to conjure a spirit world that will look after them and their family in the midst of something that feels uncontrollable. Whether or not these occurrences are “real” within the world of the film is beside the point -- they represent that effort to cope with such difficulties at an age when they’re barely understood.

That’s what gives the film such power when the news comes that their mother’s received bad news from the doctor and will have to stay at the hospital longer, prompting Mei to declare that it isn’t fair and run away. Suddenly this steady movie kicks into overdrive. Everyone is suddenly more frantic. Satuski races at what seems like an impossible speed. She rumbles through the enchanted pathway and begs Totoro for help as the catbus whisks her through the rolling hills toward her little sister.

So much to this point has been kept at bay. The effort to keep things normal, to not be afraid, to hope for something good to come, to look after your loved ones, causes an unseen strain. When something big comes along to dislodge it, what’s been held inside comes spilling out, and all that energy and emotion comes with it. There is genuine terror in the climax of the film, as we fear what may happen with Mrs. Kusakabe, and whether Satsuki will find Mei, with the unthinkable possibilities that secretly loomed over the movie from the beginning are made manifest.

And yet, it’s also why there’s such catharsis when Satsuki identifies the sandal floating in the pond as belonging to to someone other than her sister, and when she finds Mei, with the help of a leaping catbus and her friendly “troll” of a neighbor, assured that her preteen frustrations did not scare her only sibling off somewhere dangerous. It’s why there is such relief when the movie slows down again, to show Mr. and Mrs. Kusakabe speaking easily with one another about how this is a minor setback and how they’ll all be together at home soon enough.

It is all a reassurance that the winsome old farmhouse and the love that radiates from within it to the flora and fauna that surround it can still be sustained and enjoyed. The movie begins with our unhurried glimpses of that idyllic life. It lets loose the childhood and grown-up anxieties that throw that paradise into jeopardy. And finally, it restores the pastoral wonderland and familial affection that makes *My Neighbor Totoro* seem so gentle and inviting, with the thought so tragic that it could ever, so suddenly, slip away.
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20thCentury
/10  4 years ago
(SPOILER ALERT)

I was delighted to see this subtle/multi-layered tale unfold, which seemed to play well to both a childhood audience, keen on likable characters/compelling imagination, and adults with a deeper appreciation for the symbolic backstory.

Like most of Miyazaki's films, there was an enormous focus on the power of the natural world. Whenever man perverts the natural world, the natural world seems to pushback. It appears as though the seldom seen Mother in the story is sick due to some mental/physical disconnect that she has likely had with the natural world.

Through the unique power of children to tap into their imagination, especially children living outside the city and amongst nature, Miyazaki demonstrates the unique gift that children have to re-establish the lost bond between unhealthy adults and the healing power of the natural world. I was thoroughly impressed with how delicately Miyazaki established this bond between the two children, their imagination, and the natural world. Totoro, the lovable silent giant, is a great and unexpected metaphor for the healing power of the natural world and childhood imagination :)
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r96sk
/10  3 months ago
Aggressively cute.

'My Neighbor Totoro' holds an extremely hearty story, one told via impeccably beautiful animation. Noriko Hidaka and Chika Sakamoto standout as Satsuki and Mei, the relationship between those two characters is so sweet. They do get a bit shouty in parts which ever so slightly irritates, but that's definitely one to file under 'nit-picking'.

A simple movie, one which displays the imagination of children perfectly. Big fan of the Catbus. 🐱
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