On the Retirement of Hayao Miyazaki – Ben Clark

Hayao Miyazaki (b. 1941) recently retired after a long career as an acclaimed director, writer, and producer of animated films, including: Howl's Moving Castle, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, and My Neighbor Totoro.

Hayao Miyazaki (b. 1941) recently retired after a long career as an acclaimed director, writer, and producer of animated films including: Howl’s Moving Castle, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, and My Neighbor Totoro.

It is a misunderstood culture. You will never find a more wretched hive of body odor and social awkwardness than at the conventions. The clubs are the toddler-fenced play space for would-be autocrats. Every fan seems to be wearing a garish costume and haphazardly tossing foreign words into his speech (fitting the pronoun, the fans are predominately male). America has embraced Comic-Con; that is, sexy people like Michael Fassbender and Charlize Theron can go there without having to fear anything more than adoring fans, let alone social disgrace. But will we embrace anime? And why should we?

Hayao Miyazaki recently retired from making feature films. The goal here is to persuade you to care, if you don’t already, but first to try to determine why you might not care at the moment.

Miyazaki-san is the co-founder of Studio Ghibli, which is, in essence, the Pixar of East Asia (so Pixar-like was its success that Disney had to get in on it, making a deal for distribution and theater rights of all Studio Ghibli films outside of Asia). He was directly responsible for the highest grossing film in Japan before Titanic in 1997, and then for the film that overtook Titanic at the box office. Both films, Princess Mononoke and Sprited Away respectively, were animated. A critical and commercial darling in his native Japan and abroad, Miyazaki-san is still fairly unknown in our society, though his more recent films have grossed hundreds of millions in international theaters.

Spirited Away is the highest grossing film in Japanese history and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2003.

Spirited Away is the highest grossing film in Japanese history and won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2003.

The cultural data in the first paragraph is empirically confirmed, but does it fully explain the position to which anime has been relegated to in our culture? Trying anime and liking it, in America, is like the opposite of trying alcohol or marijuana as a teen. The only common ground is that you can’t tell your parents. No one is getting you out of the closet unless they push you from the back.

My first hypothesis is that everyone starts out liking anime because virtually everyone likes cartoons. As we grow up, the general trend is toward more “mature” programs, and this means shows with real people (whatever that means). Anime is subsequently categorized with Looney Tunes, which is also a great production, but it is separated from adult cartoons like The Simpsons and Family Guy. South Park, simply because it is “about” fourth graders, seems to cut out its own niche. In any case, the movement away from anime in this instance is rather a general movement toward programs featuring embodied voices, not just voice actors. The abandoned aspect of childhood, the equation of an unrealistic aesthetic with an unrealistic worldview, is concomitant with the yearning for adulthood.

A second hypothesis is that some people like anime even into the age when “adult” programs become the expected fare. However, the more extreme examples of fans (weaboos, otakus), and the expectation that publicly liking anime will result in being grouped with them, necessitates either an opinion reversal – perhaps an extreme one! – or, as stated, hiding one’s opinions and being a closeted enthusiast.

The second group of anime enthusiasts has responded with typical counter-culture behavior, and is as unbearable as anyone who would attempt to define a unique individual, i.e. the definer him- or herself, by a characteristic that is quite common and unremarkable per se. These people have a range of self-expression that can be accurately summed up in the basic “I am _______” model. The results are hilarious, despite any objective legitimacy in the sentence’s object: I am social concern. I am scientific reasoning. I am frat. I am zen (big no-no there!) I am anime.

My final hypothesis for our want of anime appreciation stems from its being Japanese. As world citizens, we should care about Japan. They are the third largest economy in the world. They are a highly influential culture with a rich and significantly unusual history. Not least, they had two atomic bombs dropped on them, and all Americans would do well to develop more sensitivity to, for instance, having four hundred Tomahawk missiles aimed in our general direction.

Miyazaki's last film, The Wind Rises, was released this past summer in Japan. The film will be released throughout North America in February of next year.

Miyazaki’s last film, The Wind Rises, was released this past summer in Japan. The film will be released throughout North America in February of next year.

But anyway, is anime about all that stuff simply because it is Japanese? Miyazaki-san’s final feature length film, The Wind Rises, is about the creator of Japan’s powerful WWII fighter planes, yet has been denounced for exhibiting Miyazaki-san’s leftist views, since they are critical of the war and the increasing nationalism in Japan’s politics today.

Does that mean anime is about Japanese people, around which the history and culture revolve? Or is it about people who happen to be Japanese? Certainly, when watching anime, one gets the feeling that the films were made for someone else. With more watching, one gets this feeling less frequently, until it comes up at about the rate of the feeling sonder (that everyone’s life is as detailed as your own). The culture clash is fleeting. Like swimming, you have to dip your head, briefly bow, to acclimate yourself. Or maybe the water is already warm.

Miyazaki-san has been waiting in the wings for most of this essay. For me, his films defy any argument to be viewed. It is like arguing with yourself not to dream when you sleep, and the analogy benefits from the dreamlike quality of his works. As an American who loves Pixar movies, I say without bias that Studio Ghibli is as good, but it will be different. Subjectivity, you know. What actually matters is how similar it is. Similar to you, or to anyone. And that’s what any given anime is about—the same exact stuff that anything else is about.

Earlier I alluded to the possibility that we as Americans could benefit especially from Miyazaki films. I don’t want to hop on the bandwagon and say that our entertainment culture promotes US-centrism or victory through force, because that would require getting off the bandwagon in the first place. Even our beloved Toy Story seems less than innocent. Woody and Buzz, POW’s in a foreign house (anyone remember Sid’s destruction of Combat Carl?), have to lead the great escape for all the toys. Afterward, they restore the status quo with the ingenious use of a rocket. Certainly this interpretation benefits from framing, and we would not and should not be ashamed about our fond memories of Toy Story. Neither should we refrain from watching it because of any “childishness.”

Totoro is one of the most iconic characters to come out of Miyazaki's work. The large hamster-like being can be seen everywhere from backpacks and plushes to a cameo in Toy Story 3.

Totoro is one of the most iconic characters to come out of Miyazaki’s work. The large hamster-like being can be seen everywhere from backpacks and plushes to a cameo in Toy Story 3.

Studio Ghibli films are “grown-up,” both standing alone and in comparison to our equivalents.  Take, for instance, the strange My Neighbor Totoro, Miyazaki-san’s baby. The film appears to be about a girl and her little sister who share active, morbid imaginations. Shadowy dust bunnies swarm along the corners and ceilings in their house, dispersing at the turn of a light switch. The forest is home to the giant cat-rabbit-hamster, Totoro, who evidently possesses some power to aid the girls. Aid them in what? Well, they’re children trying to deal with their mother’s long, long stay in the hospital, and with their father’s difficulty in juggling parenting and love. Often, the only refuge is in their imaginations.

So that got real. What else? The Ghibli film Grave of the Fireflies, about a big brother and little sister after the American firebombings kill their mother, is regarded by Roger Ebert as one of the most powerful war movies, and is regarded by almost everyone who sees it as heartbreaking. On a less-depressing note, Miyazaki-san’s Howl’s Moving Castle is about overcoming cowardice, making the best of bad situations, the painful futility of war, and the destructiveness of aerial bombardment (it’s less depressing because the bombardment ends and there’s love, yay!). Spirited Away, Ghibli’s most successful film, and arguably its most hauntingly beautiful, is also about overcoming cowardice and accepting responsibility, but by embracing a childlike curiosity and willingness to forgive. Fittingly, it is the obstinate banality of the protagonist Chichiro’s parents that forces her to summon her child strength, as they have gotten themselves turned to pigs and must be rescued

So what’s left of the stigma? Nothing, right? All that remains to be overcome is the experience itself of watching anime, as opposed to watching theater or movies. The recent popularity of graphic novels should make this transition easy, because, more than anything, anime is a form of literature.

Thus let us all, as always, strive to be more well-read, and let the great Miyazaki-san be your gateway auteur.

119 comments

  1. As an avid fan, Ive watched every film he has produced and I’m so sad to hear he’s retired. You have a great run Miyazaki! Cheers to an amazing career and life ahead of you!

  2. Salute for Mr. Hayao Miyazaki , he’s a great,

    Totoro is one of my favorite film and of course spirited away, i like the way he transform reality to fantasy, being an anime fan I can say that every film that he made was really touching. Every film has its own unique story, and passion,. Thanks for sharing those great story. ☺☺☺

  3. Reblogged this on In My Reverie and commented:
    I love tototo… so much!!! ^___^

    1. Thanks for reblogging ^___^

  4. I have enjoy anime for years and have converted a few also. Miyazaki-san is one of my favorites. If you pay attention there is always a message in his films as you pointed out. He does it so smoothly you don’t realize you are learning anything. Great essay well thought out and presented.

    1. Thank you, and keep up the conversions 😀

    1. Thanks for reblogging! This has been so wild…

      1. Any time, totally crazy that he’s retired! studio Ghibli will never be the same!!

  5. Love Totoro! he is one of my childhood friends.

    1. Hey, you’re not alone—he’s the world’s childhood friend 🙂

  6. Appreciation for anime has come a long way. You can’t possibly like everything in anime and manga because there is too much of it, but there are so many subjects covered that there seems to be something for everyone. That embarrassed, keep to oneself mentality exists even in its home countries, there are stories that cover the subject to good effect.

    The overt fanatic that makes you feel ashamed to be a part of something geeky exists in everything that you can like. The best way to avoid guilt by association is to live and let live, and make it easy to demonstrate why you like what you do.

    For example, I deliberately started watching children’s anime because the language is simple. I wanted to see how much I can understand without looking at the subtitles. At first I “needed” it before there were good English language instructions for speech synthesizers I was using, thankfully most important words in the field are loaned from English, and now I still look for things to watch to maintain what I’ve learned.

    Good luck, best wishes, congratulations on being freshly pressed!

    1. Good luck and best wishes to you as well! And I know, what the hell?! Being freshly pressed (whoah, weird phrase) is one of those things that happens to other people…I remember thinking that writing the essay was a bad idea because I was procrastinating on schoolwork. But now I can say with zero reservations that everyone should procrastinate on everything all the time. Actually I’m not saying that now, but I’ll say it eventually.

  7. Great post! I think anime is definitely becoming more mainstream. Although living iJn apan might give me a biased view.

    1. Thanks a lot! And yes, I’m jealous of one of my friends who’s gotten to travel there. He got the best Neon Genesis Evangelion shirt…

      1. It’s a pretty amazing country, for sure 🙂

  8. Reblogged this on Cataca9 – I kid you not… and commented:
    Love anime! Especially Howls moving castle & spirited away!!

    1. Thanks a lot for the kind words. It was wild to wake up to this, because I was certain that the only people reading these posts were the people who wrote them. I don’t know how to sign into D-Q, otherwise I’d post this from there so people would think I’m not bullshitting :/…but anyway, here is my own blog that I was inspired to resuscitate this morning.

      http://likerou.wordpress.com/

      It’ll be a bit different from this one, but maybe you’d like it.

      Thanks again.

  9. Interesting essay. I’ve always enjoyed the anime style even if I don’t always like the way it’s put into practice.

  10. ValHollow's Only Newspaper · · Reply

    Reblogged this on Writings From a Mad Girl.

    1. Thanks for reblogging!

  11. This is a well written argument. I love the fact that you are giving your specific thoughts in an organized way and you are not afraid to tell what you think.
    It is quite true that anime is very misconstrued and is often just referred to as a Japanese cartoon. I only hope that more people would see things like you and look to research on what they are spectating.

    1. Thanks a ton! I’m only saying thanks to a lot of these, but sorry, you’ve set yourself up for my shameless self-promotion:

      http://likerou.wordpress.com/

      I know you have no way of knowing that the person writing this blog also wrote the Miyazaki essay, but if the DQ editors approve the comment–I don’t know the login–, I guess it’ll be legit 😉

      Thanks a lot for the support, it’s been really incredible for me and I hope you like the other blog

  12. What a wonderful essay. I try to tell people that there is so much more to anime than meets the eye and Hayao Miyazaki is one example. The first film I watched of his was Grave of the fireflies which was so vivid i carried the emotions for a long time. Each of his films, i felt had some kind of magic…subtle but nonetheless able to capture a slice of life (real or imaginative).

    1. Thanks very much. I’m trying out a new blog if you’d like to look over it…I plan to talk about Japan and anime a lot.

      http://likerou.wordpress.com/

      1. Will definitely check this out.

        1. I see that you did! Thanks–I hope I can live up to your expectations. I must!

    1. Thanks for reblogging!

  13. My this is a very detailed perspective toward the change of our society perspective about anime. Coming to this man work, I have watched a great number of Japanese Anime because I’m a fun.

    Those which put the mark are the one from him, Spirited away, Howl Moving Castle and others. I don’t know the story behind a creator of Prince Mononoke.

    But they are great , I real like this part of you article, ” It is like arguing with yourself not to dream when you sleep, and the analogy benefits from the dreamlike quality of his works.”

    The perspective of us toward anime it should change for good.

    1. Thank you very much, it means a lot to me…to be honest, I like that part of the article too, but I’d forgotten about it until one of the DQ editors told me he liked it as well. He’s also the one who told me it was becoming popular, otherwise I would have had no idea.

      1. It’s sure is one of a change. It just made me to re-watch all of the Githul animation movies. And download of the others I didn’t watch. Quite an influence it had on me.

  14. Beautiful piece of writing about a sublime and truly beautiful film genre. M.

  15. Reblogged this on thefayday and commented:
    Loved each movie ~<3

    1. Thanks for reblogging (and to the DQ editors—I really hope your inboxes aren’t blowing up from all my comments).

      1. np, im new to WordPress. Still figuring it out. 🙂 -Fay

  16. Miyazaki’s Nausicaa of the Valey of the Winds will always be my favourite manga/anime of all times. I was mesmerised by the anime when I was a child. Then I grew up and learned about the manga, which I read and loved.

    1. I’ve heard that the manga is wonderful, so I have it on my favorites bar…but unfortunately that bar is currently just a list of things I haven’t done yet that I should 😦 Thanks for reminding me to read it!

  17. LOVE, love, love. We have a poster of Totoro in our children’s room.

  18. I’ve loved the Miyazaki films for years now. I think Spirited Away was the first I saw, but since then we’ve seen several others, and I’m fairly sure that My Neighbour Totoro is my favourite. I’ll admit I’m secretly delighted when my children say they want to watch it, so that I have an excuse to see it again 😉

  19. I’ve always dismissed anime by default, i don’t know why. But this has opened my eyes. Thank you.

    1. That’s exactly what I was hoping for. Thanks very much for commenting.

  20. Great post. Everyone should give anime a shot, because, like everything else, there is something for everyone. And it’s not like you have to restrict yourself to just anime, there is always good in variety. Also will miss the anticipation for Miyazaki’s new films. Can’t recall if Studio Ghibli is staying open but it would be interesting to see what’s next for them if they are.

  21. Great post. Everyone should give anime a shot, because, like everything else, there is something for everyone. And it’s not like you have to restrict yourself to just anime, there is always good in variety. Also will miss the anticipation for Miyazaki’s new films. Can’t recall if Studio Ghibli is staying open but it would be interesting to see what’s next for them if they are.

    1. Thanks a lot, and I of course agree!

      -Ben Clark

  22. Reblogged this on The Chronic Chronicler and commented:
    I’m a lover of anime and I think all those who love, don’t love, and are indifferent to it should read this wonderful essay on why you should watch Studio Ghibli films.

    1. Limit as
      thanks–>infinity to you!!! Haha doesn’t make much sense but I’m just needing to spice things up here with my thanks. Thank you for reblogging as well.

  23. Fantastic work here. I’m a lover of anime and you’ve just hit the nail on the head for what I’ve always pondered. Why is anime seen in such a negative light? Your work is done to a capital T. Bravo.

  24. Reblogged this on thebonegarden and commented:
    An excellent Essay.

    1. Thanks very much for reblogging.

  25. As a diehard anime fan. This was beautiful to see. A great read and well written essay. *Many Many Kudos*

  26. Reblogged this on iotism2m.

  27. They are powerful arr works: “Spirited away” is one of the most visually amazing movies I ever watched; “The grave of the fireflies” let me depresed for days. And why do we watch cartoons? Ihave been asking myself whether it is not in our genes: http://mariobarbatti.wordpress.com/2013/10/26/genes-to-make-spongebob/

  28. We’ve been watching Miyazaki’s work since my daughter was small. First was Totoro for us, and then later there was Howl’s Moving Castle, which is one of my favorite films. They are timeless favorites, not just for kids.

    1. I totally agree, and it’s good to hear that you’re passing it on.

  29. Reblogged this on Joyful Parasites and commented:
    Great fan of Amine here! Always embracing it :)))

    1. Your username is pretty great! Thanks for supporting this and anime. Here’s my blog I’m resuscitating since all this support inspired me:

      http://likerou.wordpress.com/

      -Ben Clark

  30. lim angga duta · · Reply

    nice

  31. Nice post. I first saw Totoro when I was quite young. I really want to see “The Wind Rises.”

  32. I love anime, and I love Ghibli films 😀

  33. I’ve been a fan since I saw Spirited Away, but I think Anime’s becoming more mainstream mainly because of Miyazaki’s exposure and, yes, graphic novels.

    1. Thanks for reblogging.

  34. I’ve been a long time fan of Miyazaki, I’m sad to learn of his retirement, but he’s left such an impressive and profound legacy of films. Great post.

  35. As an adult fan of manga and anime, I think fans of all types and stripes are becoming more and more accepted all the time. I’m not sure why, but I think it’s similar to how comic books have become acceptable parts of American literature, to the point they’re studied by academics. Anime/manga fans are now the comic book fans, integrating into the public consciousness.
    And guess who’s the new anime/manga fans? Bronies.

    1. I’m not on that brony wagon yet…Reddit has certainly spoiled it for me. I need to see a good academic essay on it.

      1. I’m just trying to avoid it. Too strange for me. Besides, Sailor Moon’s already my girly TV show hook.

  36. My wife an I lived in Japan for 3 years and Ghibli characters were to be seen daily on the sides of kinergarden buses in our town. As a parting gift from one of our dearest friends, we were given a copy of Totoro to share with our newborn son as he grew up. She told me that she’d always loved this particular movie because it reminded her so much of the Japan she’d grown up in.
    Interestingly, my mum (who migrated to Australia from Newcastle up on Tyne as a 4 year old) said much the same thing when she watched it with us a few years later.
    I’ve shown some of Miyazaki’s work to my students over the years but it has been hit and miss. I’ve decided that this is because there is something fundamentally different in the narrative structure of his movies. The antagonists are never “bad”. There are always easily identifiable heroic protagonists and characters in conflict with them but they, more often as not, end up being friends by the end of the story.
    Some of my students just can’t handle this. They are too pre programmed to want a clash between good and evil. Mind you, other students embrace both this and the incredible creativity and artistic splendour of this work.
    Either way, any time I’ve shown a Miyazaki movie it has drawn thoughtful opinion and had a big impact. Much like Japan itself, there’s a cultural curiosity that is mesmerising.
    Great post!

    1. I find your comment very profound and well observed. I’d never thought about it that way, but yes, as children in our society (I’m talking UK/US society mainly) we are indeed programmed to want a simple black and white battle between good and bad. I think such stories have their place, but I think children are far more intelligent and discerning that we give them credit for and, given the opportunity, can take on board much more complex concepts that are more true to life and less emotionally lazy…for I believe there is almost nothing in this world that is truly as simple as, this is right and this is wrong. And what a message of hope, that those in conflict can become friends. Thanks for this thought provoking comment, inspired by a very interesting and well written piece.

    2. This story was really touching. Thanks very much for posting it.

      -Ben Clark

  37. Excellent post. I will look at anime in a different light.

    1. Excellent! That was my goal. Thank you very much for the encouragement.

  38. Fantastic essay. Studio Ghibli has made some of my all time favorite movies, animated or otherwise. They are fun, emotionally complex, and generally fantastic. I’ve loved so many of them. I delighted in Howl’s Moving Castle and dissolved into a heap of tears at Grave of the Fireflies. I’ve tried to explain to others how these are more than just “cartoons”, that they mean something. I think you’ve done a fantastic job of that here.

    Anime is wonderful to me because it is it’s own, unique art form, so different from much of US animation. I’m pretty sure that Akira is the first anime that I saw and it lead me to explore many others, from Cowboy Beebop to Tokyo Godfathers. It’s an amazing art form and Miyazaki-san is certainly a master of it.

    1. Haha, I concur on all accounts! Thanks so much for being 1) an anime fan and 2) so encouraging. You might check out this new blog I’m trying.

      http://likerou.wordpress.com/

      It’s a fairly different format though, might kinda be scatterbrained but hopefully (in the words of Kintaro Oe), “very educational!”

  39. […] books. This semester, DQ has expanded to include essays on popular culture (see this week’s essay by Ben Clark on Hayao Miyazaki) and visual arts (see Alyssa Boutelle’s piece on Raphael’s “School of […]

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