Current:Home > ContactIn 'The Boy and the Heron,' Miyazaki asks: How do we go on in the midst of grief? -Keystone Wealth Vision
In 'The Boy and the Heron,' Miyazaki asks: How do we go on in the midst of grief?
View
Date:2025-04-18 12:15:40
Those of us who love the work of the anime master Hayao Miyazaki have happily learned not to take his retirement announcements too seriously. In 1997, he claimed that Princess Mononoke would be his final animated feature; in 2001, he said the same about his future Oscar winner, Spirited Away. Still, there was a greater air of finality in 2013 around The Wind Rises, a mournful drama of love and loss that felt like a fitting swan song.
But Miyazaki clearly had more to say. A decade after The Wind Rises, he returns with The Boy and the Heron, which combines the excitement of a child's grand adventure and the weight of an older man's reflection. The boy of the title is 12-year-old Mahito, whom we first meet on a fateful night in 1943. Bombs are falling on Tokyo, and his mother dies tragically in a fire at a hospital. A year later, a still-grieving Mahito moves to the countryside with his father, who's about to marry a woman named Natsuko.
Some but not all of this is drawn from Miyazaki's own life. While his parents both survived the war and lived for decades afterward, Miyazaki has spoken of his memories of fleeing Tokyo during the war when he was just a child. His father ran a company that manufactured airplane parts, a backstory that Mahito's father shares as well. But that's about as close to reality as the movie gets. If this is a partial self-portrait, it's also a beguiling fantasy, in which Miyazaki's flair for wondrous characters, bewildering plot turns and gorgeous and grotesque imagery is on inventive display.
As he explores his new home, Mahito gets to know his stepmother-to-be and a gaggle of gossipy grannies who help look after him and the house. In time he also crosses paths with a mysterious gray heron that keeps trying to get his attention, at one point poking its head in through his bedroom window: "Your presence is requested," it says.
The heron is voiced by Robert Pattinson in the English-dubbed version, which also features actors including Christian Bale, Gemma Chan and Florence Pugh. If you can, though, I recommend seeking out the subtitled Japanese-language version. Better yet, see them both; Miyazaki's story is too rich and strange to be digested in a single viewing.
In one of those bizarre transformations all too common in the filmmaker's work, the heron soon reveals itself to be a man in avian disguise. He becomes a prickly companion of sorts to Mahito as they journey into an otherworldly realm that could be located at the center of the Earth, or perhaps just at the core of Miyazaki's subconscious.
At one point, Mahito meets a girl whom he gradually realizes is a younger version of his mother. He comes across a group of smiling, floating little puffballs known as warawara, who are so adorable that they made my 7-year-old daughter squeal in delight. Along the way, he's pursued by a menacing army of giant green parakeets; if there's one ground rule in The Boy and the Heron, it's that birds are clearly not to be trusted.
I confess that I found much of this mystifying when I first saw it, and that I couldn't have minded less. Miyazaki has never been bound by narrative logic, and his imagery here exerts its own hypnotic, hallucinatory pull. But there's a clue to the movie's meaning in its original Japanese-language title: How Do You Live? It shares that title with a famous 1937 coming-of-age novel by Genzaburo Yoshino, a copy of which surfaces in the story as a gift to Mahito from his late mother.
The question "How do you live?" is one that Mahito must confront as he deals with wartime trauma and loss, and also as he forges a bond with his future stepmother. But Miyazaki is also asking us how we live, how we push past our own despair and find balance in the instability of life.
Over the years, his movies have provided their own hopeful answers: Set in worlds ravaged by greed, conflict and environmental destruction, they remind us that there's redemption in acts of kindness and love. It's that sincere belief in the possibility of goodness that draws me back to Miyazaki's work again and again — and that makes The Boy and the Heron such a powerfully affecting addition to his legacy.
veryGood! (15)
Related
- What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
- Baker Mayfield injury: Buccaneers QB exits matchup vs. Colts briefly with leg issue
- U.S. talks to India about reported link to assassination plot against Sikh separatist Gurpatwant Singh Pannun
- 3 men of Palestinian descent attending holiday gathering shot, injured near University of Vermont
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- 9-year-old girl killed by falling school gate in Arizona; sheriff says no criminal violations
- 24 hostages released as temporary cease-fire in Israel-Hamas war takes effect
- Male soccer players in Italy put red marks on faces in campaign to eliminate violence against women
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Israel-Hamas hostage deal delayed until Friday, Israeli official says
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly decline, as investors watch spending, inflation
- Thousands of fans in Taylor Swift's São Paulo crowd create light display
- Wild goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury in mask issue shows he's better than NHL leadership
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Dead, wounded or AWOL: The voices of desperate Russian soldiers trying to get out of the Ukraine war
- Beyoncé films to watch ahead of 'Renaissance' premiere
- Israel summons Irish ambassador over tweet it alleges doesn’t adequately condemn Hamas
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Four local employees of Germany’s main aid agency arrested in Afghanistan
Where to watch 'Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer': TV channel, showtimes, streaming info
Irregular meals, benches as beds. As hostages return to Israel, details of captivity begin to emerge
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Bradley Cooper says his fascination with Leonard Bernstein, focus of new film Maestro, traces back to cartoons
Marty Krofft, of producing pair that put ‘H.R. Pufnstuf’ and the Osmonds on TV, dies at 86
Teenage murder suspect escapes jail for the second time in November