nemorathwald (
nemorathwald) wrote2005-05-04 09:36 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
Grave of the Fireflies
The same animation studio and acclaimed director who created Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro also produced Grave of the Fireflies, about the firebombing of Japan during WWII. AVN showed it last night and I'm still recovering. This animated film is the most relentlessly heartbreaking movie I've ever seen. The protagonists are a teenage boy, and a four-year-old girl that is exactly like my four-year-old niece. During the movie their home, school, workplace and even their mother all burn; they are evicted by relatives, live in a hole in the ground, get beaten up and turned in to the police for stealing crops, the father does not return to save them because his ship sinks, and they die in each other's arms from malnutrition. No Disney cartoon, this. Disney only makes merchandisable movies, and if they made a talking doll of this girl, when you pull the cord she wouldn't just say "I love you," she'd also plaintively say things like "I'm hungry," "I have diarrhea," "when can we see mommy in the hospital?" and "auntie told me they put mommy in the ground." Not only is there no happy ending, but the "camera" POV never flinches away from explicitly depicting the maggots crawling on the corpse of their mother, or from the suffering of the children. What few scenes of redemptive joy occur-- playing on the seashore and collecting fireflies-- are intruded on by human death. I wonder why Miyazaki made this animated film to watch a grieving four-year-old die while covered in sores?
I warned you not to click that LJ-cut. I wish I hadn't watched it.
What was really weird about this movie were the constant recruitment ads for the U.S. military during the commercial breaks. The film is not anti-U.S.-- no attention is focused on whoever is in the plane shooting at this boy or dropping napalm on his mom. Only on the cruelty and indifference of their neighbors and relatives. I don't think the U.S. would even be thought about, were it not for the commercials the cable channel happened to run in this jarringly incongruous context.
I warned you not to click that LJ-cut. I wish I hadn't watched it.
What was really weird about this movie were the constant recruitment ads for the U.S. military during the commercial breaks. The film is not anti-U.S.-- no attention is focused on whoever is in the plane shooting at this boy or dropping napalm on his mom. Only on the cruelty and indifference of their neighbors and relatives. I don't think the U.S. would even be thought about, were it not for the commercials the cable channel happened to run in this jarringly incongruous context.
no subject
If you want another similar heartwrencher, I can recomend the British docudrama "Threads", about a hypothetical nuclear attack, though I don't know if it's available anywhere. Not as graphic, but neither does it pull punches.
Next time you watch something like that, record it. I'd like to see it, even if it is horrifying and heart breaking.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
That may just be an artifact of the way the Japanese in general look at WWII. In "Dave Barry Does Japan", Barry describes what he saw when he attended the Japanese commemoriation ceremony at Hiroshima. It had the same odd neutrality about the US, as though the war was just something that happened out of the blue, that had nothing to do with people's choices. It disturbed Barry, and in a way made him angry. I'd quote him, but I've just remembered that I loaned out my copy, so I don't have the book handy.
no subject
no subject