Followers of anime writer-director Matoko Shinkai might discover periodic nods to Studio Ghibli’s films in his latest work — and so they’re very a lot intentional. However these references aren’t simply homages to Japan’s most well-known animation studio: They serve a really particular function.
Not like Shinkai’s earlier two films, Your Title and Weathering with You, his newest, Suzume, focuses on the affect of a real-life catastrophe: the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami. These movies’ little nods to Studio Ghibli — cultural touchpoints viewers are prone to acknowledge — particularly root the world of Suzume nearer to our actuality, earlier than the film’s ties to the 2011 catastrophe are absolutely revealed.
Certainly one of Suzume’s Ghibli nods is overt — somebody on social media spots Daijin the keystone cat using a practice on his personal, and compares the picture to Whisper of the Coronary heart. One other is subtler: Serizawa, a buddy of human-turned-chair Sōta, drives protagonist Suzume and her aunt Tamaki to their ultimate vacation spot whereas enjoying “Rouge no Dengon” from Kiki’s Supply Service on his telephone. However the film’s greatest Ghibli nod is its subtlest. In actual fact, it may not even actually be a full reference — and but it resonates a lot extra in the event you learn it as one.
[Ed. note: This post contains spoilers for the ending of Suzume — and for Studio Ghibli’s Howl’s Moving Castle.]
All through the film, unintentional companions Suzume and Sōta journey throughout Japan to shut magical doorways. It’s not too far of a leap to check these portals to the magical destination-switching doorway seen in Hayao Miyazaki’s Howl’s Transferring Fort. This feels very true when Suzume first steps by means of a kind of doorways and sees a lush meadow coated in wildflowers — a panorama that would simply match alongside the beautiful discipline that Howl reveals Sophie in Miyazaki’s film.
Viewers be taught that this can be a doorway to the afterlife, and the explanation Suzume can see it by means of the doorway is as a result of she one way or the other wandered into the realm as just a little lady. Flashbacks reveal that Suzume did certainly enter a mysterious door as a toddler, and was greeted by a determine she assumed to be her useless mom. Afterward, she discovered a chair she thought she misplaced, the one which Sōta finally will get cursed to grow to be.
Suzume learns she should return to the door she initially entered if she needs to avoid wasting Sōta, so she returns to the ruins of her hometown. That sequence is harking back to the climatic scene in Howl’s Transferring Fort, by which, after Howl’s fort is destroyed, Sophie finds its magical door resting on some rocks among the many ruins. Opening that door, Sophie stumbles into Howl’s childhood, and a previous model of the meadow he confirmed her, then watches him meet his fireplace demon Calcifer, and make the deal that prices Howl his coronary heart.
Because the scene begins to fade away, Sophie calls out to Howl, “Discover me sooner or later!” and Howl and Calcifer each look her method. It’s closely implied that that is the explanation Howl seeks her out later in his life, and can be the explanation that Sophie is in the end in a position to save him.
So when Suzume enters her personal magical doorway and finds herself in that wildflower meadow, it appears like an echo of Miyazaki’s film. Suzume enters the afterlife to avoid wasting Sōta, simply as Sophie entered the previous to avoid wasting Howl. Admittedly, Suzume options extra giant-earthquake-worm battles, simply sufficient that the rapid comparability fades away. However after Suzume saves Sōta — and in doing so, reclaims her personal will to stay — she gazes on the discipline of wildflowers and notices a small determine within the distance. It’s herself, as a toddler.
In Howl’s Transferring Fort, reaching again to the previous connects the film’s two protagonists, weaving collectively the beginnings of each their tales. However Suzume isn’t the identical kind of romantic film as Howl’s Transferring Fort. The main target is on Suzume’s development, the best way she goes from apathy and self-destructiveness to somebody who really needs to stay. So, though she steps by means of the door to avoid wasting Sōta, she’s really saving herself. She appears to be like again on the previous and sees the youthful, despondent model of herself, and tells that crying little lady that it’s all going to be okay. It ties her story collectively completely, bringing the ending again to the start — simply as Miyazaki’s film does, in its personal method.
Suzume is in theaters now.