Let us dispense with the formalities up front. Ponyo, the latest from Japan’s Hayao Miyazaki, is a film that deserves to be seen. More importantly, it is a film you deserve to see. From the very first moments of the dialog-free prologue, you’ll know you’re witnessing great art and that you’ll be leaving the theater very happy.
A straight-up description of Ponyo is difficult because while on one hand it is fairy-tale simple in its broad strokes, it is also hallucinogenic in its disinterest in tethering itself to the constraints of our real world. The fairy tale simplicity, first. Ponyo (Noah Cyrus) and Sosuke (Frank Jonas—yes the leads here could cast an episode of “Disney Channel: The Younger Sibling”) love each other but they’re from opposite sides of the tracks. They wish to be together, but in doing so they introduce disharmony into their worlds; disharmony that can only be overcome through pure love and an acceptance of differences completely lacking in cynicism.
Now for the hallucinogenic stuff. Ponyo is a magical fish-like creature. Her father is a formerly human alchemist, Fujimoto (Liam Neeson), who lives on a submarine and is on a mission to to return the ocean to its primordial state, untainted by humans. Ponyo’s mother is a sea goddess, Gran Mamare (Cate Blanchett), a being of ephemera and magic. Sosuke, though, is a normal 5-year-old boy living on in a cliff house with his mother (Lisa/Tina Fey) and his father (Matt Damon), who is often out to see on his fishing boat. Sosuke and Ponyo meet when he finds her stuck in a bottle and thinks she’s a goldfish (Ponyo is a name he gives her). Their love is immediate and total, but unlike the romantic love of your typical fairy tale, this is the unemcumbered devotion of children for a new best friend or adored sibling.
© 2009 Nibariki-GNDHDDT
For younger children, parents should be aware of a couple things. One, there is never really any peril in the movie but things do get intense in a couple places and may overwhelm some children. Second, one scene relies heavily entirely on subtitles and be prepared for a chorus of “what happened?” from children not yet able to read along.
Ponyo is not Miyazaki’s masterpiece (I’d still go for Spirited Away or Porco Rosso first) but it is thoroughly wonderful and accessible to all ages in a way not seen in several films now. It harkens back to titles like My Neighbor Totoro and Kiki’s Delivery Service. If you loved those movies, you’ll love Ponyo.
Ponyo is a Walt Disney Pictures presentation of a Studio Ghibli film.
- Wide release on Friday, August 14.
- Directed by Hayao Miyazaki
- Screenplay by Hayao Miyazaki
- Starring Noah Cyrus, Frankie Jonas, Tina Fey, Liam Neeson, Cate Blanchett, Matt Damon
- Rated G
- Running time 100 minutes
- Alex’s Rating: 9 out of 10