Friday, September 18, 2009

GAKE NO UE NO PONYO




Run time: 103 min

I have to admit, I am not a big fan of Japanese animation movie. Until I heard about this so called Ponyo that makes some buzz. If you mention the name Ponyo to anyone in Bandung, people will think that it is a Sundanese restaurant chain, well that is not wrong, Ponyo is one of sundanese restaurant chain in Bandung. The name similarity with a Sundanese restaurant chain spark my interest. I know it is a weird thing to be interested in a film because its title just like the name of a restaurant, but since the food in that restaurant is good, I hope the film is good too.

Watching this film brings back the good childhood memory (you know, the time where we didn't have to lie to the cops for speeding on a freeway) where everything was so simple and easy to understand.

Even the animation feels like it has sprung up from children drawing book. The story revolves around the friendship between a magical goldfish, Ponyo (Yuria Nara) and the five year old human child, Sosuke (Doi Hiroki). Sosuke lives in a small house on a cliff where he lives, Lisa (Yamaguchi Tomoko). I suspect Lisa is not Sosuke's mother, but his step mother since Ponyo refers Lisa by name, no by calling her 'mom'. Sosuke's father, Koichi (Kazushige Nagashima), is a ship captain rarely seen at home since he is away in the sea.

Ponyo and Sosuke met by chance, Ponyo escaped her father and Sosuke loves Ponyo at the first glance. Sosuke himself gave the name Ponyo to the goldfish. Ponyo soon begins to adapt and take on human aspects since she lick Sosuke's blood. Both have a strong bond and Ponyo has strong desire to become a human. A desire, Fujimoto (Tokoro Joji), Ponyo's father, cannot contain anymore. Fujimoto himself is a former human who has magical powers and obsessed of cleaning the sea. Notice how Miyazaki slowly put an ecological and environmental message in this film.

What will happen to Ponyo and Sosuke as their mutual affection grows significantly? As you can expect the line between the real and spiritual world is being blurred in an enchanting way.

The animation was wonderful, Miyazaki didn't only drew characters but he made the characters act, anyone would fall in love with the cuteness of doe-eyed Sosuke and Ponyo and Miyazaki did a convincing job on how the animated character authentically mimic a body movement of a 5 year old human. The 2 D animation was splendid and imaginative, I even liked the pastel colored background, it gives me the classic feeling of animation.

What I watched is the original Japanese version, but I am interested to watch it in English language version since it is said that Matt Damon, Cate Blanchett and Liam Neeson doing voices for Ponyo's US version. A lot of people say that this film is for children (I even like the childish Japanese theme song), but as for me I think it speaks for all of us since this film reminded us on how beautiful life is when we were young.

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