Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 10 April

By April 10, 2024No Comments

Suzume (Shinkai, 2022)

I’ve writ­ten earli­er here about how much we love animé auteur Makoto Shinkai. Not just the massive cros­sov­er hits Your Name. (2016) and Weathering With You (2019), but we also have a box set of his earli­er work includ­ing Voices of a Distant Star (2002), The Place Promised in Our Early Days (2004), Children Who Chase Lost Voices (2011) and The Garden of Words (2013).

His latest hit, Suzume, has just landed at Netflix and I dove upon it like a starving man at a buffet.

For the first third of the film you find your­self won­der­ing wheth­er he’s had a bump on the head as this is abso­lute premi­um grade “A” whack­a­doodle – even weirder than usu­al – involving talk­ing demon cats and hand­some teen­age boys turned into chairs – but it even­tu­ally reveals a pro­found meth­od to its mad­ness as it wrestles with the col­lect­ive Japanese trauma from nat­ur­al dis­asters, spe­cific­ally the 2011 Tōhuku earth­quake and sub­sequent tsunami.

Suzume (voiced by Nanoka Hara) is an ordin­ary orphaned teen­age girl, liv­ing in a small town with her aunt Tamaki (Eri Fukatsu). One day, on her way to school, she meets a boy (Hokuto Matsumura) who asks dir­ec­tions to a loc­al ruined bathhouse.

Impulsively, she decides to fol­low but, instead of find­ing him, she dis­cov­ers a mys­ter­i­ous door that when opened up, releases power­ful under­world chaos that threatens the safety of mil­lions of people.

The boy, Souta, turns out to be a “Closer”, someone tasked with keep­ing all those portals shut and the people safe, but Suzume has changed the nat­ur­al bal­ance of things and now doors have to be shut all over Japan.

What res­ults is an excit­ing, and often very funny, road trip to Tokyo where Suzume starts to learn a lot about the adult world as well as her des­tiny with­in it.

Much of Shinkai’s charm is the way he lays the fant­ast­ic­al over the mundane. All his loc­a­tions are drawn from life – you can do tours of the real Tokyo loc­a­tions from Your Name. – and the tiny details of clothes, apart­ments, trans­port (Oh, my god, the trains!) and food are simply delightful.

Suzume has more humour than we are used to with Shinkai – we laughed out loud on quite a few occa­sions – and he really leans into the absurdity of the setup but also totally brings it home. The end­ing really packs a punch.

Despite its pres­ence on stream­ing ser­vices, I really hope this gets a phys­ic­al media release as I’d love to add it to the collection.


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Where to watch Suzume

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa, Australia, Canada, USA & UK: Streaming on Netflix and Crunchyroll