Asides

Something to watch tonight: Tuesday 17 September

By September 17, 2024No Comments

Grave of the Fireflies (Takahata, 1988)

Frame from Isao Takahata's 1988 animated classic film Grave of the Fireflies

On 16 April 1988, Studio Ghibli per­formed the greatest one-two punch in the his­tory of cinema by releas­ing both Hayao Miyazaki’s life-affirming mas­ter­piece My Neighbor Totoro and his col­league Isao Takahata’s power­ful anti-war tragedy Grave of the Fireflies on the same day.

Ghibli’s fam­ily favour­ites – like Totoro, Spirited Away, Porco Rosso, Howl’s Moving Castle, etc. – have been avail­able on Netflix for ages but for some reas­on Fireflies has only landed this week.

I’ve seen some sad films in my life – Watership Down, any­one? – but Grave of the Fireflies is the most heart­break­ing of all.

Based on an auto­bi­o­graph­ic­al short story by Akiyuki Nosaka, it tells the story of two sib­lings, Seita and his little sis­ter Setsuko, who are orphaned dur­ing the bomb­ing of Kobe near the end of World War II and fight for sur­viv­al among the ruins. Help from the equally des­per­ate grown-ups is fleet­ing as soci­ety crumbles around them.

Takahata was a co-founder of Ghibli with Miyazaki but he spent most of his time pro­du­cing and so his list of cred­its is nowhere near as extens­ive. The rel­at­ive inac­cess­ib­il­ity of his mas­ter­piece, Fireflies, has also con­trib­uted to his second-tier repu­ta­tion but he was a big reas­on why Ghibli became what it is.

There’s no escap­ing that Fireflies is a heavy pic­ture but it is suit­able for chil­dren as long there are grown-ups with them – rated M in New Zealand and Australia.


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Where to watch Grave of the Fireflies

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Worldwide (except Japan): Streaming on Netflix