βFor some time, Hollywood has marketed family entertainment according to a two-pronged strategy, with cute stuff and kinetic motion for the kids and sly pop-cultural references and tame double entendres for mom and dad. Miyazaki has no interest in such trickery, or in the alternative method, most successfully deployed in Pixar features like Finding Nemo, Toy Story 3 and Inside/Out, of blending silliness with sentimentality.β
βMost films made for children are flashy adventure-comedies. Structurally and tonally, they feel almost exactly like blockbusters made for adults, scrubbed of any potentially offensive material. They arenβt so much made for children as theyβre made to be not not for children. Itβs perhaps telling that the genre is generally called βFamily,β rather than βChildrenβs.β The films are designed to be pleasing to a broad, age-diverse audience, but theyβre not necessarily specially made for young minds.β
βMy Neighbor Totoro, on the other hand, is a genuine childrenβs film, attuned to child psychology. Satsuki and Mei move and speak like children: they run and romp, giggle and yell. The sibling dynamic is sensitively rendered: Satsuki is eager to impress her parents but sometimes succumbs to silliness, while Mei is Satsukiβs shadow and echo (with an independent streak). But perhaps most uniquely, My Neighbor Totoro follows childrenβs goals and concerns. Its protagonists arenβt given a mission or a call to adventure - in the absence of a larger drama, they create their own, as children in stable environments do. They play.β
βConsider the sequence just before Mei first encounters Totoro. Satsuki has left for school, and Dad is working from home, so Mei dons a hat and a shoulder bag and tells her father that sheβs βoff to run some errandsβ - The film is hers for the next ten minutes, with very little dialogue. Sheβs seized by ideas, and then abandons them; her goals switch from moment to moment. First she wants to play βflower shopβ with her dad, but then she becomes distracted by a pool full of tadpoles. Then, of course, she needs a bucket to catch tadpoles in - but the bucket has a hole in it. And on it goes, but weβre never bored, because Mei is never bored.β
β[β¦] You can only ride a ride so many times before the thrill wears off. But a child can never exhaust the possibilities of a park or a neighborhood or a forest, and Totoro exists in this mode. The film is made up of travel and transit and exploration, set against lush, evocative landscapes that seem to extend far beyond the frame. We enter the film driving along a dirt road past houses and rice paddies; we follow Mei as she clambers through a thicket and into the forest; we walk home from school with the girls, ducking into a shrine to take shelter from the rain; we run past endless green fields with Satsuki as she searches for Mei. The psychic center of Totoroβs world is an impossibly giant camphor tree covered in moss. The girls climb over it, bow to it as a forest-guardian, and at one point fly high above it, with the help of Totoro. Much like Totoro himself, the tree is enormous and initially intimidating, but ultimately a source of shelter and inspiration.β
βMy Neighbor Totoro has a story, but itβs the kind of story that a child might make up, or that a parent might tell as a bedtime story, prodded along by the refrain, βAnd then what happened?β This kind of whimsicality is actually baked into Miyazakiβs process: he begins animating his films before theyβre fully written. Totoro has chase scenes and fantastical creatures, but these are flights of fancy rooted in a familiar world. A big part of being a kid is watching and waiting, and Miyazaki understands this. When Mei catches a glimpse of a small Totoro running under her house, she crouches down and stares into the gap, waiting. Miyazaki holds on this image: we wait with her. Magical things happen, but most of life happens in between those thingsβand there is a kind of gentle magic, for a child, in seeing those in-betweens brought to life truthfully on screen.β
A.O. Scott andΒ Lauren Wilford on βMy Neighbor Totoroβ, 2017.Β Β