Movie Review - Miyazaki's 'Ponyo,' Swimming Magically Against The Tide A goldfish gets her chance to live above sea level in a sweet-natured film by visionary Hayao Miyazaki. Kenneth Turan says its mixture of fantasy, adventure and affection make Ponyo unforgettable.

Review

Movies

'Ponyo,' Swimming Magically Against The Tide

'Ponyo,' Swimming Magically Against The Tide

  • Download
  • <iframe src="https://www.npr.org/player/embed/111629594/111878806" width="100%" height="290" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" title="NPR embedded audio player">
  • Transcript

Up Where They Walk, Up Where They Run: Ponyo, a goldfish turned little girl, gets her chance to live where the people are in a sweet-natured film by Spirited Away director Hayao Miyazaki. Nibariki-GNDHDDT hide caption

toggle caption
Nibariki-GNDHDDT

Ponyo

  • Director: Hayao Miyazaki
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Running Time: 100 minutes

Rated G

With: Cate Blanchett, Liam Neeson, Matt Damon, Tina Fey

(Recommended)

Watch Clips

I'll Call Her Ponyo'

Media no longer available

'Ponyo Returns'

Media no longer available

If you thought Pixar's Up was going to be the only great animated feature of the summer, think again. There's a new film out from the visionary Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki, and trust me: You'll be planning to see Ponyo twice before you've finished seeing it once.

The film's special mixture of fantasy, adventure and affection mark it unmistakably as the work of Miyazaki, the great genius of contemporary animation. (He won an Oscar for Spirited Away.)

The story he tells this time concerns a goldfish named Ponyo, who desperately wants to be a little girl after she meets a small boy who loves her.

Once Ponyo's on land, she proves to be a delightfully willful creature, determined to have her own way in all things. Though her magician father returns her to the ocean, she's not the type to give up. She steals an elixir to help her become human, but that causes a storm to end all storms, a tempest that jeopardizes everyone in the film.

That supernatural tsunami represents a notion central to the film: that magic haunts the edges of the everyday, mixing with the ordinary in ways we don't always take the time to notice.

Underlying everything is Miyazaki's exceptional filmmaking imagination, his ability to bring us into other worlds, to stretch our minds without seeming to break a sweat.

Guppy Love: Ponyo (voiced by Noah Cyrus) and Sosuke (Frankie Jonas) get along swimmingly. Nibariki-GNDHDDT hide caption

toggle caption
Nibariki-GNDHDDT

Guppy Love: Ponyo (voiced by Noah Cyrus) and Sosuke (Frankie Jonas) get along swimmingly.

Nibariki-GNDHDDT

Ponyo is a sweet-natured film that emphasizes the joys of childhood friendships, and this English-language version has been given first-class treatment. E.T. screenwriter Melissa Mathison did the adaptation, and top-quality voice talent like Liam Neeson, Tina Fey and Cate Blanchett were hired.

Ponyo won't remind you of anyone else's films. It offers up unforgettable images, like Ponyo running on the crests of waves, images that use the logic of dreams to make the deepest possible connection to our emotions, and to our souls.

Web Resources