From one of the most celebrated filmmakers in the history of animated cinema comes the most acclaimed film of 2002. Hayao Miyazaki’s latest triumph, filled with astonishing animation and epic adventure, is a dazzling masterpiece for the ages. It’s a “wonderfully welcoming work of art that’s as funny and entertaining as it is brilliant, beautiful, and deep” (Joe Morgenstern, Wall Street Journal). SPIRITED AWAY is a wondrous fantasy about a young girl, Chihiro, trapped in a strange new world of spirits. When her parents undergo a mysterious transformation, she must call upon the courage she never knew she had to free herself and return her family to the outside world. An unforgettable story brimming with creativity, SPIRITED AWAY will take you on a journey beyond your imagination. “To enter the world of Hayao Miyazaki is to experience a kind of lighthearted enchantment that is unique to the world of animation” (Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times). It’s a fantastic tale the whole family will want to experience over and over again.The highest grossing film in Japanese box-office history (more than $234 million), Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away (Sen To Chihiro Kamikakushi) is a dazzling film that reasserts the power of drawn animation to create fantasy worlds. Like Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz and Lewis Carroll’s Alice, Chihiro (voice by Daveigh Chase–Lilo in Disney’s Lilo & Stitch) plunges into an alternate reality. On the way to their new home, the petulant adolescent and her parents find what they think is a deserted amusement park. Her parents stuff themselves until they turn into pigs, and Chihiro discovers they’re trapped in a resort for traditional Japanese gods and spirits. An oddly familiar boy named Haku (Jason Marsden) instructs Chihiro to request a job from Yubaba (Suzanne Pleshette), the greedy witch who rules the spa. As she works, Chihiro’s untapped qualities keep her from being corrupted by the greed that pervades Yubaba’s mini-empire. In a series of fantastic adventures, she purges a river god suffering from human pollution, rescues the mysterious No-Face, and befriends Yubaba’s kindly twin, Zeniba (Pleshette again). The resolve, bravery, and love Chihiro discovers within herself enable her to aid Haku and save her parents. The result is a moving and magical journey, told with consummate skill by one of the masters of contemporary animation. MPAA Rated: PG (“Some scary moments”) –Charles Solomon
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January 8, 2006
#1
This is an absolute outrage! Who do these Japanese moviemakers think they are? This violence and gratuitous mayhem is beyond reproach! Chihiro’s parents getting turned into pigs scared my 8 year old to death. The grotesque vomiting by No-Face made ME want to vomit right in my seat. … Don’t bother!
January 8, 2006
#2
we saw this movie with several other parents and the kids found it scary. the movie on the whole was mean spirited. the parents yell at their daughter before being turned into to pigs and she is entered into slavedom and must save her parents and everyone is mean, ugly and nasty to each other. hardly a happy family movie. Maybe ok for adults although it was not my cup of tea but I certainly would not recommend it for kids. everyone was complaining about as they left the theater. I’ll stick with monsters, inc., ice age, shrek, spirit are all better family fare.
January 8, 2006
#3
Oh. My. God. What is the matter with you people? I think the people who put together this vile mass of odor have serious mental issues. I couldn’t watch it. It was so painfully disturbing, that I was sure my eyes were literally bleeding! This movie is a threat to society! Don’t watch it! Don’t buy it! Save yourselves!!!
January 9, 2006
#4
That anyone would let a child watch a movie that involves worshiping idols, definately not for Christian Familys!
January 9, 2006
#5
This is, by far, one of the creepiest movies that I’ve ever managed to actually sit through. I love anime, but can’t quite understand why this one has become quite so popular. The backline (with family) is a great story, but the whole spirit storyline gets very farfetched and downright creepy. This could cause nightmares in children and adults.