Noah Cyrus & Tina Fey in Ponyo
'Ponyo'
You'll be planning to see "Ponyo" twice before you've finished seeing it once.
Five minutes into this magical film you'll be making lists of the individuals of every age you can expose to the very special mixture of fantasy and folklore, adventure and affection, that make up the enchanted vision of Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki.
The great genius of contemporary animation, the only foreign director to win the Oscar for best animated feature (for "Spirited Away," which also took the Golden Bear at Berlin), Miyazaki is more than revered in the international animation community.
But though he got a rare standing ovation at the recent Comic-Con, Miyazaki's work has never made the kind of impact in the mainstream American market it deserves.
That may change with this remarkable story of a goldfish who wants ever so desperately to be a little girl.
"Ponyo" is a sweet-natured film that emphasizes the joys of childhood friendships, but though it has a lot in common with Miyazaki's gentle classic "My Neighbor Totoro," it still manages to be exciting when it needs to, and it's been given first-class treatment by distributor Walt Disney Studios.
John Lasseter, Pixar and Disney's reigning guru and a longtime Miyazaki admirer, has brought on "E.T." screenwriter Melissa Mathison to do the film's English-language adaptation, and hired such top-quality voice talent as Liam Neeson, Tina Fey and Cate Blanchett to bring to life for domestic audiences a story that echoes Hans Christian Andersen's "The Little Mermaid."
The constant that unites all of the director's 10 features is Miyazaki's exceptional filmmaking imagination, his ability to bring us into other worlds, to stretch our minds without seeming to break a sweat in the process.
"Ponyo" begins with an extraordinary vision of a dazzling undersea world that is rich with visual wonders.
One of the reigning powers is the long-haired Fujimoto (voiced by Neeson), an intimidating wizard who struggles to keep the sea healthy and finds humans disgusting because the trash they create gets in his way.
Fujimoto's daughter, Ponyo, a goldfish with a delightful face, not surprisingly sees humans in a completely different light. In fact, Ponyo (Noah Cyrus, Miley's sister) is desperate to become human herself. Managing to find a way to the surface of the ocean, she gets trapped in a glass jar and nearly dies before a 5-year-old boy comes to her rescue.
That would be Sosuke (Frankie Jonas, a Jonas Brothers sibling), who's beside himself with glee at the discovery. "She came to me, I saved her, she's my responsibility," he pleads to his put-upon mom Lisa (Fey), who finally lets him keep his new aquatic friend.
Ponyo, however, proves to be a delightfully willful creature.
She accompanies Sosuke in a bucket as he goes about his day, going to school and visiting the nursing home where his mother works and where three eccentric old ladies (Cloris Leachman, Lily Tomlin, Betty White) are his good friends.
Though circumstances conspire to return Ponyo to the sea, she is not the type to give up on anything. But the actions she takes to become human have far-reaching consequences.
Will the intervention of sea goddess Gran Mamare (Blanchett), who happens to be Ponyo's mother, be necessary to set things right?
You'll be holding your breath until you find out.
"Ponyo" Movie Trailer
Ponyo MPAA rating: G.
Running time: 1:40.
Starring the voices of:
Noah Cyrus (Ponyo); Tina Fey (Lisa); Frankie Jonas (Sosuke); Cate Blanchett (Gran Mamare).
Written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki;
Produced by Toshio Suzuki.
A Walt Disney Pictures release.
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