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IMDbPro

Le Garçon et le Héron

Original title: Kimitachi wa dô ikiru ka
  • 2023
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 4m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
99K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,205
26
Le Garçon et le Héron (2023)
A young boy named Mahito yearning for his mother ventures into a world shared by the living and the dead. There, death comes to an end, and life finds a new beginning. A semi-autobiographical fantasy from the mind of Hayao Miyazaki.
Play trailer1:21
6 Videos
99+ Photos
AnimeFantasy EpicHand-Drawn AnimationIsekaiAdventureAnimationDramaFantasy

In the wake of his mother's death and his father's remarriage, a headstrong boy ventures into a dreamlike world shared by the living and the dead in search of his missing stepmother.In the wake of his mother's death and his father's remarriage, a headstrong boy ventures into a dreamlike world shared by the living and the dead in search of his missing stepmother.In the wake of his mother's death and his father's remarriage, a headstrong boy ventures into a dreamlike world shared by the living and the dead in search of his missing stepmother.

  • Director
    • Hayao Miyazaki
  • Writer
    • Hayao Miyazaki
  • Stars
    • Soma Santoki
    • Masaki Suda
    • Kô Shibasaki
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    99K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,205
    26
    • Director
      • Hayao Miyazaki
    • Writer
      • Hayao Miyazaki
    • Stars
      • Soma Santoki
      • Masaki Suda
      • Kô Shibasaki
    • 422User reviews
    • 226Critic reviews
    • 91Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 Oscar
      • 34 wins & 86 nominations total

    Videos6

    The Final Teaser
    Trailer 1:21
    The Final Teaser
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:56
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:56
    Official Trailer
    Official Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 1:12
    Official Teaser Trailer
    The Boy and the Heron
    Trailer 1:12
    The Boy and the Heron
    The Boy And The Heron: Toshio Suzuki On Hayao Miyazaki & The Future Of Animation
    Featurette 4:37
    The Boy And The Heron: Toshio Suzuki On Hayao Miyazaki & The Future Of Animation
    Promo
    Promo 0:33
    Promo

    Photos210

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    View Poster
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    + 206
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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Soma Santoki
    • Mahito Maki
    • (voice)
    Masaki Suda
    Masaki Suda
    • The Grey Heron
    • (voice)
    Kô Shibasaki
    Kô Shibasaki
    • Kiriko
    • (voice)
    • (as Kou Shibasaki)
    Aimyon
    • Himi
    • (voice)
    Yoshino Kimura
    Yoshino Kimura
    • Natsuko
    • (voice)
    Takuya Kimura
    Takuya Kimura
    • Shoichi Maki
    • (voice)
    Keiko Takeshita
    • Maid #1
    • (voice)
    Jun Fubuki
    • Maid #2
    • (voice)
    Sawako Agawa
    • Maid #3
    • (voice)
    Karen Takizawa
    • Wara Wara
    • (voice)
    Shinobu Ôtake
    • Maid #4
    • (voice)
    Jun Kunimura
    Jun Kunimura
    • The Parakeet King
    • (voice)
    Kaoru Kobayashi
    Kaoru Kobayashi
    • Old Pelican
    • (voice)
    Shôhei Hino
    • Great-Uncle
    • (voice)
    Nami Uehara
    • Additional Voice
    • (voice)
    Kiyoko Nishimura
    • Additional Voice
    • (voice)
    Ryûnosuke Watanuki
    • Additional Voice
    • (voice)
    Takuya Yagyu
    • Additional Voice
    • (voice)
    • Director
      • Hayao Miyazaki
    • Writer
      • Hayao Miyazaki
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews422

    7.498.9K
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    Featured reviews

    6KFstudios2009

    A big Mess!

    From Studio Ghibli, The Boy and the Heron is an animated movie about a boy that dramatically lose his mother due the war in Japan, and he and his father have to move to a safer place. When they arrive, they live in a nice and quiet home. In a place, were strange things did happen, and will happen, too. First of all, I have to list up what was good about the film. It was absolutely beautiful animation with great paint, drawing techniques, and amazing colors. They had that mix with painting-like animation, but at the same time, classic Japanese anime. And I really liked that, I think it is a very nice thing, and I can see that this is a technique that Studio Ghibli is using a lot, and they are really doing it well. Very nice music. It was soft, easy and quiet, but at the same time it built up a hidden suspense that was holding. The music was some sort of anxiety mixed with calmness. Very strange. Last thing that was good was the overall atmosphere and the feeling of the movie, at least in the first act. Because then things started to get a little weird. Everything became unknown and messy, the story changed the course multiple times, and I wasn't sure which way the plot was going to go. At the end everything became a little more clear, but still a little weird. When you don't know what is really going on, the action becomes a little nonsense, too. And that was exactly what happened. The action sequences were sometimes fun and entertaining, but I was still questioning: Why are they doing it? Why are they running? What are they running from? What's the point of the story? Good enough that they had a good moral at the end. Very great with a good message about the balance of the world, and that the soul value is very important. After all, this was a movie on the middle. Great music and animation. Fine atmosphere in the first act. But it got a little messy, and the story changed course to many times. They rushed a lot and I didn't get time to think. Studio Ghibli could have definitely done better.
    7alex_with_a_P

    Hayao Miyazaki delivers

    Not his best, but a very solid fairy tale from the master with lots of his trademark elements like stoic characters, spirit worlds, flying scenes and characters running through narrow passages.

    It is stylistically comparable to Spirited Away and Howls Moving Castle, although a bit less epic in scope. Like those films it inhibits a certain darkness and maturity at times with a war as a backdrop, that is not really aimed at children. I personally liked it and wished that more filmmakers in animation would have similar aspirations, but I guess those who do are expelled to do short movies. But back to Miyazaki's movie: it is bursting with lots of ideas, symbolism and fairy tale motifs like Snow White (with a dead mother, seven dwarfettes and a glass coffin with a sleeping beauty). At other times the character dynamics invoke Jim Henson's Labyrinth, where the protagonist has to rescue a kidnapped loved one and work with a henchman who sells him out at every opportunity until they start bonding.

    All the visual ideas are great but sometimes they can unnecessary bloat the picture. It is one of Miyazaki weaknesses to be over-indulgent and unfocused at times, sometimes he needs to tighten the story in certain places - especially during the last stretch it can feel exhausting. I still like the leisurely pace in the beginning and that the movie takes it's time to slowly pull us into another world/afterlife/beforelife however you want to call this place. There are beautiful visual metaphors like when the little balloon creatures fly off into the next world, one can say that those symbolize the protagonists own emotions bubbling up into the surface (this is also the first sequence where we see the main character smile and express genuine emitions) - and that he tries to repress those feelings. Especially towards his new stepmom which he tries to rescue seemingly out of pure obligation for his father. It is also no coincidence that we witness the appearance of an avatar of his real mother in that very same sequence - she tries to protect those cute balloons from hungry predators, but in the process burns most of them. The clinging to the ghost from the past is preventing a new blossoming/beginning. There simply aren't easy and clean-cut solutions, neither in nature nor our society.

    There are certain moments where someone can get the impression that Miyazaki is making a statement towards his own legacy and the studio he helped to build. There are themes of responsibility & duty versus family sharing a lot of similarities to his last movie 'The Wind Rises' . I appreciated the ending, without getting into any spoiler territory, a lot of people wondered or were baffled why the final scene feels sort of "tacked on". But when you closely observe it, it is sound with the movie's themes and illustrates rather well the important choice of our main character.
    8sterlingrobson

    Visual pleasing, Imaginative world, Very complex story.

    If you have never watched a Hayao Miyazaki film, I wouldn't recommend starting with The Boy and the Heron.

    For an introduction I'd recommend to start with Spirited Away (2001) and Princess Mononoke (1997).

    If you become amused and the films resonate with you. Then you will enjoy The Boy and Heron. It isn't the strongest of Hayao Miyazaki and Ghibli films but a very good addition to their filmography.

    The film begins with a slow pace of mostly visually defining the world, characters and their dilemmas. As the movie progresses you see touches of another realm. Before you know it, it becomes a full-blown feverish dream of Hayao Miyazaki imagination and story telling. It eventually comes all together back on its feet at the end.

    Was it fun and visually pleasing? Yes.

    Was I confused at times And had a lot of unanswered question? Also yes.
    8siderite

    Beautiful Ghibli animation, wonderous magical worlds, moral lessons, a lot of confusion

    This is one of the good ones. However it reflects as much the passion and skill of Hayao Miyazaki as his old age confusion. His latest "last movie" starts one way and ends (abruptly) another. It has elements from his own life, his previous work and some new ideas, but the gist of the film is reconciling with loss and moving forward, recognizing there isn't much one can do. A very old man mentality in a movie about a child entering a magical world filled with wonder and dream logic.

    The animation was so beautiful, the story a bit disjointed, but quite captivating. It was the ending that kind of disappointed. This film has been a long time in the making (in 2019 it was 15% complete, allegedly, with Miyazaki directing a minute of the film a month) and it shows.

    The Japanese title is "How do you live?", the same as the Genzaburo Yoshino's instructional coming-of-age novel that Miyazaki's mother gifted him. In the film, the boy finds the book with a message from his dead mother, instructing him to read it, but it never goes anywhere. There are a lot of other hints and symbols that are quite opaque to non-Japanese, so I felt that I've missed chunks of what the movie was supposed to convey.

    Perhaps the most interesting quality of the film is how easily it can be interpreted multiple ways, the ambiguity both confusing and thought provoking. As we experience dream and child logic we get a glimpse of the transmuted reality underneath. The grief, the loss, the benevolent yet oppressive culture, the futility and pain of war, the missing and missed parenting and so on.

    Bottom line: is it a masterpiece or a slice of Miyazaki, jumbled beyond recognition? Both. I felt it might be a fitting farewell film, but also that I missed so many meanings from it. I liked it.
    7danielatala8

    It's confused, but it got the spirit

    Seeing The Boy and The Heron, Hayao Miyazaki's latest movie feels almost like a monumental event in and of itself. It was announced almost as a surprise with the words "Hayao Miyazaki's last movie". With this amount of hype, including the amazing reviews it's got from critics, my hype was built up to the max. The end result? Not what I expected, and that's ok!

    Let's get to the positives, the animation is STUNNING. The way Hayao Miyazaki manages to build these worlds and characters is just an amazing feat, they all come alive with the colours and the movement. Another positive is the tone of the movie, I really hate Disney for trying to market this as a kid's movie, when it's not. It's got some unnerving and scary moments and themes that are not suited for kids, which is good. Hayao Miyazaki is at his best when he manages to blend the adult with the fantastical.

    The actors are always amazing, I saw the Japanese dub so I don't know how the western VAs are doing but wow; they all do a fantastic job!

    Now to the negatives... a huge thing about Studio Ghibli movies in general, especially the ones from Hayao Miyazaki, is that they're always by rule driven by the characters, it's their journey that's in the front. World building and narrative always takes a second place in his movies to be able to not distract from the characters journeys, big examples of this are Spirited Away and Howl's Moving Castle where the world building is built by very simple and effective means and rules. But here in the Boy and The Heron the world building is so convoluted and confusing it almost feels like he wanted it to take center stage in this movie and it's such a shame because it feels at like it's at odds with it's own main character who supposedly undergoes a deep deep emotional journey but it all finishes off in a very abrupt and unfitting send-off in the end which really confused me and just didn't feel like a good payoff.

    Also the way this movie introduces characters left and right with no rhyme or reason is super confusing. Once again, Hayao Miyazaki did this very minimally in his past movies where the characters get room to be explored and to leave an impact in the story but here once again it's at odds with its own world building- it all feels very haphazard and messy. The Heron is a fun character but I don't feel like he or Mahito do or learn anything from these adventures.

    Now, it may sound like I hated this movie, but I didn't. It's just that I care so much about Hayao Miyazaki movies and Studio Ghibli movies that I can't help to compare them to the movies we've seen before. And despite it not being Hayao Miyazaki's best it's still pretty good, it's very much worth a watch.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In December 2019, the film was announced to be 15% complete after three-and-a-half years of work. Producer Toshio Suzuki explained that Hayao Miyazaki, in the past, would be able to direct seven to ten minutes of animation per month, and they had scheduled five minutes of animation per month or about one hour per year on the film. However, Miyazaki was directing only about one minute of animation per month.
    • Goofs
      When a knife is being honed on a steel the knife blade is facing up, it should be facing down. Whilst you can hone in either direction, up the steel away from you, or down the steel towards you, the blade should be facing towards the handle of the steel.
    • Quotes

      The Grey Heron: I'll be your guide.

    • Connections
      Featured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: End of the Year Embarrassments (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Chikyûgi (Spinning Globe)
      Performed by Kenshi Yonezu

      Courtesy of Sony Music Labels Inc

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 1, 2023 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Official site
      • Toho Site
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • El niño y la garza
    • Production companies
      • Studio Ghibli
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $46,832,867
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,011,722
      • Dec 10, 2023
    • Gross worldwide
      • $282,422,186
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 4 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • IMAX 6-Track
      • Dolby Atmos
      • DTS:X
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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