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Mei et le Chatonbus (2002)

User reviews

Mei et le Chatonbus

4 reviews
9/10

Master storyteller, animator and director (always) at his best

Mei to Koneko basu (Mei and the Kitten Bus, 2002) is an enjoyable animated short with lovable characters, couple of them already known from Tonari no Totoro (My Neighbor Totoro, 1988) feature-length movie, and a number of newly introduced ones. A kind of spin-off of the original movie, this 13-minute short can be seen only in the Studio Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, western suburb of Tokyo. (And what a delightful visit there it was, 20 months ago, almost to the day, in May 2009.) Story revolves around 4-year old Mei Kusakabe (this time without her older sister Setsuki, making here only a brief appearance) who befriends and babysits Koneko basu (Kitten Bus), the offspring of the Neko basu (Cat Bus), often compared to the Cheshire Cat from Lewis Carroll's classic Alice in Wonderland. Spacious hardly enough to accommodate solely little Mei, Koneko basu takes her on a night ride, and flies her in and out of the forest to get her acquainted with the whole fleet of cat-shaped and spirited vehicles, serving their Totoro passengers, to meet sort of a big cat-liner, Neko Bâ-chan (Granny Cat Bus), and revisit the great O-Totoro itself, largest among the spirits "keepers of the forest".

Film offers many favourable ingredients contained in Miyazaki's other, mainly hand-drawn animated adventures: humorous, colourful characters, including child(ren), often girl(s) protagonist(s), character driven animation, subtlety in timing and movements, enchanting visuals with watercolour-like backgrounds, actions involving flying... Lack of subtitles, to otherwise favourable original Japanese soundtrack, for a non-Japanese speaker (Nihon-go wakarimasen!) was not detrimental at all, because it's not about the story told in words, anyway, but about telling it in "thousand times" more descriptive pictures, worming up the feelings, playfulness and imagination omnipresent in children, and, though seemingly forgotten, eventually only suppressed in grown-ups, ergo dormant potential that can be easily activated through the well-administered incentive from the skillful wake-up caller. And who could do it better than a master storyteller, rarely multitalented to simultaneously write, animate (draw), direct and produce at the highest level, whose desire is not exhausted in the process of storytelling, since he prefers to participate and play himself, "suspected" and excused for finding in it as much fun as children do. And, in doing so, he entertains the same desire in us, spectators on the receiving end of his generous and exuberant offer, until, smitten all along, we find the pure joy of it all... ourselves.

Author of, apparently, one of Miyazaki's favourite books for children, Pippi Långstrump (Pippi Longstocking), Sweedish writer Astrid Lindgren used to say: "I don't 'mean' anything by my writing. I just write for the child in myself." It is unlikely that Miyazaki doesn't 'mean' anything by his great and comprehensive anime movie output (Specially in his feature-length movies, his references to contemporary global issues are quite obvious: burning requirement for scaling down the speed of exploitation of natural resources, harmonizing it with the capacity of existing reserves, and allowing for their renewal, improving ecological awareness and reducing pollution, peaceful reconciliation of hostilities…), though it is easily understood that he does the movies for the playful and curious child in himself, as well… perhaps--and why not--above all.

Judging by loud ovation from the highest represented, otherwise traditionally self-controlled, if not self-restrained, Japanese children and their parents present at the screening in Ghibli Museum theatre: kids love it and adults enjoy it!
  • Davor_Blazevic_1959
  • Jan 2, 2011
  • Permalink
8/10

Cute addition to Totoro

  • blauhund
  • May 12, 2009
  • Permalink
7/10

Physical release please, Ghibli?

I'm not the hugest fan of My Neighbor Tororo - the film - (proceeds to get booed off any and all social media platforms this opinion ends up on) but when the character of Totoro showed up in this, I think it was honestly more exciting than the famed Andrew Garfield stepping out of the ring scene in Spider-Man: No Way Home.

Mei and the Kittenbus is another Hayao Miyazaki short that's good for some bite-sized Ghibli, but not able to do for the short film format what his best films do for the feature film format. It's like listening to a song you really like from a great artist versus listening to a complete, expansive, and entirely whole album from that same artist. The quality's still there in many regards, but it's never going to be quite the same impact-wise.

Still, Mei and the Kittenbus is worth digging up if you can, but that's easier said than done. Honestly, all these Studio Ghibli Museum exclusive shorts would make a killing if they were compiled into one DVD or Blu-Ray set; I know I'd buy that stuff, and I imagine the Miyazaki shorts and any other high-profile ones would all fit onto a disc or two. That might make people less-incentivized to see the museum, but I guess to that point, I'd argue it just feels a little unfair that people all over the world love Miyazaki, yet the only way to see most of his short films is to live in Japan (particularly near the museum) or have the money to travel to Japan to see the museum, which is becoming increasingly hard these days, what with the cost of... everything.

I don't know; that's my maybe selfish view as someone not living in Japan, but a boxset of these interesting short films and other oddities would sell pretty well, I imagine.
  • Jeremy_Urquhart
  • Apr 11, 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

Just like the long movies

  • Horst_In_Translation
  • Oct 15, 2015
  • Permalink

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