16 Jul 2023

Japanese anime master Miyazaki's likely final film opens without fanfare or PR

11:43 am on 16 July 2023
A cinema employee checks on a display showing a digital poster (R) for Oscar-winning animator Hayao Miyazaki's latest film, titled in English "How Do You Live?", on the first day of its premiere in Tokyo on July 14, 2023. Miyazaki's much-anticipated film -- his first feature in a decade and probably his last -- was released in theatres in Japan on July 14.

A cinema employee checks on a display showing a digital poster for animator Hayao Miyazaki's film, titled in English 'How Do You Live?', on the first day of its premiere in Tokyo on 14 July, 2023. Photo: AFP / Richard A. Brooks

Without trailers, ads or any promotion at all, the likely final film by Oscar-winning Japanese animation master Hayao Miyazaki opened in Japan on Friday (local time), with early viewers saying the lack of information made the experience more exciting.

Miyazaki, now 82 and known for a long roster of films including Academy Award winner Spirited Away, called a press conference a decade ago to say he was too tired to make another full-length feature film and was retiring.

But he soon retracted that, as he had prior retirement announcements, and after some short projects began work on How Do You Live? (Kimitachi wa Do Ikiru Ka?), the story of a 15-year-old boy coping with the death of his mother.

Hayao Miyazaki attends the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences' 2014 Governors Awards at The Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center on November 8, 2014 in Hollywood, California.

Hayao Miyazaki attends the Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences' 2014 Governors Awards on 8 November, 2014, in Hollywood, California. Photo: Frazer Harrison / Getty Images / AFP

"I was really excited to see a Miyazaki movie," said Michiru Miyasato, an 18-year-old student who came to the first showing at a central Tokyo cinema.

"Because I didn't know anything about it ahead of time, my excitement increased even more, which I think was really cool."

Like other Miyazaki films from Studio Ghibli, the company he co-founded, the release was timed for the start of school summer holidays in Japan and features the laborious hand-drawn artwork and vivid colours Miyazaki has long been known for.

The 2001 film Spirited Away, directed by Hayao Miyazaki and animated by Studio Ghibli.

The 2001 film Spirited Away, directed by Hayao Miyazaki and animated by Studio Ghibli. Photo: Studio Ghibli / Archives du 7eme Art / Photo12 via AFP

But the opening lacked the usual fanfare of events, saturation advertising, trailers and merchandising tie-ins. The only information released was a poster drawn by Miyazaki - and even that was only sent to a limited number of cinemas.

"Since there was absolutely no promotion, it felt as if I could experience it all directly with my body," said Yumiko Kokubo, a social worker in her 50s.

Studio Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki said the strategy came from a desire to do something fresh.

"A poster and a title - that's all we got when we were children," he told NHK public television.

"I enjoyed trying to imagine what a movie was about, and I wanted to bring that feeling back."

In a first for Miyazaki's films, which include Princess Mononoke and My Neighbour Totoro, this one also has an IMAX release.

Though Miyazaki has retired and returned several times in the past, his age has many believing this time may be for real.

"I thought his previous film was the last, then this was announced - and they say it's the last," said Rens Takahashi, 24, who works in computer graphics.

"So I was really, really looking forward to it."

No overseas release date has yet been announced.

- Reuters