Pom Poko
Went straight to DVD in the US on August 16, 2005
Pom Poko. What can I say about you? This film bears one of the few immortalized Ghibli memes in my household, but for all the wrong reasons. I guess the biggest problem I have with Pom Poko is that the film is just shy of two hours, but feels like it is two decades long. When the narrator says: Year 23 of the Pom Poko Era, he means it very literally. Everyone I've shown this film to agrees - it somehow bends the laws of time and space to fit a small lifetime into its short runtime. I've only watched this film twice, and can never watch it again, because doing so would put me past retirement age and I can't live off of Social Security alone.
Whining aside, the film is an exploration of the life of the tanuki, a mythological Japanese spirit, and its struggle to acclimate to a modern society where myths have lost all relevance. The story is lukewarm, and there isn't really any meaty feels to be found here. Unless you like balls. So many balls. Seriously, Japan, what is your fascination with testicles? Referred to in the English Dub as "Raccoon Pouches", the powers of a tanuki's family jewels cannot be understated in this film. If testicle humor is your thing, but your friends want to watch a Ghibli film, then maybe this is the happy compromise? The silliness of the film really does it a lot of favors overcoming the culture barrier, but in all honesty that is the only praise I and my companions could come up with.
Plot: ★☆☆☆☆
Design: ★★★☆☆
Music: ★★☆☆☆
Scrotes: ★★☆☆☆
Final Thoughts: Tepid dismissal. This film always puts a bad taste in my mouth, because it is a prime example of why Miyazaki is more "mainstream" than Takahata. Following Grave of the Fireflies and Only Yesterday, this film leaves me wondering where Takahata's mind was when creating this film. Supposedly, Pom Poko was a huge hit in Japan, but in my mind, this may be the lowest point in his career at Ghibli.