Venice Review: 'Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea'
Yet another fantastic film from Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli.
By Mark Salisbury

Ponyo On The Cliff By The Sea
Courtesy of the Venice Film Festival
|
|
There aren't enough superlatives to adequately describe Hayao Miyazaki's latest masterpiece, a delightfully sweet, extraordinarily imaginative Little Mermaid-esque children's fantasy. It begins with a sequence of such astonishing color and spectacle and creativity that it affixes a smile to one's face that remains firmly in place for the duration of its 101-minute running time.
Five year old Sosuke lives by the sea with his mother Lisa who works in the local old people's center. (His father is a ship's captain who seems permanently at sea.) One day, while playing by the shore, Sosuke discovers a small goldfish whom he names Ponyo. But Ponyo isn't just any fish. Having escaped from her sorcerer father's underwater lair and after sampling a few drops of Sosuke's blood from a cut on a finger, some ham, and a dose of his love, Ponyo decides to become human, the consequences of which put not only her life at risk but those of Sosuke's entire community.
Armed with such a simple narrative, Miyazaki orchestrates a riot of bright colour and unbridled imagination, populating his triumphant, idiosyncratic vision with a plethora of charming characters and whimsical sea creatures that appear to have sprung wholly into existence from the mind of a five-year-old with a particular fondness for prehistorical monsters. There are nods too to environmental issues and a sly, subversive streak, plus a peculiarly Japanese sense of morality (Sosuke's mother drives her car way too fast, often putting herself and her son in jeopardy, and has a fondness for cracking open a can of beer when stressed) but this is another memorable and wondrous film from an animation master who, at age 67, is at the peak of his game.
|