WRITER, FILMMAKER, SCRIPT EDITOR

Thursday, 25 August 2016



Originally released in 1991, Studio Ghibli’s Only Yesterday, based on the manga of the same name, only received an English dub this year, featuring the voices of Daisy Ridley and Dev Patel.

Set in 1982, Isao Takahata's story sees 27-year-old Taeko (Ridley) take a break from her busy Tokyo job to visit distant relatives in the countryside. Here she meets Toshio (Patel), who left his office job to run an organic farm. As she helps out on the farm and bonds with Toshio, Taeko’s childhood memories are stirred.

The film takes a thoughtful tone, lingering on the details of Taeko’s nostalgia as her past informs her present and she begins to wonder whether she’s happy in her big city life. This allows the story to explore a range of themes, including the disparity between the countryside and the city and the role of women in Japanese society. It also has a lot to say about organic farming processes. Well, Toshio does. It’s all he seems to talk about, and the film forgets to be subtle about this. Believable, emotional conversations are sometimes ruined when he butts in with a non-sequiter about organic farming.

Despite this, though, it’s a beautifully constructed movie. The animation is as gorgeous as you’d expect from a Studio Ghibli movie, with equal attention paid to character design and expression as to the bustle of the city and the bright colours of the rural landscapes. Patel and Ridley both give sensitive, charming performances, though it is a shame that Ridley unnecessarily puts on an American accent. 

In certain moments, such as when Taeko’s memory of falling for a boy at school turns into her imagining herself flying, all the film’s themes and stylistic quirks come together to create something truly captivating. The joy of Only Yesterday lies in these moments and the way they’re juxtaposed against perfectly captured normality.

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