Bringing it All Together
It’s no secret that I’m a pretty big fan of Hosoda’s films. I’ve written about Wolf Children at length (multiple times actually) because it has been my favorite standalone animated film for some time. Having seen all of his works, multiple times no less, I can confidently say that this latest entry was more than competent. Mirai draws a lot from the prior films, and in many ways benefits from that as a result. However, it still didn’t manage to exceed any expectations.
If I had to rank this among all of Hosoda’s other films, I’d say this ranks around 3rd place. The reason for this is mainly pacing, the film has some great moments, but how scenes flow into each other just didn’t quite work. Still, there are a lot of wonderful things to be said about this film, which is what I’d rather focus on.
For this viewing I watched Mirai with my mom as a belated Mother’s Day activity. She had enjoyed Wolf Children when we watched it a few Mother’s Days back and I figured we could probably enjoy this. I’ll include some of her thoughts on the film here-and-there as well.
What was impressive about this film was how Hosoda managed to improve on his prior movies. Nothing in Mirai is really original, it feels like a recycling of the other films, but taking mostly the best parts of each. You have the interesting time travel that The Girl Who Leapt Through Time had, various elements of The Boy and the Beast, and much more of course.
This demonstrated Hosoda’s growth in his career and I genuinely believe his next film is gonna be an impressive one if this is any indication. When viewing Mirai from this angle it leaves a better impression than it might otherwise as an isolated film.
The other aspect of the film that was done quiet well was Kun’s character. He is a bratty child who is jealous of his baby sister, the titular Mirai. GKIDS got an actual kid, Jaden Waldman, to voice Kun and that always makes a world of difference. As an audience it is easy to see why Kun behaves the way he does, so you sympathize, but he’s just obnoxious enough that you don’t exactly root for him either.
It’s a good balance that accurately reflects how kids act and think. My mother was pretty impressed with that part but she remarked that he might have been just a little too obnoxious. I can’t disagree, but considering we both have a pretty high tolerance for kids, I can only imagine how others might take to Kun.
Kun being a kid, he blends fantasy and reality together often in this film. It’s neat to see, making everything a kind of metaphysical interaction, but it can cause some parts of the film to feel slightly confusing. Not in a way that you can’t follow it, but in a way that might pull some folks out of the experience.
Both my mom and I were impressed with the time travel concept and how it brought everything together. Kun’s war-era grandpa was easily the best story in the bunch and I low-key wouldn’t have minded watching an entire film about that.
Finally, I just have to mention the train station that nightmares are made of. I saw a review before I picked this up that heavily criticized the depiction of a train station, seeing that this is a kid’s film, and I was puzzled at first. When the film got to that point, I told my mom about it and we both went, “Yeah, not seeing it.” Then… well, we got it. For us, it was very humorous, but it is the only real black mark against the film as something meant for children. It may actually be quite traumatizing for some kids.
All-in-all, Mirai has charm. It’s a solid watch if you are a fan of Hosoda at all, even more so if you are actually. While there were a few times the movie wasn’t at its best, when it wanted to deliver, it absolutely did. As a children’s film, there are a lot of solid messages here, which you ought to know by now I’m all about. You should definitely watch with younger kids, but older ones should be fine. For adults, there are some interesting things to ponder and plenty of spectacle.
Have you seen Mirai? Additionally, what Hosoda film is your favorite? Let me know in the comments! If you want to help me out and support my writing please use my Ko-fi button which you can see below. As always, thanks for reading and I hope to see you back here again soon!
I’m a really big fan of Wolf children as well,And I’ve written a double feature on werewokves and included a feature of that movie as well on my blog. I have not watched Mirai, but I feel interested to watch it now. Now, your title says mini review but you’ve put in a lot of detail! It was a really good post! Keep up the good writing and I will keep up the reading!
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Hey, thanks for stopping by! I’m always happy to see a new face. I’ll have to check your blog out after the weekend is up (bit busy and will be away until then). As for the length of the review, this is actually a small review for me. Mini reviews just mean under 1,000 total words. Though, some of my main posts still stay under this limit.
Anyway, thanks again for stopping by and I’m glad you’ve enjoyed reading up by the look of things 🙂
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Whether its the mini or the regular, they are really good! I will make sure to keep stopping by!
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Thank you so much! 🙂
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Mirai became my favorite Hosoda film just upon first viewing, my previous was Wolf Children. The soundtrack is probably one of my favorite film scores from last year – it’s so lush and bright, just like how the film looks. I loved the timeline-collage presentation of the movie, kind of unkempt and awkward, as you said, but it got its own charm. Thanks for the balanced review, made me remind myself to watch it again when I get the chance.
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Glad to hear you enjoyed it and thanks for the kind words! Hope you enjoy your rewatch just as much as your first time! 🙂
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Still waiting for the UK release to see this one. It’s coming soon I believe though…
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I’m surprised you don’t have it yet O.o
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Summer Wars was pretty good too!
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I wasn’t a huge fan of that one but I did still enjoy it 🙂
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Good review. I think it’s so strange that the same person who directed the first season of Digimon would go on to produce all these films after the fact.
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Stranger things have happened. I’m glad he did though!
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Quite true. Most of his movies came out while I had an anime fan hiatus, so I have a lot of catching up to do.
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At least they are good films and it gave you a few nice for-sure things 🙂
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Good to know. Maybe I can review one of them when I break my hiatus. We’ll see what happens.
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Let me know, I’ll check ’em out 🙂
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I really love Hosoda’s work too, and am looking forward to when I finally get to see this. As to favourites…either Wolf Children or The Girl Who Leapt Through Time.
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Hope you enjoy! A man of taste I see XD Wolf Children is soooooo good. Thanks for stopping by! 🙂
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