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Asian cinema: Japanese films
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ReviewBerlin 2023: Suzume movie review – fantastical coming-of-age tale from Japanese animation director Makoto Shinkai is beguiling for young and old

  • Inspired by the deadly 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan, Suzume sees its titular character unwittingly trigger a disaster
  • A stranger is turned into a three-legged stool by a talking cat, and she tries to help reverse this in a film skilfully animated and fabulous to look at

2-MIN READ2-MIN
A still from Suzume by Japanese director Makoto Shinkai. Inspired by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami that struck northeast Japan, the film is in competition at the 2023 Berlin International Film Festival.
James Mottram

4/5 stars

Japanese director Makoto Shinkai delivers another beguiling animation in Suzume, a film that plays equally well for young and old.

Featured in competition at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival – an honour it well deserves – Suzume is inspired by the devastating Tohoku earthquake and tsunami that struck northeast Honshu island in Japan in 2011.

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Weaving fantasy elements into a contemporary story, one that takes audiences on a picaresque journey around Japan, Shinkai creates yet another smart, sassy look at the world around us.

As fans will no doubt know, Shinkai’s films have dealt with environmental questions before. His 2019 film Weathering With You dealt with a world battered by abnormal climate conditions.
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