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5 Sep 2012

Wolf Children

This film endorses small community values, home-schooling, and sustainable living!

Original Title: おおかみこどもの雨と雪

Director: Mamoru Hosoda

Language: Japanese

Screenplay: Mamoru Hosoda, Satoko Okudera

Cast: Aoi Miyazaki, Takao Osawa, Haru Kuroki, Yukito Nishii

A young mother recovering from the grief of losing her loving husband retreats with her children to the remote countryside to escape the prying eyes of social services and to bring up her children far away from the stresses of urban living. There in hardscrabble country, she vows to learn how to grow her own crops, bring up her children in a manner befitting of their mixed heritage, home-schooling them if need be, and to get back on her two feet with or without the help of the tight-knit rural community.

Oh. She had yiffy sex with a wolf-man and her two toddlers, the product of that union, are capable of switching between wolf and human form. There's question that looms throughout the film — will Hana be able to do justice to her children's dual heritage despite being a single, widowed mother with no male/wolf mentor figure for them to emulate? Will the children choose their human or wolf heritage or can they find a balance of both? Will they answer to the call of nature or nurture?

Sure, there's that fantastic detail but like in all of Mamoru Hosoda's socially conservative stories so far (among them The Girl Who Leapt Through Time and Summer Wars), the story is really about the bonds of family and community, of the selflessness that a healthy community showers on individuals, on the selflessness that parents shower on their children, and how individuals grow up and find maturity when they find their place in the larger community.

Unlike Summer Wars where the socially conservative message seemed preachy, the intense and heartfelt storytelling, the real drama, and the almost Miyazaki-esque ecological message of Wolf Children makes it easier to swallow.

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