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Grave of the Fireflies

Animation. Drama. War A Japanese boy of 14 and his 4 year old sister, attempt to seek refuge from the atrocities of World War II in the small city of Kobe. In post-World War II Japan, a janitor finds a metal sweet container beside a deathly ill boy. The janitor tosses the canister into the night, unwittingly beginning a most unusual tale of survival amid war. Brother and sister Seita and Setsuko, flee their disheveled home and deceased parents to make their ... [+]
Author Review
United StatesUnited States
Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
"An emotional experience so powerful that it forces a rethinking of animation (...) Rating: ★★★★ (out of four)"  POS
United StatesUnited States
Chicago Reader
Chicago Reader
"Takahata, a frequent collaborator of Miyazaki's at Studio Ghibli, adapted a partly autobiographical novel by Akiyuki Nosaka, and his handling of the tragic story is masterfully understated"  POS
United KingdomUnited Kingdom
The Guardian
The Guardian
"This animated Japanese masterpiece is a war story as wrenching as any live-action movie (...) There are magical moments of natural beauty and childish delight (…) Rating: ★★★★★ (out of 5)"  POS
United KingdomUnited Kingdom The Independent "It is told with remarkable and poetic restraint, as war movies go; achingly sad and hard to bear."  POS
United KingdomUnited Kingdom
Empire
Empire
"A devastating heart-stab of a movie, this certainly isn't a family film. It is, however, a beautifully constructed, animated drama (…) Rating: ★★★★ (out of 5)"  POS
United StatesUnited States
Rolling Stone
Rolling Stone
"'Grave of the Fireflies' might be the pinnacle of adults-only animation (...) The latest Pixar movie made you weepy? This one will rip your heart and soul out."  POS
United StatesUnited States
Slant
Slant
"Takahata makes survival the thematic core of the story, but he never degrades his characters or fetishizes their suffering (…) Rating: ★★★ (out of 5)"  POS
United StatesUnited States
AV Club
AV Club
"'Fireflies' makes its doomed subjects seem utterly human, with the wealth of personal details and believable characterizations common to Studio Ghibli's peerless animated film"  POS
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