I think Studio Ghibli’s greatest strength lies in its ability to have something that initially feels like there really isn’t any story there, and make it so that you can connect with the characters on such a level where you can feel their hardships; even if the character happens to be a witch who is terrible at making potions, casting spells, and generally being a witch. The writing prowess of the Studio Ghibli staff makes this relation seem completely conventional, in that even though I have nothing in common with the character on-screen, given the bizarre circumstances of their lives I can still put myself in their position regardless of how ludicrous their position is. This is a pretty common characteristic of the Studio Ghibli filmography. It’s one we’ve come to know and love and seems to transcend the basic nature of the plots and the over-the-top nature of the circumstances. Anyway, back to Kiki.
“Kiki’s Delivery’s Service” is a sweet little film that got its original release in Japan back in 1989. You wouldn’t be able to tell given the quality of the breathtaking animation, but that’s for later on. Kiki is a young witch who isn’t that good at being, well, a witch. She can’t make potions, she can’t cast spells, but the one thing she can do is fly to her heart’s content. She leaves her family in order to find a town where they don’t have a witch with her sarcastic pet cat Jiji. They’re the only ones with onomatopoeic names so at least this review won’t drive me up the wall. I would also like to point out how happy I am to write the phrase “sarcastic pet cat” and be completely serious, but such is the nature of the beast when dealing with Studio Ghibli.
Let’s get the obvious out of the way early. The animation is absolutely, positively, categorically, unquestionably, adjectively stunning. I expect nothing less from the animation masters themselves at Studio Ghibli. Seriously, all their films are sinfully astonishing when it comes to how they look and this is no exception. Whether it’s a bird way off in the horizon or a massive set piece crashing to the Earth, everything looks like hundreds of man-hours went in to creating every stroke of a pencil and every dash of colour. The movement is as seamless as a ballet and one questions how the animators even get their characters to move like that.
“Kiki’s Delivery Service” is a great addition to Studio Ghibli’s collection of masterpieces and serves as a great example of less is more.
– by Paul O’Connor