Japanese film-maker Hosoda tackles anime's problem with girls

Belle is animation director Mamoru Hosoda's riposte, a spectacular dive into the roller-coaster emotional life of a shy adolescent girl called Suzu. PHOTO: AFP

CANNES (AFP) - Mamoru Hosoda has a bone to pick with both Steven Spielberg and Hayao Miyazaki, the other great Japanese animator whom he is often compared with.

Hosoda - whose brilliantly humane Mirai (2018) got an Oscar nod three years ago - has had enough of the way Hollywood treats the digital world and how Miyazaki depicts women.

The dystopian tropes about the Internet that run through so many movies, including Spielberg's Ready Player One (2018), are not doing anyone any favours, particularly women, said Hosoda at the Cannes film festival, where his latest feature Belle premiered.

First reviews of the movie were ecstatic, with The Hollywood Reporter saying its "wildly imaginative futureworld takes your breath away" as the story rises to a "series of swelling emotional crescendos" that are always rooted in real emotion.

Hosoda, who has a young daughter, said he wants to empower her generation to take control of their digital destinies rather than cower in fear. "They have grown up with the Net... yet are constantly told how malevolent and dangerous it is," he said.

Belle is his riposte, a spectacular dive into the roller-coaster emotional life of a shy adolescent girl called Suzu, in a 21st-century take on Beauty And The Beast.

To her surprise and everyone else's, Suzu becomes a pop star called Belle in the virtual universe of an app called U. Rather than being burned by online abuse and harassment as she acquires millions of followers, Suzu uses her online avatar to overcome the haters and her own hang-ups.

Hosoda said: "Human relations can be complex and extremely painful for young people. I wanted to show that this virtual world, which can be hard and horrible, can also be positive."

Suzu and her computer-geek friend are far from the women that usually populate Japanese anime - which is where Hosoda takes issue with Miyazaki, the Oscar-winning legend behind classics such as Spirited Away (2001).

"You only have to watch Japanese animation to see how young women are underestimated and not taken seriously in Japanese society," he said.

Hosoda, whose films are more grounded in social realities than Miyazaki's, was brought up by a single mother, a rarity at the time. His 2012 classic Wolf Children is a paean to the fierce independence with which she brought up her little pack alone.

"It really annoys me to see how young women are often seen in Japanese animation - treated as sacred - which has nothing to do with the reality of who they are," Hosoda said, with evident frustration.

Without naming Miyazaki, he was unsparing about the Studio Ghibli founder. "I will not name him, but there is a great master of animation who always takes a young woman as his heroine. And to be frank, I think he does it because he does not have confidence in himself as a man," said Hosoda.

"This veneration of young women really disturbs me and I do not want to be part of it."

He wants to free his heroines from being paragons of virtue and innocence and "this oppression of having to be like everyone else".

Hosoda and Miyazaki have history. The 53-year-old was seen as the natural successor to Miyazaki after he was called in from the outside by Ghibli to direct the Oscar-nominated Howl's Moving Castle (2004). But Hosoda walked out midway to set up his own studio.

He prefers stories that "show the good and the bad in people. This tension is what being human is all about". Which is why he was also drawn to bringing Beauty And The Beast up to date.

"In the original story, the Beast is the most interesting character. He is ugly and has this violence, but he is sensitive and vulnerable inside too," said Hosoda.

"Beauty is just a cipher. It is all about her looks. I wanted to make her as complex and rich."

That duality is also there in his fascination with the digital world that began with his first hit, Digimon: The Movie (2000). "I keep returning to the Internet. First, with Digimon, and then with Summer Wars in 2009 and now again."

And he is more convinced than ever that people cannot keep dismissing the Internet as the source of all evil. "Young people can never separate themselves from it. They grew up with it. We have to accept it and learn to use it better."

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