According to Japanese anime director Makoto
Shinkai, his latest film Children who Chase Lost
Voices from Deep Below is a study of “how people
are connected” and the relationship between
individuals. Although the film is designed
primarily for a young audience, adult themes of
love and loss abound in its story of mourning
lovers attempting to reach out to them across
the dimensions. Its theme can also be said to
encompass the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism:
Life is full of suffering, suffering is caused
by attachment, release from suffering is
attainable, and there is a path to the end of
suffering. Here, the path is setting your loved
one free and “saying hello” to a world without
them.
Nominated for best animated feature at the Asian
Pacific Screen Awards in 2011, the film takes us
on a journey to a land deep below the surface of
the Earth, the legendary country called Agartha
where it is rumored the dead can be brought back
to life. Unlike other visionary depictions of
mythical kingdoms, Agartha has no magical cities
of gold with tall towers and futuristic
technology, but rather a rural environment of
towns and villages in which mundane life appears
similar to those who are called the “topsiders”,
those who live on the surface (us).
Supported by the ethereal soundtrack of Tenmon
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpRFbY189bo, the
plot centers around the quest of a young girl of
around 11 or 12 named Asuna Watase (Hisako
Kanamoto) to find the mythical Agartha, talked
about by her substitute teacher, Ryugi Morisaki
(Kazuhiko Inoue). Mirroring the Greek legend of
Orpheus and Eurydice and its Japanese
equivalent, the myth of Izanagi and Izanami,
Morisaki longs to travel to Agartha to find his
deceased wife Lisa and bring her back with him
to Earth. Asuna has also lost a loved one. Her
father died when she was little, compelling her
mother to work long hours as a nurse. Lonely and
withdrawn, she spends her time after school in
her private mountain retreat listening to the
crystal radio her father had given her.
One day, after hearing beautiful and strange
music from her radio, she meets a young boy with
supernatural powers named Shun (Miyu Irino), who
saves her from the attack of a ferocious
bear-like creature. Returning the next day, Shun
tells her that he is from Agartha, a land deep
inside the core of the hollow Earth. Surprised
by a blessing from Shun in the form of a kiss on
the forehead, Asuna leaves suddenly but when she
comes back the following day, she learns sadly
that Shun, while trying to reach for the stars,
has fallen off a ledge and died.
Telling her story to Mr. Morisaki, the teacher
informs her that in the ancient times, humans
were guided by creatures known as
“Quetzalcoatls,” a name we know from
Mesoamerican history as the Aztec God called the
“Feathered Serpent” who, according to legend,
promised to return one day to lead his people.
When Asuna once again returns to her hiding
place, she discovers a boy who looks like Shun
but who claims to be his brother Shin (Irino).
Morisaki poses as a warrior of the group called
the Arch Angels, those who want to reach Agartha
but are interested only in its wealth and
superior knowledge. Morisaki, however, simply
wants to find his dead wife Lisa.
Using a device known as a “clavis,” he and Asuna
enter the underground realms and begin their
travel to the Gate of Life and Death, “the
undiscovered country from whose bourn no
traveler returns.” The journey through the
subterranean realms is filled with both beauty
and the obligatory horror, the norm for sci-fi
adventure stories for children. Asuna and
Morisaki are attacked by fearful long-toothed
monsters (children must have their nightmares),
and have to rely on the powers of Shin to save
them, even though he had been given the task of
retrieving the “clavis” which they possess.
The remainder of the film is filled with
numerous plot twists and turns that introduce
other characters and some of it can be
confusing. The viewer is treated, however, to
ravishing visuals that invoke the experience of
dimensions far beyond our limited reality.
Ultimately, Morisaki and Asuna are forced to
choose whether or not they wish to pursue their
goal in Agartha or let go and surrender to the
wisdom of the universe, and the theme song of
the film by Anri Kumaki, “Hello, Goodbye and
Hello,”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgWb2YSTovA
exquisitely embraces the conflicting emotions
the characters feel.
Whether or not you have recently lost a loved
one, you may find the tears hard to resist. Lost
Voices is the first of Shinkai's films that I
have seen and it definitely encourages me to see
more. Comparisons of Shinkai's themes and style
have been made with those of Hayao Miyazaki, but
since I have only seen one of Miyazaki's films,
I will leave the comparisons to others and just
enjoy the warm glow of Shinkai's stunning
achievement.
GRADE: A-