Review: Spirited Away
Finally saw Spirited Away. Sadly, I was not as enamored of it as everyone else is.
It has, as one would expect from a Miyazaki film, gorgeous art, a wide variety of imaginative creatures, magic, sympathetic characters, an environmental message (much subtler than usual), and good animation. But it never really engaged me, and it felt really long—too many plots and subplots stuffed into the movie. Chihiro (the protagonist) seemed too whiny to me for the first 45 minutes or so; it made sense for the character to be scared and upset—the situation was really spooky—but I wanted the voice actor to provide slightly more range of emotion. Given that she also did the voice for Lilo in Lilo & Stitch (though I didn't recognize the voice 'til I looked her up in the IMDB), I know she's capable of a much wider range.
Miyazaki in general is kinda hit-or-miss for me. I loved the visuals and the flying parts in Nausicaä but always found the story hard to follow (though that may not be a fair assessment; I suspect it makes more sense in Japanese, and I did quite like the English-translated comic book); thought My Neighbor Totoro was charming (and loved the cat-bus); enjoyed Kiki's Delivery Service a fair bit; haven't seen more than a few minutes of Laputa or Lupin or any of the others; and I'm afraid Princess Mononoke didn't do much for me.
There were things I loved about Spirited Away, though. The soot-spiders were totally charming; I really liked Kamaji the boiler-room guy (visuals, character, physical body design, and the English voice acting by David Ogden Stiers); I liked the stop-the-frog effect used by Haku early on; lots of small nice/surreal/spooky touches throughout the movie. Certainly not bad by any means; I just didn't fall in love with it the way pretty much everyone else seems to have. I liked Lilo & Stitch more.