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The Boy and the Heron

2023 · Directed by Hayao Miyazaki

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Woke Score

91

Critic

🍿78

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 87 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #109 of 1469.

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Representation Casting

Score: 0/100

The entirely Japanese cast reflects the film's setting but demonstrates no deliberate contemporary diversity strategy or casting beyond narrative authenticity.

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LGBTQ+ Themes

Score: 0/100

No LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes appear in the narrative.

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Feminist Agenda

Score: 5/100

The stepmother Natsuko is capable and nurturing, though the character exists to serve the protagonist's emotional arc rather than to advance feminist ideology.

Racial Consciousness

Score: 0/100

The film's WWII Japanese setting does not engage with contemporary racial consciousness frameworks or reframe history through modern social justice lenses.

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Climate Crusade

Score: 0/100

No environmental themes, climate concerns, or ecological consciousness appear in the film.

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Eat the Rich

Score: 0/100

The narrative contains no critique of capitalism, wealth inequality, or economic systems.

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Body Positivity

Score: 0/100

No themes related to body image, size acceptance, or body positivity appear in the work.

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Neurodivergence

Score: 0/100

No neurodivergent characters or conditions are represented or discussed in the film.

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Revisionist History

Score: 0/100

The film focuses on personal narrative and psychological transformation rather than reframing historical events through contemporary progressive frameworks.

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Lecture Energy

Score: 5/100

Philosophical dialogue about life, death, and transformation exists but remains integrated into character development rather than becoming preachy exposition.

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Synopsis

While the Second World War rages, the teenage Mahito, haunted by his mother's tragic death, is relocated from Tokyo to the serene rural home of his new stepmother Natsuko, a woman who bears a striking resemblance to the boy's mother. As he tries to adjust, this strange new world grows even stranger following the appearance of a persistent gray heron, who perplexes and bedevils Mahito, dubbing him the "long-awaited one."

Consciousness Assessment

The Boy and the Heron stands as a meditation on grief and transformation that operates largely outside the vocabulary of contemporary progressive cultural consciousness. Miyazaki constructs a narrative centered on a teenage boy processing maternal loss during wartime, a deeply personal rather than socially prescriptive endeavor. The film's emotional architecture relies on universal human experiences, particularly the ways trauma reshapes our understanding of identity and belonging.

What distinguishes this work is its refusal to instrumentalize its historical setting or its emotional content for contemporary ideological purposes. The stepmother figure functions as a nurturing presence without becoming a vehicle for feminist messaging, and the film's philosophical dimensions emerge organically from its narrative rather than being imposed upon it. The magical realism serves the story's psychological needs rather than any external agenda.

This is not a film that resists contemporary social consciousness markers out of reactionary impulse, but rather one that exists in a different register altogether. It is a work of profound artistic maturity that suggests the most durable storytelling transcends the cultural moment in which it is created. The Academy's recognition of this film with the Best Animated Feature award indicates a momentary alignment between Miyazaki's vision and institutional taste, though the work itself remains indifferent to such classifications.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

91%from 55 reviews
IndieWire100

While this dream-like warble of a swan song may be too pitchy and scattered to hit with the gale-force power that made “The Wind Rises” feel like such a definitive farewell, The Boy and the Heron finds Miyazaki so nakedly bidding adieu — to us, and to the crumbling kingdom of dreams and madness that he’ll soon leave behind — that it somehow resolves into an even more fitting goodbye, one graced with the divine awe and heart-stopping wistfulness of watching a true immortal make peace with their own death.

David EhrlichRead Full Review →
The Playlist100

The Boy and the Heron is Miyazaki’s strong-willed encouragement for us to persevere. If this is, in fact, a swan song, then it’s a ravishing one because no one has the ability to distill elemental truths into vividly rendered moving paintings like Miyazaki.

Carlos AguilarRead Full Review →
New York Magazine (Vulture)100

The Boy and the Heron is irresistible in its dream logic, straddling the adorable (white blob creatures called Warawara that inflate like balloons) and the dark (parakeet soldiers that are on the search for fresh meat). But what makes it most compelling are the ways in which the real and the magical are equal presences.

Alison WillmoreRead Full Review →
The Observer (UK)60

The lush orchestral score, by regular Miyazaki collaborator Joe Hisaishi, is shimmering and exultant. All the elements are in place. So it seems almost churlish to note that this is middling Miyazaki at best.