When it comes to animated movies, people love to tout Pixar movies as the cream of the crop. However, while Pixar has released some tremendous films and deserves all the credit they receive, they are still not the best of the best. That is reserved for the animated output from Hayao Miyazaki.
The legendary Japanese animator and storyteller started as a television director back in 1971. He then transitioned into one of the best-animated filmmakers in the world over the next three decades. Even his worst movies are better than many studio's best efforts. With so much greatness to choose from, here is a look at the 10 best Miyazaki films of all time.
Updated May 20th, 2020, by Shawn S. Lealos: When looking at the world of Hayao Miyazaki, everyone sees the main theatrical releases and considers that the best of his work. However, when digging deeper into the filmography of the brilliant filmmaker, there is so much more to discover. This even includes some groundbreaking short films. We went out and found five more great Miyazki films to add to the list for the ultimate viewing experience to celebrate this great animator's illustrious career.
THE DAY I HARVESTED A STAR (2006)
In 2006, Mizaki wrote and directed the short film The Day I Bought a Star, and it became an exclusive short for the Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, Tokyo. In this 16-minute short, Miyazaki tells the story of a young boy named Nono, who makes a living by selling vegetables. After he treated his vegetables one day for a tiny seed, he plants it, and a planet grows from the flower pot, with an atmosphere and life forming on it.
CONAN THE FUTURE BOY: THE BIG GIANT ROBOT'S RESURRECTION (1984)
This movie is a unique addition to the list, as it is just three episodes of the 1978 television show by Miyazaki titles Future Boy Conan. It also omits part of the final episode to avoid confusing viewers with characters who appeared early in the series. With that said, the story follows the aftermath of a war that caused several earthquakes and turned most of the world into water. The hero is a young boy named Conan and a girl he meets named Lana and their battle against the evil Industria.
MEI AND THE KITTENBUS (2002)
Anyone who loved My Neighbor Totoro got a special treat in 2002. Released 14 years after Miyazaki's groundbreaking anime, Mei and the Kittenbus is the 13-minute sequel that fans had been waiting for. Chika Sakamoto returned to voice Mei once again, and Miyazaki both wrote and directed the followup. The film follows the adventures of Mei over one night with the offspring of Catbus, the Kittenbus. The film is shown regularly at the Ghibli Museum.
BORO THE CATERPILLAR (2018)
While The Wind Rises was the last film that Hayao Miyazaki made before his retirement, the bug to make animated films never left him. In 2018, at the age of 77, Miyazaki created the animated short film Boro the Caterpillar. The film was screened at the Ghibli Museum and is about a hatched caterpillar making his first steps into the world. The film is experimental, has no dialogue whatsoever, and comedian Tamori created all sounds and audio effects.
NAUSICAA OF THE VALLEY OF THE WIND (1984)
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind was what Miyazaki worked on following his debut film Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro. This was the first anti-war film that the filmmaker made. The story starts up a thousand years after a global war that wiped out almost the entire world. In a world polluted by toxic air and poisonous seas, a heroine named Nausicaä rises to lead her people in a fight to regain their bond to the Earth.
Kiki's Delivery Service (1989)
Released in 1989, Kiki's Delivery Service was the first Miyazaki movie that came after he received worldwide accolades for My Neighbor Totoro. With this movie, he proved that he was not a one-hit-wonder; he was a master of many different styles of storytelling.
When it comes to this film, Miyazaki told a smaller coming-of-age story about Kiki, a 13-year-old witch who has to spend a year living on her own before she can continue training. When she starts to lose her powers after falling into depression, she has to overcome her insecurities and find her place in the world.
Spirited Away (2001)
Possibly the most popular of the Miyazaki movies for mainstream audiences is Spirited Away. Released in 2001, Spirited Away is Miyazaki taking on the themes of a classic fairy tale but doing it in a way that is wholly and completely unique. Spirited Away is about a girl named Chihiro and her parents, who are turned into pigs.
They end up in a universe that is completely the opposite of the world in which she came from. When she ends up forced to battle malevolent spirits, she realizes the horror and has to grow up fast in order to survive. The movie won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature and sits at the top of many fan's lists of the best Miyazaki movies.
Castle In The Sky (1986)
Released in 1986, Castle in the Sky was the first Miyazaki movie produced by Ghibli Studio. The movie is also his first truly great film and is one of the most exciting and adventurous movies that the filmmaker ever created. The movie features two kids; a girl with the power to float in the air and a boy who wants to find the flying city of Laputa.
The two head off together on their adventure with evil government agencies and space pirates standing in their way. This might not be the most beautiful or artistic film he ever created, but this is Miyazaki thrilling audiences with one of the most entertaining stories of his long and successful career.
Porco Rosso (1992)
Most Miyazaki movies have one thing in common: a love of flying and adventures through the air. Porco Rosso, released in 1992, lives in that world. The hero of the movie is Porco, who happens to be a pig that is an aviation ace. That might make this one of the most bizarre movies of Miyazaki's career, but it is no different than any other animation studio's talking animal movies.
Porco is basically an antihero in the film noir sense; a hero who is only out for himself but soon realizes that he is on a crash course to save others. He is like a pig-Han Solo. There is also the fact that Porco used to be human but was cursed to live life in the body of a walking, airplane flying pig. This only adds to the depth that Miyazaki fans are used to.
My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
My Neighbor Totoro is the Miyazaki movie that put the filmmaker on the map. Released in 1988, the animator had already made some great movies but it was this one that crossed over and took America by storm. The movie is so iconic that the character of Totoro—the giant rabbit/cat hybrid thing—is the Studio Ghibli symbol.
The movie takes place in Japan after World War II and follows a small family in a rural village. The two daughters discover a magical world all around them, including new friends like Totoro. The movie was groundbreaking and influenced so much of what came later — especially the animation studio Pixar.