Chargement...
Chargement...



Un petit monde caché… Une première découverte… Une rencontre inattendue…
Dans la banlieue de Tokyo, sous le plancher d’une vieille maison perdue au cœur d’un immense jardin, la minuscule Arrietty vit en secret avec sa famille. Ce sont des Chapardeurs. Arrietty connaît les règles : on n’emprunte que ce dont on a besoin, en tellement petite quantité que les habitants de la maison ne s’en aperçoivent pas. Plus important encore, on se méfie du chat, des rats, et interdiction absolue d’être vus par les humains sous peine d’être obligés de déménager et de perdre cet univers miniature fascinant fait d’objets détournés. Arrietty sait tout cela. Pourtant, lorsqu’un jeune garçon, Sho, arrive à la maison pour se reposer avant une grave opération, elle sent que tout sera différent. Entre la jeune fille et celui qu’elle voit comme un géant, commence une aventure et une amitié que personne ne pourra oublier…
Avis de la communauté (7)
"The Secret World of Arrietty 2010" is yet another good adventure movie from Studio Ghibli, who manages to maintain its unique artistic style throughout the years.
no bro you live in a society i live in the secret world of arrietty
A cozy, easygoing film about the tiny people who live in the walls, embarking upon overnight expeditions between floors while we sleep. Borrowing what crumbs and scraps they can, they go about their quaint, peaceful little lives, content to exist in silent parallel. Apart from the risk of being caught in the open by a hungry cat or bird, their greatest mutual fear is being noticed by the big folks. Keep your head down and the status quo might just support you forever. With a lack of major stakes, just that eternal threat of discovery, we settle in for ninety minutes of serenely observing this happy little world. Which is exactly the type of work Studio Ghibli loves to produce. Even in their most dramatic, consequential pictures, the famed Japanese animation house will habitually obsess over the little, poetic details. It’s part of what I love about them, and in this context it’s enveloping. All the fun of a concept-first story like this one lies in the minutiae, in seeing everyday items repurposed to meet smaller needs. The little clip Arrietty uses to pull her hair back. The sewing needle she modifies into a rapier. Those micro delights, plus the sense of grand exploration in a fantastical setting, are Ghibli’s bread and butter, and here, we get all we could ever ask for. _The Secret World of Arrietty_ might not be Ghibli’s most mesmerizingly beautiful film, nor their most emotionally engaging, but not everything needs to meet such lofty standards. What exists instead is an effortlessly simple, relaxing watch that doesn’t strive for more. Comfort food for the silver screen.
After 15 years primarily as an animator for Studio Ghibli, Hiromasa Yonebayashi's directoral debut is a wonderful telling of Mary Nortons classic tale. Gorgeous art direction leaves no mistake that this is Ghibli. The films sound design is incredibly detailed. The scene where Arrietty sees the kitchen for the first time and she pieces together all the sounds she has heard through the walls and the objects that make them is wonderful. Cécile Corbel music score is beautifully touching. Smaller in scope than many Studio Ghibli films it feels very much at home along side works like Ponyo and The Cat Returns.