

For all that Arrietty Clock (voiced by Bridgit Mendler) knows, her family may be the last of its kind, a lost little world in a land of giants. Arrietty is well worth your time, but only once you’ve made it through the rest of the Ghibli library.The wee folk beneath the floorboards in the wistful animated children’s film “The Secret World of Arrietty” don’t get underfoot: they scramble and hide, if less like scattering mice and more like practiced explorers. There’s a nice set of bonus features included on this one, including two interviews – one with Miyazaki, and one with the director – which are new to this release, as well as a feature-length storyboards gallery and music video. English dub – featuring Amy Poehler, Will Arnett, and Carol Burnett – which was assembled by Disney. GKIDS’ new Blu-ray release of the film comes with the original, Japanese-language audio track, as well as the U.S. It’s still a good movie and one that children will probably enjoy watching over and over, but judging it among the other Studio Ghibli films that are part of this reissue campaign – a few of which are among the greatest animated films of all time, mind you – it falls into a very perceptible lower tier. (Arrietty’s miniature size lends itself to some clever moments, but the scale isn’t something we haven’t seen before in other animated worlds, from The Rescuers to Toy Story to Chip and Dale to Fern Gully.) Or, maybe it’s missing a bit of the Miyazaki touch: the brilliant director passed off his script to animator Hiromasa Yonebayashi shortly after the project was announced. Perhaps it’s because the story is nothing out-of-the-ordinary (a brave young heroine learns to trust an outsider), or perhaps it’s because the setting doesn’t feel nearly as fantastic or magical as most of Studio Ghibli’s productions. Inspired by the classic children’s novel, The Borrowers, by Mary Norton, Studio Ghibli’s adaptation of Arrietty’s tale feels oddly traditional. He only wants to befriend Arrietty, but being seen by a human could put the borrowers’ whole existence in danger. A sick, young human boy moves into their host’s house he has heard stories of the “tiny people” who live under the floorboards from his mother and grandfather. She and her family only stand roughly three inches tall their people – if there are more of them – refer to themselves as “borrowers.” They’ve survived for generations by taking only the things they need to survive from their human hosts’ homes: things like sugar cubes, biscuits, or tissues, which won’t be missed. Thirteen-year-old Arrietty lives with her mother and father in the walls of a sprawling country manor.
