SPIRITED AWAY

Facts

No one knows exactly how long Chihiro was stuck in the spirit world.šŸ‘»

It seems this particular detail was left ambiguous both on-screen and off. Miyazakiā€™s right-hand man and Studio Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki reckons it was about three days, based on the dust and leaves in and around her parentsā€™ car. But itā€™s hard for anyone to know for certain ā€“ especially as the passage of time seems to change as one passes through the tunnel to the spirit world.

One location in the film was based on Yurakucho and Shinbashi.šŸ—šŸ§†

One fan asked about the inspiration behind the food stall where Chihiroā€™s parents sat down to eat at the beginning of the film. Rather than using one particular location as a model for the unmanned yatai (street stall), Miyazaki drew inspiration from the eateries and general atmosphere around Tokyoā€™s Yurakucho and Shinbashi districts.

Even the characters in the spirit world who look human probably arent!šŸ˜²

According to the studio, most of the male workers at the bathhouse are frogs while the female staff are actually slugs. The studio said this may be a reference to how the senior staff at Studio Ghibli initially all look the same to new hires. A character like Rin, who appears human to Chihiro, apparently only looks that way because sheā€™s one of Chihiroā€™s direct seniors, so Chihiro can tell her apart from all the other bosses.

There is a little No Face in all of usšŸ™ˆšŸ’€

Miyazaki reportedly created the characters of Chihiro, Yubaba and No Face to represent three different sides of a single person. No Face supposedly represents some of the darker personality traits we all struggle against, like obsession and greed. Apparently, No Face was named ā€˜No Faceā€™ to emphasise that people are multifaceted beings who are more complex than you would know judging by just one single aspect of their character.

How did Chihiro know which pigs were actually her parents at the end of the film?šŸ–šŸ™€

Ghibli wouldnā€™t give us a definite answer to this one. Instead, they pointed us in the direction of the 1971 childrenā€™s book ā€˜Krabatā€™ by Otfried Preussler. The fantasy tale is about love and black magic, and reportedly inspired the fateful test Chihiro had to pass to be reunited with her parents.

The scene where Yubaba blasts No Face was inspired by Dragon Ball!šŸ±ā€šŸ

Looking back on it now, the director canā€™t recall why he made this choice, but when making the storyboard for the scene, Miyazaki specifically added a note saying ā€˜Dragon Ball styleā€™. The point is, Yubaba may be a grandma, but sheā€™s a super powerful granny who can also fly through the air.

Chihiro and Haku could meet againšŸ’‘

Unfortunately, that doesnā€™t mean a sequel is in the works, but seeing as Haku is actually the spirit of the river from near Chihiroā€™s childhood home, the two friends could be reunited if Chihiro revisits that same river one day.