Ghibli Museum (original) (raw)

The museum is in Mitaka, about 20 minutes from Shinjuku. Mitaka is a really nice town - not like the hustling, bustling mess of Tokyo. For example, there's a pleasant walkway along the river that has some nice greenery along it; there's no room for trees in Tokyo.

We got out of the station and saw some signs pointing to the bus to the museum. The bus was jammed with little kids, so we decided to walk along the river. It's a nice walk and only a little over a kilometer to the museum anyway.

Distance to the Museum

The walkway has some helpful animal-headed signs pointing toward the museum, telling how many more meters it is to the place.

So, after the pleasant walk, we see the ticket office:

Ticket Office

Now, after finding the real way in (the place is only by advance ticket purchase, anyway), we enter the amazing museum. We exchanged the vouchers we got from the travel company for real tickets - including a ticket (with three frames of embedded film!) for the current museum-only short film, Koro no Oosanpo (Koro's Big Stroll - no idea what the official English title is). Unfortunately, they didn't let you take pictures inside the museum, so for the indoors exhibits I'll have to use scans from the museum book.

Inside the Museum

We entered into the interestingly-designed museum and headed first to the bathrooms (hey, it was a long train ride), but... the most obvious way to them was through a door about 3 or 4 feet high...

On the main ground floor is a tiny spiral staircase (only barely enough room for one person) up to the third floor... there're things like mini-causeways across the upper floors... windows inside here and there, doors of miscellaneous sizes... stained-glass windows depicting Ghibli characters all over the place... even the fan at the ceiling's blades were shaped like airplane wings.

scan of Jesters passing their heads
scan of Jesters passing their heads

Then we headed into the main gallery, where we saw first a model of a robot from Laputa with one of those spinning cylinder things with slits in it around it to make an animation of birds flying from its hands (a big one - it went most of the way to the ceiling)... and then a bunch of exhibits, a lot of which involving strobe lights to make interesting animations... a memorable one involved a bunch of court jester-type people on a spinning circle passing their heads from one person to the next.

Then the most impressive exhibit - again involving strobe lights:

scan of Spinning model animation
scan of Spinning model animation

A whole bunch of models all attached around a pole in the center, spinning quickly around it. Each model was right in line with the next, so when a strobe light that was timed to hit each model exactly as the next one was in front of the viewer, it created the illusion of animation. There were animations of a bat flying, a Totoro jumping with an umbrella, Mei jumping rope, a running catbus, someone on a unicycle...

Then, on the second floor, there were lots of mock-ups of an animator's studio, documenting all the parts of the process. They showed storyboarding (they even let you flip through books with the complete storyboards of all their films), drawing the backgrounds, the rack of paint (hundreds of colors), the steps each cel had to go through to completion (sketching, photocopying to create black lines, drawing in lines to show where colors changed, painting in both colors separately).

Mockup of Animator's Studio

The whole area's walls were covered with drawings, watercolors, completed cels, they even drew things on the walls - windows showing into a family of pigs having dinner, a (real) desk halfway into the wall showed an animator working at it, complete with the rest of the animators working behind him. There were stacks of books everywhere too. There were some weird green models of (it looked like) green, hunched-over midgets, almost like the three green heads in Spirited Away, but these ones had bodies... they were sitting in corners on the books.

There are some doors to the outside on this floor, leading to the cafe, but I'll go there later, because I'm going in the order I walked through the museum.

Catbus (nekobasu)

Then we headed up to the third floor - via the normal staircase, not the narrow spiral one, primarily because the spiral one went only from the first to the third floor with no stop at the second. There was an interesting causeway above the staircase though - it led from the top of the spiral staircase to the third floor, but it went right above everybody on the staircase.

The third floor had another interesting large, furry creature: a catbus with screaming kids romping all over it - with their shoes off, of course. I wonder how long that thing lasts, considering the level of activity on it... It seemed to be the place where the little kids with their endless energy romped around while their tired parents took a break at the surrounding benches.

Spiral Staircase to the Roof
Spiral Staircase to the Roof

But wait! There's a door to the outside! From here, there's a view of the entrance and of another spiral staircase going up.

Interesting that the whole building almost looks like a giant, elaborate potted plant.

Entrance to the Museum
Robot from Laputa on the Roof
Robot from Laputa on the Roof
Block from Laputa on the Roof
Block from Laputa on the Roof

But what could be on the roof? A giant casting of a robot from Laputa: Castle in the Sky! There was a long line in front of the robot with people waiting to get their picture taken in front of it. A person was about as tall as a leg of the robot. There were even plants growing in various places on the sculpture!

The whole outside of the museum seemed like a garden because of the numbers of plants growing on and around it.

There was also a skylight on the roof, looking down into the fan with the airplane wings. Also, there was also a model of one of the cube-things from Laputa, off in the corner of the rooftop. (It wasn't nearly as popular as the statue of the robot, though.)

Then, after returning to the third floor, we explored the rest of the inside. There were a few rooms devoted to endless pictures of the production of Spirited Away. There was even a huge stack with piles and piles of (I believe) the cels to the movie. They took up a giant glass case in the middle of the room. The walls of the room had pictures from practically every scene to the movie.

There was also a gallery with framed cels of all of Studio Ghibli's movies. Some were replicas that one could buy (for a lot of money)... but others were originals on display.

Stuff I bought from the gift shop
Stuff I bought from the gift shop

The gift shop (Called Mamma Aiuto) was also on this floor. At the gift shop, you could buy so many different Ghibli-related things. For example, they had puzzles, a large selection of stuffed animals (including a Totoro backpack! cute!), Ghibli christmas tree ornaments, movie soundtracks, videos, and DVDs, models of various characters (including a die-cast version of the Laputa robot), figures on a string with a suction cup to put on your car window, wash cloths with characters on them, ... and so much more. A Ghibli fan's paradise... but only if you have a lot of money, which I don't.

Ghibli DVD Player

Since I went to the museum on the day of the release of Spirited Away on DVD, I bought the movie there - but since I also did not have a region 2 DVD player, I got the set with the Ghibli DVD player. (It wasn't very much more expensive than buying a region-free one here, due to the fact that the player set (¥19800, about 172)camewiththeDVD,pricedat¥4700(about172) came with the DVD, priced at ¥4700 (about 172)camewiththeDVD,pricedat¥4700(about41). And I got a ... very interesting-looking ... DVD player in the bargain. It's pretty small, too.

Rice-ball

Also, the set came with Haku's onigiri figure, a plastic model of the rice-ball that Haku gives Chihiro... I'm still scratching my head as to why people would want this...

On the other side of the third floor - the bookstore. They had all the Ghibli art books, as well as Japanese-translated classics (Sherlock Holmes, Les Miserables, etc). They also had kids' books. The most interesting book there was the Museum book - I bought a copy. It documented (with lots of pictures!) the inside of the museum where we weren't allowed to take pictures.

scan of Theater

From here, we head back to the first floor to see the museum-only short film about the little dog Koro and his adventures on a stroll. The little dog gets lost in the process, with his little-girl owner searching for him. A cute film. It had Japanese subtitles, complete with imitations of what noises the dog was making, etc. The theater was interesting - it had a painting of the sun on the ceiling, and when they dimmed the lights for the movie to start, a moon covered up the sun. Also, the windows automatically closed. (they were sort of like airplane windows)

scan of Film Ticket

The tickets were also interesting - they had three frames of film embedded in each. My scanner doesn't scan film, though, so even after touching up in Photoshop, the frame isn't very good...

There are three museum-only films: Kujiratori, Koro no Oosanpo, and Mei to konekobasu. We saw Koro no Oosanpo - the others show at different times so they can get you to come back to the museum, but I have very little chance of seeing the others unless they import them to America.

After the film, we head back to the third floor to see if we missed anything. We didn't, so...

Pig Sign

Time to head out of the museum. We head down the staircase - the atmosphere in here was a very cheerful yellow. But wait! there's a door outside - but not out of the museum. This lead to the Cafe. Unfortunately, the cafe had a very long line, so we went to the hot dog stand (which also had a very long line, but it was moving quicker). The menu and informational signs featured the typical Miyazaki pigs.

Pig Weathervane

Underneath the cafe area (the area accessible by stairs, shown in the picture of the cafe), there were some lockers for your stuff, as well as one of those religious water-purification things (with a fountain w/ cups on handles that you wash your hands in...) I have no idea what they're called, but even it had its own weathervane with a figure of a pig on it!