Michael Scott
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I really didn’t know what to expect from Poupelle of Chimney Town. It was from a first time director (Yusuku Hirota), and looked more like a French animation work rather than Japanese, but the story seemed intriguing from the trailer so I decided to give it a go. The story starts out simplistically and very childish, with a narrators voice cluing us into the fantastical world world of Chimney Town. A town that spat black smoke into the sky in an effort to run the economic world of the town, while telling everyone that there is nothing outside of the smokey sky. A whirlwind of magic forms a man made of trash into existence, and dumps him right into the middle of Chimney Town during a Halloween festival (the perfect cover), only to get found out and chased away by the scared town folks.
Running away into the mist, our magical trash man runs into Lubicchi, a young chimney sweet who works among the highest peaks of the city due to his father Bruno’s stories as a young boy. Bruno had claimed to have been outside of the smoke and trash that is the city and seen these mystical things called “stars” and “sky”. As his father had recently passed away, Lubicchi yearned to see the things his father told him of, even if he was pretty sure they were nothing but fantasy. However, his trip to the stars may very well become a reality when the trash man (whom he dubs “Poupelle”) runs into him and changes his life forever.
While the idea of fearing the unknown, and people in power trying to keep a populace ignorant is nothing new. We’ve see this base narrative a million times. However, it’s the way that Poupelle of Chimney Town goes about it’s narrative is what makes it truly special. The entire story focuses on looking into the unknown with gusto. Overcoming fears and searching to expand not only your knowledge, but yourself on the way to that goal. It’s what makes it change from a simple child’s story that you’d see on the Disney Channel, to something truly amazing by the time the credits rolls. There’s also a couple of twists near the end that will be certain to draw a tear, and a sense of warmth and genuine heart that is intoxicating. I won’t say the movie is as strong as last month’s Belle, but it is still one of the best animated films I’ve seen in ages.
Rating:
Not Rated by the MPAA
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• What's Next For Chimney Town — An Exclusive Interview with Creator Akihiro Nishino.
• Creator Akihiro Nishino Special Q&A — Malibu Film Society Screening
Final Score:

Poupelle of Chimney Town starts out whimsical and goofy, a pure kids move to the core, but then gets progressively more layered and deep as it goes along. I honestly didn’t know what to expect from the trailer, but this ended up being a fantastic must see film by the end. It’s sweet, heartwarming, sad, and incredibly powerful despite the simplistic basis for the story. The Blu-ray from shout Factory is great, with good video, great audio, and moderate extras. Well worth checking out.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Masataka Kubota, Mana Ashida, Shingo Fujimori, Rina Honizumi, Kazuki Lio, Jun Kunimura
Directed by: Yusuke Hirota
Written by: Akihiro Nishino (book)
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, Japanese DTS-HD MA 5.1, English, Japanese DD 2.0
Subtitles: English, English SDH
Studio: Shout Factory
Rated: NR
Runtime: 100 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: May 31st, 2022
Recommendation: Great Watch
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