I have seen this film three times. I will never watch it again. But I am grateful it exists. It is one of the greatest war films ever made—indeed, one of the greatest films, period. See it once. Bring no children. Bring no snacks. Bring only the knowledge that animation is not a genre, but an art form capable of expressing the deepest registers of human pain.
BY ROGER EBERT / April 8, 1988
The story is brutally simple. After their mother is horrifically burned to death in a firebombing—her bandaged, maggot-ridden body a shocking image for any medium, let alone animation—Seita and Setsuko move in with a distant aunt. The aunt is not a monster. She is worse: she is practical. As rations shrink and the war effort fails, her kindness curdles into passive-aggressive resentment. “You eat our rice but do nothing for the war,” she seethes. Seita, too proud and too young to beg, takes his sister to live in an abandoned bomb shelter. grave of the fireflies roger ebert
We open in a crowded train station. A young boy, ragged and skeletal, leans against a pillar. He is dying. A janitor approaches, finds a candy tin, and tosses it into a field. From the tin, a small, ghostly firefly rises. So begins the memory of Seita, a teenager trying to keep his little sister, Setsuko, alive in the final months of World War II. I have seen this film three times