My Conspiracy Theory Nut Neighbor, Totoro

Who loves Studio Ghibli? They’re the studio that brought the world films like “Princess Mononoke,” “My Neighbor Totoro,” and “Spirited Away.” I would guess that quite a few of you cried out “ME!” to your smartphones and computers in answer to this question. I would say the same thing too. I grew up watching Ghibli films. Characters like Totoro, the Little Dust Bunnies, and Kiki have always stuck with me, even to this day. The animation and musical scores are always beautiful, not to mention the stories themselves!

So now you know that I love Ghibli films just as much as you guys, but here’s my question: How many of you have ever been scared of Studio Ghibli? How many of you have heard of Totoro’s urban legend and / or Ghibli’s Curse? Regardless of whether or not you know about them (or believe in them), I personally have literally shuddered and trembled because of them. Ready for some ghost stories? C’mere, gather around my camp fire to stay awhile and listen…

“My Neighbor Totoro”

totoro

One of my favorite Ghibli films, 隣のトトロ (Tonari no Totoro / My Neighbor Totoro), has a deep and dark secret. Before we get into that, though, let’s take a look at its fun, friendly plot! Many of you guys probably know of it already, but let me introduce it to you anyways. The story is about two young girls, Satsuki and her little sister, Mei. They move into a house in the countryside with their father to be closer to their mother, who is sick and hospitalized. Then, they discover magical creatures called Totoros inhabiting the nearby forest. They become friends with the Totoros and have magical adventures.

Just to be sure, I’d like to explain that Totoro is not a Japanese traditional character but rather a creation of Hayao Miyazaki. They look like a mixture of several animals: (fukuro / owls), (neko / cats), and (tanuki / raccoon dogs). They are so cute and one of my favorite characters in all Ghibli films. These cuddly creatures seem to be called many names varying from “a giant furry thing” to “a rabbit like spirit.”

totoro-cat-owl-tanuki

One day, though, I found out that the name “Totoro” comes from when Mei mispronounces the word トロール (tororu), the Japanese word for “troll.” It seems so clear watching the movie now, but as a kid I didn’t realize this because the Totoro is so cute! Of course, I was shocked and thought, “TROLL???” My image for trolls wasn’t cute at all. Instead, they were large, stupid, hairy, long-nosed, horned, and creepy bug-eyed creatures.

But, if Totoro is a troll, at least in the eyes of a child, what else could it be? Maybe the child didn’t know better, so she called it a “troll” when it was something else. But what else? Some people out there think that the Totoros are 死神 (shinigami), aka “Gods Of Death.” Considering how often Hayao Miyazaki puts hidden meanings into his Ghibli films, I think it is possible. If you keep reading, you’ll see why other people think this, too.

The Sayama Incident

sayama-incident

It has been said that My Neighbor Totoro is actually based on a famous murder case called “The Sayama Incident.” This case occurred on May 1, 1963 in Sayama City, Saitama Prefecture, Japan, when a man kidnapped, raped, and killed a 16-year-old high school girl. Although a suspect was arrested and imprisoned for 31 years, he claimed that he was arrested, wrongfully convicted, and the police failed to catch the real murderer when they had the chance. He also claimed official discrimination against Japan’s 部落民 (burakumin), a social minority in Japanese society. He was paroled and released from prison in 1994, but he still remains guilty and continues to seek a fair trial for the chance to clear his name.

Let’s get back to the connection between the Sayama incident and My Neighbor Totoro, though. Why do people think that this film is related to the Sayama Incident? Why do they think that Totoro represents the God of Death? Here are a few theories:

The Month Of May

The first clue for this conspiracy theory is that both of the sisters’ names related to “May,” the month that the Sayama incident occurred in. The older sister’s name “Satsuki” means “May” in Japanese and the younger sister’s name “Mei” is pronounced just like the English word “May.”

Sayama City

The model of the house from the film is located in 狭山丘陵 (Sayama Kyuryo), which means “Sayama Hills,” and the movie’s location was inspired by Tokorozawa-city, which is next to Sayama City where the incident took place. This all explains why it’s called “My Neighbor,” right? But, the town in the film is in Sayama. Here’s the first clue:

sayama-tea

On the box behind the old lady it says “Sayama Tea.” Hmm, suspicious, but not damning. Here’s another clue:

hospital

The hospital in the film, 七国病院 (shichikoku byouin) had a real-life counterpart in Sayama, called the 八国病院 (hachikoku byouin). Only one number apart. Coincidence? Probably not. This hospital was supposedly located in the same place as portrayed movie.

Suicide

The girl who was killed in Sayama had an older sister who loved her little sister so much that she committed suicide after her death. It’s said that the older sister was seeing big raccoon or cat-like ghosts before she killed herself, due to so much stress. The Totoros could have been inspired by this. It could be interpreted that Satsuki did the same in the film, though we’ll talk about that in just a second.

Soot Sprites (Susuwatari)

susuwatari

Early in the film the girls see these things, which apparently in Japanese folklore mean you’re about to die. Not a good sign. They also appear later, when Satsuki tries to join her sister in death (whoops, spoilers, okeep reading).

Seeing The Totoros

If you can see the Totoros (aka the God of Death), it means that you’re either dead or almost dead. Kanta, the old lady’s grandson couldn’t see the Totoros even though he was a kid (supposedly kids can see the magic things, though in this case he couldn’t). Yet, the two girls could see them. Remember when Mei goes missing and her slipper is found in the pond? Supposedly Mei actually drowned here. Ruh roh. Actually, though, the slipper is not hers (if you compare slipper pics). So, could this be a representation of something? Or, does it debunk all of these conspiracies? I’m sure you’ll have an opinion on the matter.

Knocking On Death’s Door

So, in this theory, Mei is dead. Satsuki goes to look for her, and opens death’s door, going inside. She’s so wrought with grief that she joins her sister in death, which emulates the girl’s suicide in the Sayama Incident. Remember the susuwatari? They come back during this sequence. Death is not far away… she’s running right into it!

susuwatari

When she’s crossed over to the other side, the Totoro then helps Satsuki to find her sister in dead-land, and then they later go visit their mother. Strangely, nobody notices they were there except for their mother, who is dying. “I felt Satsuki and Mei just laughed near the tree,” the mother said.

nekobus-hospital

This suggests they came to say goodbye before heading off to heaven in their Cat Bus. Speaking of cat buses…

Neko Bus

Some people think the Neko (Cat) Bus is a 1-way trip to heaven (or maybe hell). While I don’t know about this, one of the stops on the Neko Bus is “grave road,” so that sounds pretty must like dead people ride it to me.

grave-road

Shadows

In the ending scene, Mei and Satsuki don’t have shadows. Only dead people don’t have shadows (for some unknown reason).

There is a lot more of this, but this set of gifs summarizes most of the points. Gifs make everything more understandable, right? Prepare for your childhood to be torn straight from your hearts.

tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo10_r1_250tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo13_r1_250
tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo23_r1_250tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo22_r1_250
tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo15_r1_250tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo16_r1_250
tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo17_r1_250tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo18_r1_250
tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo19_r1_250tumblr_mg4mlemHpE1rh8tulo20_r1_250

This conspiracy theory has been around for a long time, actually. It got really heated on the internet, and then finally Ghibli had to make an official statement. In 2007, they did just that, denying that the urban legend was true.

“No need to be alarmed. There is absolutely no truth or configuration that Totoros are the Gods of Death or that Mei is dead in My neighbor Totoro.” – said Studio Ghibli

Still, when I was reading this everything made sense and it caused me to shudder and tremble when I thought about it. Who thought a children’s movie could have such scary undertones! So, who’s telling the truth? It seems like there’s a lot here that makes sense. But, people will read into just about anything too much from time to time. Were you convinced either way? Or do you think it’s just a silly story that someone made up. I think that Miyazaki likes to put hidden meanings in his films so… who knows.

[hr]

Bonus Wallpapers

totoro-conspiracy-animated-700

[2560x1600] • [1280x800] • [1280x800 Animated] • [700x438 Animated]

[hr]

Sources: sukekomashi gaijin

  • NegaJun
  • Mami

    Really, eh? I think I should watch the movie again. Now I learned more things about the conspiracy, so I’d like to watch the movie again with all the theories like you did.

  • Beetle BANE

    I really enjoy conspiracy theories behind cutesy childhood media. Didn’t know this one before, but this makes Totoro so exciting and even more awesome. Somehow, the more grim the conspiracy gets, the more decadent it becomes <3

  • Sonali Nahata

    Haha… And I read somewhere that Hayao Miyazaki based Mei’s character on his own niece… I don’t think he would want to kill off that character

  • Sonali Nahata

    But their mom also says “The kids must be worried” after the whole telegram thing… I don’t think she’s assuming her dead kids to be worried :P

  • Ash

    I wish but my parents wanna watch it too so probably in English ;)

  • Mami

    I agree too. That’s why I love ghibli!

  • http://www.tofugu.com koichi

    or would he? dun dun dunnnn.

  • Mami

    Wow, I like it! haha so cute. I’d like to believe it too. hahaah

  • Mami

    Thank you. I’m glad that you enjoyed it!

  • Mami

    I see I see. Ummmmm…I’d say that if they are not really fun of animations, you may want to tell them beforehand to make them more interested in the movie. X)

  • Mami

    oh, it’s ‘U’ not ‘A’! dun dun dunnnnn
    I assume i wrote ‘da da da daaaaaan’ in ローマ字.

  • http://www.bloodstripewife.wordpress.com/ bloodstripewife

    Agreed. In the credits there’s this whole sequence where their mom gets better and has another baby, and it shows them all romping etc. While I think the death theory is very creative, ultimately I think the credits ending implies life moved forward.

  • Dylan

    If you watch Grave of the Fireflies backwards and skip the intro, it’s an uplifting story about people coming back to life and getting healthier as a war declines.

  • Mami

    It was the first movie to make me cry. It’s not aired on tv as much as other Ghibli films because the trade mark issue for Sakuma drops(sakuma shiki drops).

    Before WW2 Sakuma seika made Sakuma drops and they get really popular

    During WW2 No sugar …they went out of business

    After WW2

    Previous president’s kid started Sakuma Seika, whereas previous workers started Sakuma Seika in a different place

    They took into the court to figure out which one is actual Sakuma seika.
    The previous workers won.

    Pervious worker:佐久間製菓(sakuma seika):サクマ式ドロップス (sakuma shiki drops)
    Pervious president:サクマ製菓(sakuma seika):サクマドロップス (sakuma drops)

    blah blah blah

  • http://www.littlegaijin.net/ アナ

    The facts are too convincing! I believe you! I wish Studio Ghibli would announce the real truth though, but if this is true – I can see why they didn’t.

  • Akira Suzuki

    I think Totoro it´s a really cool and really well made film Xo I think this is true , and I think is cool he put deep meanings , I bet no kid will understand that , so it ´s and awesome way from my point of view to make a story a bit more then simply a story and make it way more interesting and deep ^^ I already knew about this but I loved the post it adeed some new things I did not knew like those black balls meaing death in Japanese , thanks for posting it !

  • rapchee

    seriously?? ugh. trademark laws ftw :p

  • Mami

    Ah, i c. I’m a type of person who leave a movie theater or take DVD out as soon as credit starts. I should’ve watched that part!

  • Mami

    yeah…it seems so. what does ftw mean?

  • Mami

    never mind. now i got it.

  • rapchee

    i remembered “fan” by picturing someone fanning someone (like slaves did in old times), but in this case it’s a voluntary thing, since the person likes them so much. well it’s easier to picture it then describe it lol

  • Mami

    if you want to learn Japanese words out of my articles, feel free to ask me! I’ll answer as many as possible. and those black balls don’t actually mean death but are called ‘まっくろくろすけ’ meaning completely black guys or so. In japanese folklore, if you see them that means that you are going to die.

  • rapchee

    short animation? you might be thinking about something else. or at least i definitely wouldn’t call 86 minutes short, even though it’s not exactly a long movie, by today’s standards.

  • Mami

    they officially announced that this is not true though. but they also mentioned that they get so many calls every year from people who want to figure out if totoro is death of god. so they could be just tired of dealing with those. who knows:P

  • Mami

    maybe comparing to series of animation.

  • Mami

    うちわ??

    スズシィ(*~.~)~~~~“Q。(゚.゚*)”パタパタ

  • rapchee

    “for the win”. in this case it’s ironic, but can be used both ways

  • rapchee

    i mean a “fan” is someone who likes stuff, not “fun”. i was trying to avoid being too much of a dick about correcting it, i might have failed :p
    also, i should really start studying japanese XI because i can only understand the emoji from that message or perhaps it’s all emoji? they kinda look like things instead of words

  • Mami

    I see. Thank you. I thought you just said wtf oppositely. haha

  • rapchee

    disqus sometimes confuses me, i didn’t see this one

  • Mami

    Ah, i c. Thank you for correcting me!

    suzushii(pretty cool)(*~.~)~~~~“Q。(゚.゚*)”patapata(fan waving sound)

  • rapchee

    boo boo the show isn’t over until the fat lady sings :) sometimes i do that too, but mostly when i don’t really care about the movie, with the better ones it’s nice to sit back for a couple of minutes, think about the experience, enjoy the soundtrack a bit more. actually i kinda hate that in cinemas, i cannot watch the credits, because everyone leaves and they try cleaning up the place and it’s awkward.

  • rapchee

    :DDDDD

    emojis ftw ;D

  • Akira Suzuki

    Thank you very much! xp Yes I did not knew the name , ~I love to knew as much as possible about culture and new words to memorise so your response was really helpfull ! , next articles I will start to ask more how things are called because I love to know that , but I ofen think there are a lot of comments and there is no chance I will make a question and anyone responde me xp Thx for your time and sorry for the bad English xp 6 years of study but still don t know how to writte some words xp

  • MandaMac

    Interesting, but it seems like people in general have some deep-seated need to attach deeper or sinister meanings to children’s film…if you listen to the conspiracy theorists, every Disney movie has something sinister lurking behind the princess’ skirts…LOL That being said, I adore Ghibli! I will say that Spirited Away is by far my favorite, though Howl’s Moving Castle is a close second.

  • Charles Dunbar

    This legend will never go away, regardless of how many times Ghibli denies it. I’ve met people who personally know Miyazaki-san, and they insist the story was allegorical to his growing up in postwar Japan, that the girls are based on friends and family members, and everything else is just conjecture. I also know the Miyazaki-san infuses his films with folklore and a healthy amount of “hidden references” to all sorts of socially conscious topics and ideas.

    But that never stops me from telling this story each and every time I’m lecturing on the subject of shinigami or Ghibli history.

    What’s really stoking my curiosity…is who made those gifs? That’s me presenting my “Politics and Philosophy of Studio Ghibli” talk at AnimeNEXT 2012…

  • http://blackragdoll.blogspot.com/ Black Ragdoll

    Wow, I had no idea! And here I thought My Neighbour Totoro was just a cosy family film…

  • Midnight Tea

    I think it’s possible there’s a reference to the tragedy in Sayama — Miyazaki-sama has always had a very big heart for the lives of young women — but I’m not sure the film is an allegory. I couldn’t find anything about susuwatari outside of the Ghibli films, though they are very striking in appearance.

    I think Studio Ghibli likes to make movies about young women facing the intensity of the human condition through vivid fantasy. I’d like to think Spirited Away is about how we all eventually see our parents for the flawed humans they are eventually and how the world itself becomes a bigger and scarier place once they’re no longer the center of our universe. Perhaps My Neighbor Totoro is about these sisters coming to terms with death, and how the pain can be managed if we make friends wherever we can find them.

  • Kiley

    This was an interesting and very convincing theory but Mami, honestly I was disappointed at your description of the Saitama incident. Yes, the police did collar someone for the crime but whether it was the man who did it is highly debatable. Please read the many articles online including in Japan Times http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2013/04/03/national/lawyer-freed-convict-fight-outcast-bias-injustice/#.Ug4sqX1uvMJ that explain the circumstances behind the wrongful conviction, and you’ll soon find how distasteful your implication above is. Besides, burakumin discrimination did and does exist – Ishikawa did not use it as an excuse, but it appears to be a motive for why the cops were specifically looking in his area for suspects.

  • Mami

    no that’s fine because i was wrong anyway

  • Mami

    right…yeah, i’ll try to listen to the soundtrack from now on. :) That’s a good idea.

  • Mami

    Hi Kiley. Thank you for reading this article and telling us your opinions, and I’m sorry that I made you feel distasteful by the description of Sayama incident. If you don’t mind, could you tell me which part exactly you got upset, please? Do you think that we shouldn’t use his picture or even pick up his name? I know it’s highly debatable whether he was the criminal, so I thought I mentioned about it and wrote that he was still fighting. (or did you mean this part: he claimed that he was arrested, wrongfully convicted, and the police failed to catch the real murderer when they had the chance?) Yet, I don’t know how English writing sounds like to everyone, so I really appreciate if you can explain more detail. However, I also didn’t want to write about this incident too long because this article’s topic could be vague(as you know, this is a long story:http://ja.wikipedia.org/wiki/狭山事件, http://sayamacase.web.fc2.com/0/jiken.html, ). I had to go back to Totoro’s quickly and I also wanted to stay at the neutral position. As for burakumin, what do you mean that he didn’t use it as an excuse…you mean in the court? or should I say ‘Many Ishikawa’s supporters claim’? Finally I’m sorry again that I made you upset.

  • Mami

    Yeah, Spirited Away’s setting is debatable too and actually Miyazaki-san mentioned about the movie setting is inspired by a japanese pink house. People talk about it a lot, too.

  • Mami

    Yeah, I like to think that it’s a cosy family film too cuz totoros are so cute.

  • Mami

    Is that true? Is that you?? Seriously????

  • Mami

    every Disney has those? haha It’s funny. I was kind of scared when I watched spirited away.

  • Mami

    No your english is just fine. Yeah, I’m waiting for being asked japanese words. I like helping people learning japanese.

  • Mami

    hehe :D

  • Charles Dunbar

    Yes, that is me. I told that story to end the lecture, watched the looks of horror creep across everyone’s face, and then said: “It’s probably not true, but CANNOT UNSEE!”

    One of the parishoners at my church is friends with Miyazaki-san’s family, and he laughed when I first mentioned this story to him, saying it’s very popular in Japan.