Grave — Of Fireflies
Why You Should Only Watch Grave of the Fireflies Once (And Why You Must Watch It Anyway)
That candy box. Sakuma drops. By the end, it becomes a funerary urn. You will never look at a tin of hard candy the same way again.
The film opens with a gut-punch of honesty. We see Seita’s ghost, starving and covered in sores, waiting for death in a Sannomiya train station. We know how it ends before the story even begins. The rest of the movie is a slow, agonizing walk toward that inevitability. Grave of fireflies
Set during the firebombing of Kobe in World War II, the story follows two siblings trying to survive after their mother is killed in an air raid. They move in with a distant aunt, where rations are tight and resentment grows. Eventually, they retreat to an abandoned bomb shelter, eating wild berries and watching the fireflies glow in the dark.
When the final scene arrives—modern-day Kobe, skyscrapers and peace, while two ghosts sit on a hill watching over the city—the message is clear. The fireflies are gone. But we are still here. We owe it to the Setsukos of history to remember why. Why You Should Only Watch Grave of the
There is a small, sickening moment about halfway through Grave of the Fireflies that encapsulates its entire thesis. Four-year-old Setsuko, starving and delirious, begins to make “rice balls” out of mud. She presents them to her older brother, Seita, with a proud smile. He doesn’t have the heart to tell her the truth.
Takahata gives us one of the most beautiful and brutal sequences in animation history: the night the siblings capture fireflies to light their cave. The next morning, Setsuko digs a tiny grave for the dead insects. “Why do fireflies die so soon?” she asks. Seita looks at the shovel. He doesn't answer. He is digging graves for his own future. You will never look at a tin of
But you should watch it anyway.