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[29] Despite the public's emotional reaction, Takahata expressed
that the purpose of the film was not to be a tragedy or make people cry. [30][31] Moreover, he regretted
depicting Seita as a boy from that era because he wanted him to come off as a contemporary boy who acted like he had time-traveled to the period. He didn't intend for it to be retrospective or nostalgic. He wanted the Japanese audience to be weary of Seita's behavior. [30] Furthermore, he says that his decision to show the audience that Seita and Setsuko have died at the beginning of the movie is to protect the audience from heartbreak, "If an audience knows at the beginning of the film that the two will eventually die, they are more prepared to watch the film in the first place. I try to lessen an audience's pain by revealing everything at the beginning. "[15][16] The
fireflies in the film are portrayed as symbols of various themes such as the spirits of the lost children, the fires that burned the towns, Japanese soldiers, the machinery of war, and the regeneration of life through nature. [21] Okypo Moon states in her essay "Marketing Nature in Rural Japan", that hundreds of fireflies were caught nightly in the 1920s and 1930s. In the 1960s and 1970s, there was a shift to reinstate this tradition and "there are now eighty five 'firefly villages' (hotaru no sato) registered at the Ministry of the Environment in Japan. [32] The movie uses fireflies to visually represent both deadly and beautiful imagery, such as fire-bombs and kamikazes. [21] Takahata chooses to use the kanji "fire" instead of the normal character for the word firefly in the title, which has been interpreted to represent the widespread burning of wooden houses in Japan.
[18]
Inspiration for the story came from works
including Shūzō Oshimi's Inside Mari, Rumiko Takahashi's Ranma 1⁄2, the Heian period novel Torikaebaya Monogatari, and Greg Egan's short story The Safe-Deposit Box. [19] Shinkai also cited Interstellar (2014) by Christopher Nolan as an influence. [20] While the town of Itomori, one of the film's settings, is fictional, the film drew inspirations from real-life locations that provided a backdrop for the town. Such locations include the city of Hida in Gifu Prefecture and its library, Hida City Library. [21] Many locations in Your Name were based on real-life locations. From left to right: Suga-jinja in Shinjuku, Shinano-machi station pedestrian bridge and Yotsuya Station.
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