Search

» » Jarinko Chie (1981)

Short summary

Chie Takemoto is a small dependable girl who lives in Osaka with her dad. She has two goals - to get her troublesome father, who runs a tavern, some work and then get him to make up with her mother who left him.

When Tokyo Movie Sinsha decided to make this film, one of the candidates for the director was Hayao Miyazaki, who had directed "Rupan Sansei Kariosutoro No Shiro" for them. But he declined the offer by insisting that he would change the whole concept from the point of view of cat characters.

Although the first draft of the script was written by Giichi Fujimoto, director Isao Takahata chose not to use it, because he thought that the draft emphasized Fujimoto's his own color rather than the feel of the original comic strip.

As this film was made during the big boom of "manzai" (Japanese comic dialogue), most of the characters' voices were played by popular manzai acts from Osaka. For example, Tetsu and his friend Mitsuru were played by Norio Nishikawa and Yoshio Kamigata, and Tetsu's parents were played by Utako Kyô and Keisuke Ootori.

Name pronounced Tchié, but French version changed or mistook as Kié.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Llathidan
    Jarinko Chie (Chie the Brat) is the movie version of a long-running Japanese comic strip. I found the film to be very entertaining and well up to the quality of story one would expect from the great director Isao Takahata (Grave of the Fireflies, Pom Poko, Only Yesterday). I've never seen or read the original comic, but the character development aspect of this film stands alone and ensures enjoyment whether or not one can find the comic.

    Chieko (Chie) is a young girl, in second or third grade in elementary school, who lives with her divorced father in a small bar/eatery somewhere in the Osaka area in western Japan. As young as she is, she's quite capable of fending for herself and running the eatery--as her father, Tetsu, is lazy and a bit of a scoundrel.

    There are several concurrently-running plots in this tale. First is the relationship between Chie and her father. Outwardly, she is in open rebellion against him. She does love him, however, and stands up for him when she must. Next is the relationship between Chie's parents. The divorced mom, Yoshie, is still in her life. It's plain that her father can't stand being around his former wife, even when she moves in again. Another plot involves her father, Chie's newfound stray cat, and some local gangsters. Chie's cat gets into a fight with the gang leader's cat and beats him handily. The consequences of this battle are profound.

    While the plots are separate, they all serve to flesh out the fascinating and completely likable characters. You get to know and like everybody in the story--including the gangsters. This story isn't very deep, but it is very satisfying and easy to get fully engrossed in. I gave this film an 8 out of 10.
  • comment
    • Author: Mamuro
    The movie feels like a child throwing his brightly coloured marbles on the floor: they look fascinating, going each in a different direction, their noise is loud yet pleasant and in the end one feels like laughing. But also as a spectator, if you are familiar with what a broken family means, there are moments when you feel like crying. A small girl lives with her violent father who gambles a lot and takes money from his own parents, while her mother is away from home, not wanting the father to know that she is seeing her daughter from time to time. But...things are not so cliché at all, the girl is a tough nut, the father is sometimes really well meaning, the mother is somehow too delicate, and the grandparents still treat their own son as a young boy, snapping at him and hitting him. you feel like you did not "get" each of them all over again when the story changes a couple of times. Old enemies become friends, on the edge of the absurd, only not quite, if you think of how things turn up in life. The movie is definitely worth seeing up to the end, because it has something unique. It also has violence, sincere facts of life, and the portraits of people from another culture or era. The hilarious scenes take you by surprise, one can't help laughing even if you somehow feel you should have stayed serious or even upset at some scene or another. Some Takahata features are visible too, the fighting cats, foe example, similar to the raccoon-dogs from Pom Poko. Very lively movie.
  • Credited cast:
    Chinatsu Nakayama Chinatsu Nakayama - Takemoto Chie (voice)
    Norio Nishikawa Norio Nishikawa - Takemoto Tetsu (voice)
    Kiyoshi Nishikawa Kiyoshi Nishikawa - Kotetsu (voice)
    Yasushi Yokoyama Yasushi Yokoyama - Antonio Jr. (voice)
    Shinsuke Shimada Shinsuke Shimada - Masaru (voice)
    Ryûsuke Matsumoto Ryûsuke Matsumoto - Shigeru (voice)
    Utako Kyô Utako Kyô - Obaa (voice)
    Keisuke Ootori Keisuke Ootori - Ojii (voice)
    Gannosuke Ashiya Gannosuke Ashiya - Shacho (voice)
    Kyoko Mitsubayashi Kyoko Mitsubayashi - Yoshie (voice)
    Bunshi Katsura Vi Bunshi Katsura Vi - Hanai sensei (voice) (as Bunshi Katsura)
    Yoshiko Ohta Yoshiko Ohta - Masaru's mother (voice)
    Ichirô Nagai Ichirô Nagai - Shocho (voice)
    Rest of cast listed alphabetically:
    All Hanshin All Hanshin - Tetsu's friend (voice) (as Ôru-Hanshin)
    Yoshio Kamigata Yoshio Kamigata - Maruyama Mitsuru (voice)
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com