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9''Heisei Tanuki Gassen Ponpoko'' (Heisian Tanuki War Ponpoko, 1994) is Creator/StudioGhibli's 8th film. It is the story of a rag-tag group of magical animals engaged in a desperate battle to prevent the destruction of their forest.
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11Directed by Creator/IsaoTakahata, ''Pom Poko'' deftly fulfills Ghibli's dual missions of advocating for the environment and preserving traditional Japanese culture by presenting a cautionary environmental story ''and'' a raucous exploration of Japanese folklore all wrapped up a bittersweet tale of the costs of urban sprawl told from the perspective of the displaced animals.
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13The {{tanuki}}, known as the "raccoon dog" in English (which is ''not'' related to the North American Raccoon, as much as it might resemble one), occupies a very important place in Japanese traditional and popular culture. ''Pom Poko'' takes full advantage of this by working in just about every Tanuki reference available from fairy tales, folklore and even nursery rhymes. Needless to say, most of these references are lost on non-Japanese audience. Unfortunately, as Takahata's partner Creator/HayaoMiyazaki has been known to lament, nowadays many of these things are lost on the increasingly urbanized Japanese as well.
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15Well-noted for the scene where defiant tanuki use one of their most prominent fairy tale features (their extraordinarily large testicles) as clubs to attack the police. And it shouldn't surprise anyone that the art is incredible, seeing as it's a Creator/StudioGhibli film.
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17'Ponpoko' is a reference to the sound the tanuki of legend were supposed to make using their bellies as drums.
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19----
20!!Tropes:
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22* AllMenArePerverts: Zigzagged. When the Tanukis' self-imposed restriction on breeding first goes into effect, the females literally have to beat the males away. When the next mating season comes around, however, they cheerfully chuck the rules along with the guys. [[spoiler:Shoukichi makes a valiant effort to hold out, and it's actually Kiyo who can't keep her hands off him, resulting in the birth of their four cubs.]]
23* AllPartOfTheShow: An uinintentional version. To try and frighten the humans out of New Tama, the tanuki enact "Operation Specter", a massive parade of {{youkai}} and monsters. However, it merely amazes the humans, and a nearby amusement park [[SomeNuttyPublicityStunt takes credit for the show as a publicity stunt]].
24* [[FunnyAnimal Anthropomorphic Animal]] (see below)
25* AnimalsLackAttributes: Averted. ''MAGICAL. TANUKI. TESTICLES.''
26* AnthropomorphicTransformation: The tanuki shift from realistic to anthropomorphic to cartoonish and back again as the story requires.
27* ArtShift: Befitting their magical nature, the tanuki gain one of two [[NonStandardCharacterDesign non-standard]], minimalistic, cartoonishly-drawn designs [[EmpathicShapeshifter depending on whenever they either feel happy and festive, or meek and submissive]] respectively.
28* AsianFoxSpirit: Though they aren't as prominent as the tanuki, several kitsune do show up. Unlike the tanuki, they've all gone into hiding and are living as humans.
29* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor: Throughout the movie Gonta demands that he and his fellow tanuki be given permission in fighting the humans head on. [[spoiler:In the climax they get that wish, but get utterly destroyed.]]
30* BigBeautifulWoman: Female tanuki are this by default, all are highly rotund but even the older ones are quite adorable. They usually take a slimmer appearance if they take a human form.
31* BittersweetEnding: [[spoiler:The tanuki's home is destroyed, save for a few parks and preserves, a significant number of them have died, and the survivors who can transform are forced to join the human world, abandoning those who can't. However, their fun-loving, easy going spirits endure, and the humans are taking big steps to preserving the nature around them and help the tanuki. The end of the movie finds them dancing and singing joyfully in a grassy field, and the camera cranes back to reveal that it's a golf course.]]
32* {{Bowdlerise}}: Japanese culture (even children's songs) is full of earthy references to the Tanuki's most outstanding anatomical feature--unusually large testicles. Not surprisingly, Disney changed "scrotum" to "pouch" for the English dub -- but not the subtitles on the dvd version. On the Blu-Ray version, they don't use Japanese translated subtitles. Whether or not they fooled anyone is unclear. (Actually, given all the sight gags on that topic, the real surprise is that Disney did the release at all.)
33** With Ghibli films at least Disney tends to bow down to the sub watchers with the subtitles. The subtitles match the original dialogue closer, on average, than the dub.
34** Part of Disney's contract with Studio Ghibli was that they wouldn't edit any of the studio's films. This after the terrible fate of ''Manga/NausicaaOfTheValleyOfTheWind'' at the hands of [[Creator/RogerCorman New World Pictures]]. So, Disney released ''Anime/PomPoko'' unedited and hoped that nobody would notice.[[note]]That being said, Disney neglected to release Isao Takahata's ''Anime/OnlyYesterday'' and Goro Miyazaki's ''Anime/FromUpOnPoppyHill'' in the US (though they have been released by GKIDS) because of "unacceptable" content - a discussion about menstruation in ''Only Yesterday'' and implied incest in ''Poppy Hill''.[[/note]]
35* BreakingTheFourthWall: A rare serious example, at the end of the movie, to ask the viewers to protect the tanukis, the foxes and all the non-transforming animals.
36* CulturalTranslation: Largely averted, aside from the bowdlerisation noted above and the mis-translation of "Tanuki" as "Raccoon" for North American audiences. Other Japanese cultural references are either explained or ignored.
37* DubSpeciesChange: As noted above, the English dub refers to the main characters as raccoons. They're actually raccoon dogs, which as the name implies look very similar to raccoons but aren't the same animal.
38* FauxDocumentary: The movie is presented in this format with the narrator being a tanuki who has assimilated into a human lifestyle, though this only becomes apparent in the epilogue.
39* FunnyBackgroundEvent: Behind the two elderly dudes drinking all the ghostly parade through without noticing (bordering on UnusuallyUninterestingSight / WeirdnessCensor)
40* GagPenis: Sort of. The Tanuki's traditional distinguishing feature is played for laughs throughout the movie.
41* GenderRestrictedAbility: Only male tanuki can use their... testicles to fly and as weapons, as befitting Japanese mythology. Justified for obvious reasons.
42* GhibliHills: Massively subverted as this film depicts the ''destruction'' of the Ghibli Hills by developers.
43* GroinAttack: As in, [[RussianReversal the groin attacks]] ''[[RussianReversal you.]]'' Of course, some riot police officers are shown trying to beat away the tanukis' massive nads with their clubs as the latter attempt to smother them under.
44* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: In their FunnyAnimal form, many tanuki wear a shirt, vest or cape, but no pants - so that their scrotums are uncovered.
45* HotBlooded: Whenever Gonta appears on-screen, expect him to [[LargeHam bring some ham to the scene]].
46* HumansAreBastards: [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]]. The owner of the amusement park sabotages Project Spectre by saying it had been his doing as a publicity stunt, thereby breaking the tanuki's morale, but other than this jerk move the humans aren't evil at all. They just need the room, and when the Tanuki finally reveal themselves to the media, humanity proves to be willing to some degree of compromise, if only because people like to live among green spaces too.
47** We actually see this trope [[InvertedTrope inverted ]] a few times. Most notably when several tanuki celebrate three humans ''getting injured and killed'', [[WhatTheHellHero with their elders being understandably horrified and enraged at their joy.]] Then there is Gonta who isn't really a bad person, but is frighteningly bloodthirsty and his hatred of humans causes him to do some terrible things both to them and to his fellow tanuki.
48* HumanityEnsues: The shape-changing tanuki eventually give up and start living as humans themselves, just as the foxes did before them. They treat it as both a blessing and a curse.
49* ItCantBeHelped: The tanuki have to "accept the unacceptable" and conform to humans' encroachment on their territory. Some turn into humans and adapt, others weather on as tanuki, but their golden days will never come back.
50* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Ryotaro the kitsune is a sly, proud, and duplicitous guy; but he also sincerely sympathizes with the tanuki, offering the shapeshifters homes without any payment and is sincerely aggrieved he can't help the tanuki who can't transform.
51* KickTheDog:
52** Many of the Tanuki celebrate after Gonta's resistance brings the deaths and injuries of three humans. The elders' calling them out with a WhatTheHellHero gets mostly drowned out.
53** The ex-leader of the Blue group is implied [[spoiler: by the epilogue to have taken up real estate in his human form and had already sold some of the Tanuki territory by the ending.]]
54* LampShadeHanging: The Tanuki constantly reference the songs, stories, and nursery rhymes about them.
55* LaserGuidedKarma: The amusement park owner who took the credit for Project Specter by saying it was a publicity stunt ends up having all the money he earned from the trick stolen by the enraged tanuki.
56* MagicalCounterfeiting: One young tanuki tasked with retrieving money from the human world tries passing a bunch of leaves off as money, the elders are not fooled.
57* MoodWhiplash: In the climax, images of mass Tanuki genocide are cross-cut with wacky ball gags.
58* NightParadeOfOneHundredDemons: Operation: Specter is a display of illusory magic practiced by the Tanuki elders of Shikoku that simulates a ghostly parade of youkai and demons as part of a last ditch attempt to protect Tama Hills from human development. Since the humans of New Tama are not as superstitious as those in Shikoku, it winds up being confused for a festive piece of advertisement for a local theme-park company, made all the more insulting since one of the Elders wound up dying from the strain of it.
59* NoSexAllowed: The Tanuki invoke a temporary case of this in order to keep their numbers small and protect their dwindling food supply. [[spoiler:It works for a while.]]
60* OlderAndWiser: Oroku, the oldest tanuki, is frequently the voice of reason among the characters, and she's also the one responsible for teaching the younger tanuki how to transform.
61* OurNudityIsDifferent: While male tanuki are mostly naked (exposed "[[SuperSexOrgans pouches]]" and everything) female tanuki [[TertiarySexualCharacteristics wear shirts]] and other clothes to conceal their [[NippleAndDimed teats]]. Pants are still optional though.
62* ProductPlacement: When the three old masters ride a cab, they pass next to a car shop, then the image shifts towards the building revealing the logos of three German car makers on its wall: Volkswagen, Mercedes and BMW.
63* PublicDomainCharacter: Kincho, Hage and Gyobu, the trio of venerable elders, are all characters from ancient legends. Danzaburou is also mentioned and sought after, but it's revealed near the end that he had been shot dead by a hunter shortly after WWII.
64* RedOniBlueOni: The impulsive and aggressive Gonta wears red clothes, contrasting with the calmer Seizaemon, who wears blue-ish ones.
65* RefugeInAudacity: When some of the Tanuki decide to go public on TV to plead their case to save their habitat. To the typical viewer (and the in-universe ones too), you will reflexively think this stunt [[ReedRichardsIsUseless will never happen]] as fantasy folk in these stories are ''never'' openly revealed and no one will believe they are seeing the real thing. However, after a moment's hesitation, the Tanuki find the courage to do the unthinkable and appear right on camera to make their address and, to a degree, ''it works''!
66* RidiculouslyCuteCritter: The tanuki. Especially in their "intermediate" form, in which they look like teddy bears. ''So'' much so.
67** Also a ''delightful'' case of TruthInTelevision. For people who've never seen an actual tanuki or wasn't aware they even really existed, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l-vGu6cCtxM&feature=fvw this is one of the most popular videos of one]].
68* ScarecrowSolution: To chase the humans away, the tanuki launch "Operation Specter", during which they shapeshift into ghosts, monsters and youkai and march on the streets to make the humans believe the place is haunted.
69* ShoutOut:
70** To ''Anime/OceanWaves'' of all things, especially considering its status as an oddball in the Ghibli catalog: in a scene where the disguised Tanuki are doing a field test of their transformation, there's a poster for the film in the window of a convenience store, prominently displaying Rikako.
71** [[Anime/MyNeighborTotoro Totoro]], [[Anime/KikisDeliveryService Kiki]], [[Anime/PorcoRosso Porco Rosso]] and [[Anime/OnlyYesterday Taeko]] all appear in the Tanuki's "Ghost Parade".
72** During the "Ghost Parade" there is a brief foxes' wedding scene which is very similar to that seen in the "Sunshine through Rain" episode of ''Film/AkiraKurosawasDreams''.
73** Also, in a scene where a group of Tanuki are trying to scare away a person from buying some property, they use the signature pose of the original Series/KamenRider to transform.
74** The Tanuki-as-Samurai battle that begins the film is loaded with references to numerous samurai films of both the famous classics (''Film/TheSevenSamurai'' for instance) and ones that are obscure outside of Japan.
75* SlobsVsSnobs: While tanuki and kitsune are shown to get along just fine, the dichotomy of this trope is still very clear; the former live in worn-down shrines in the countryside and scavenge for anything they can find, while the latter live luxuriously in the big city as a result of successfully blending in with human society.
76* SomethingElseAlsoRises: Shoukichi's tail goes up moments before he and Kiyo drop out of sight and get to work conceiving their cubs.
77* StealthPun: [[FoxyVixen Female foxes]] in the forms of "foxy" (seductive) club hostesses.
78* SuperSexOrgans: The tanuki can distend their scrotums to fly, among other things. This is accurate to Japanese folklore about tanuki, where they use their scrotums for all kinds of things.
79* {{Tanuki}}: This movie is all about them. There are plenty of references to fairy tales, songs and nursery rhymes about tanuki throughout the film.
80* TanukiKitsuneContrast: While the tanuki suffer from human encroachment on their habitat, the kitsune have assimilated into the city.
81* ToiletHumour: In a scene where the old Tsurugame is talking to the huge and loud tanuki crowd, one of them accidentally and quite hilariously rips a gigantic fart.
82* TheUnmasquedWorld: Some of the tanuki go public to plead their case to save their habitat. It's effective to a degree.
83* WarHawk: Gonta's proposal for every meeting always involves going to war with the humans tearing the tanukis' home apart.
84* WhatHappenedToTheMouse: [[spoiler:Kiyo and Shokichi's cubs.]] We're treated to an adorable montage of their parents lovingly raising them, and then come fall, they're never mentioned again.
85* WhatTheHellHero: The elders' reactions when they see the younger tanuki celebrating their 'success' in causing the horrific deaths of several humans.
86* WhatTheRomansHaveDoneForUs: When Gonta states his intentions to kill every human in Tama Hills, in addition to Shoukichi pointing out he doesn't think humans are bad, several other Tanuki point out they wouldn't be able to access human food and the tools needed to makes it. Gonta begrudgingly relents at this observation.

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