Mamoru Hosoda on Mirai, Fatherhood and the Meaning of Life

Mamoru Hosoda is one of the most storied directors in contemporary anime. Creator of such works as The Girl Who Leapt through Time, Summer Wars, The Boy and the Beast and yes, Wolf Children, Hosoda’s films number among some of the best and most canonically significant anime movies to have come out in the past two decades. A recent inductee to the Motion Picture Academy, the 51-year-old director’s star is rising and with it anime’s continued global prominence.
Hosoda’s latest film, Mirai, depicts the life of a four-year-old boy named Kun struggling to cope with the arrival of his new baby sister and his new role as an older brother. In his journey to understand his place in the larger history of his family, Kun is visited by the spirits of his loved ones from both the past and future in order to be taught a valuable lesson in what it means to love and be loved.
On the eve of Mirai’s North American premiere at the Animation is Film festival in Los Angeles, Paste had the opportunity to speak with Mamoru Hosoda about the film’s production, lessons from his career, architecture, and the importance of family.
Paste: Tell us about the origins of Mirai. When did you first start writing the script and what inspired you to tackle another time-travel story?
Mamoru Hosoda: The idea for Mirai came to me about three years ago in December. I have an older son who was an only child, and when we welcomed our new baby girl three years ago, my son was very surprised seeing the baby. That made me think [about] how he would understand this is his sister and how he relates to her. So that’s where the story began to form. I wanted to do a story about a child learning their family history and through learning that history, he would learn how to love his sister. This mysterious garden at the center of the house was a tool to see that family history. I think that the idea of using a garden as a portal into another time or world comes out of western stories where the main protagonist would find out something about their family through a garden or a yard. So it’s not really about time-travel per se, but about one’s history.
Paste: You’ve talked about how becoming a father taught you what you described as, “the meaning of life.” How has that experience shaped your approach to filmmaking? In what ways do you create films now as a parent that you didn’t before?
Hosoda: The moment I became a father, I felt as though I existed specifically to become the father of my children. That really is the meaning of life; that’s what happens when one becomes a parent. I think everyone is looking for the meaning of life in some form or another, and hopefully by watching this film the audience can glimpse a part of that. In searching for the meaning of life, I feel that the answer is the connections formed between people, of families and how they are connected.
Paste: In the past you’ve said, “Because I directed Wolf Children, I was able to do The Boy and the Beast, and it’s because I directed The Boy and the Beast that I was able to do [Mirai].” What lessons from creating The Boy and the Beast did you apply when creating Mirai?
Hosoda: The Boy and the Beast was about, “How do I become a father?” I’ve got a son, but I just don’t know what I can do for my son, so how can I grow to become what he needs in a father. With Mirai, it’s about how Kun felt like he lost his parent’s love and the process of relearning what love is by giving love. How to obtain love by giving love. So they are connected. Because I did The Boy and the Beast and I thought about how a father can change and how they can give love to their children, I was able to depict Kun in how he learned to obtain and give love.