Logo Binge Senpai
Chat with Senpai Browse Explore Calendar
EN
Log In Sign Up
Sign Up
Logo
Chat with Senpai
Browse Calendar
Language English
SFW Mode
Log in Sign up
© 2026 Binge Senpai

Spring Comes to Ponsuke · review

★
Top reader Feb 11, 2021 · 1 min read
6 /10

Spring Comes to Ponsuke is one of the few almost completely preserved works of Japanese auteur Ikuo Oishi, who was at the time of his work considered the Japanese equivalent of Walt Disney who worked at the Photo Chemical Laboratory, Manga Division, where he would train the next generation of post war Japanese animators that would set the trend for the anime industry in the 1950s. The short film is without dialogue and suffers from poor preservation as a mark of it's time. I think the themes at play - hunger, lack of resources, difficult environments seemed to represent the overwhelming sentiment of the Japaneseempire at the time - one of expansionism to justify the sustenance of the civilization.

This short film is available in the public domain thanks to the efforts of the Japanese Animated Film Classics subdivision of the Japanese Archive. At only 11 minutes, it is worth a watch to get broader context of the history of the animated art form in Japan and how the forefathers of the modern unique style took broad inspirations from Walt Disney.

8 reactions
Mark
© 2026 Binge Senpai
  • News
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Terms