Miyazaki actually came out of retirement to make this film. I think that's pretty significant, and should make us sit up and pay closer attention to the intent, the different meanings, tropes, and images in the film. After all, in animation, everything is deliberate. It isn't so much a conscious-expressing art as it is the careful crafting of a fictional piece like a short story. Why would Miyazaki do this?
So along those lines...
2) The first half of Spirited Away centers around the personal growth and challenge presented to Chihiro. How do you think that Miyazaki is addressing the experience of meeting his friend's daughter?
A survey from 2004 about Junior High students in Japan (READ! really interesting!)
http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/DATA/MONO/EASY/index.html
http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/DATA/MONO/EASY/index.html
Japanese children and their fathers!
http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/DATA/SPECIAL/FATHER/FIGURE1.HTMActually, this whole site is really interesting... helpful for people doing their projects if they need it.
http://www.childresearch.net/RESEARCH/DATA_JCHILD/index.html3) The setting of Spirited Away is really important. Why would Miyazaki set this movie in a bathhouse, let alone a spiritual one?
Here's a website about water and religious purification :