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Studio Ghibli is a Japanese animation film studio whose anime style films are internationally distributed on Home Entertainment mediums by Disney in a few number of countries, including the United States.

It should be noted that only titles named on this page are distributed by Disney; Ghibli's 2011 film, From Up on Poppy Hill was not distributed in the U.S. by Disney, but rather by GKIDS, which currently now holds U.S. theatrical rights to all of Studio Ghibli's films, even those named below since 2011.

Disney continued to distribute the remaining movies they owned on Home Media until 2017, when the license expired and GKIDS took over the home media rights from Disney, releasing a full roster of reissues. The only exception to this was The Wind Rises, due to the fact GKIDS classifies it as a “Recent” film. Disney formerly held the French distribution rights to the company’s film library as well, but on September 2, 2020, the rights transitioned to Wild Bunch, Studio Ghibli’s international sales holder.

As of 2020, Disney only handles home video distribution of the company’s films on Home Media in Asia such as Japan and China.

Disney and Ghibli[]

The Beginning[]

In 1996, Tokuma Shoten, the parent company of Studio Ghibli at the time announced a deal with The Walt Disney Company that would allow Disney to distribute a majority of Studio Ghibli's catalog on VHS in Japan (excluding other Asian territories) through Buena Vista Home Entertainment Japan and that Disney had acquired worldwide theatrical distribution rights to their then latest movie Princess Mononoke outside Japan and Asia, as well as Disney being able to distribute a small-number of Tokuma live-action movies outside Asia.

This deal however excluded Ocean Waves due to the the fact it was a television movie, and also excluded Japanese Laserdisc and DVD releases, as those would continue to be released through Tokuma Shoten. The first Ghibli VHS tape released in Japan as part of this new deal would be a reissue of My Neighbor Totoro on June 27, 1997. Buena Vista Home Entertainment Japan would eventually reissue the rest of the Studio Ghibli catalogue under their new Ghibli ga Ippai Collection label.

By Late 1998-Early 1999, the deal was expanded to include Ocean Waves, as well as DVD distribution and Taiwanese distribution (through Buena Vista Home Entertainment Taiwan, and later Deltamac).

Beginning with My Neighbors the Yamadas, Disney has invested 10% of the production cost to all future Ghibli movies (Except for Earwig and the Witch, which was funded fully by NHK), which in return allows Disney to acquire the rights to TV, theater, and home video in many countries outside Asia. The funding has expanded to several other Anime movies involving or relating to Studio Ghibli, such as 2004's Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence and the movies from Studio Ponoc.

In the United States, the first Ghibli film released under the partnership would be Kiki's Delivery Service. It was originally planned for a theatrical release but Disney decided to release it direct-to-video instead due to the high sales of such movies. The movie was released on September 1, 1998 on VHS in the country, and later Laserdisc. The next film to be released was going to be Castle in the Sky in 1999 theatrically, but it was cancelled after Princess Mononoke's bombing in the US box office, mainly due to Disney subsidiary Miramax Films choosing to release it as a limited release instead of a mainstream one.

Worldwide Downgrading and US expansion[]

In the Mid 2000's, the international sales rights to Studio Ghibli's catalog were sold to German-based company Wild Bunch, who would allow other companies to release the library in the country they traded in. Disney kept held of the French distribution rights to Ghibli's catalog, while they were also kept in the US and Taiwan, as they were separate deals outside Wild Bunch's behalf.

In 2002, Walt Disney Pictures released Spirited Away as a limited theatrical release in the United States, mostly in independent theaters. After the movie won Best Animated Feature at the Academy Awards in 2003, Disney released the movie to a wider audience before it's home video release in April 2003. Castle in the Sky and Kiki's Delivery Service saw their VHS and DVD releases on the same day.

Howl's Moving Castle was also given a limited release to theaters in the United States in May 2005. Through February 2005-March 2006, Disney began releasing several Ghibli films on DVD in North America. The only Ghibli films that were not released within this time were Grave of the Fireflies, which Disney did not hold distribution rights to, Only Yesterday, due to the film's mature plotlines and references to menstruation, and Ocean Waves, also due to its mature storyline, with both films also being too "un-Disney" for Disney's taste.

In July 2009, Walt Disney Pictures released Ponyo which for the first time, a Studio Ghibli movie was given a nationwide release in North America. While Tales from Earthsea gained a very limited weekend release in August 2010, The Secret World of Arrietty gained another wide release in February 2012.

Takeover by GKIDS in USA[]

In December 2011, Disney sold the North American theatrical rights to the Studio Ghibli catalogue to New York based distributor GKIDS. GKIDS has re-released the films in cinemas a numerous amount of times throughout the years, mainly as part of Ghibli Film Festivals.

In 2013, Disney declined to distribute Studio Ghibli’s then recent film, From Up on Poppy Hill in North America due to finding the movie's plot line too mature for their tastes (they still distributed the film in Taiwan, France, and Japan home media), and instead sold the film to GKIDS for distribution both theatrically and on home media through Cinedigm. This was the first Studio Ghibli Movie since Princess Mononoke not to be released as a Disney product in the country. Disney however distributed The Wind Rises though their Touchstone Pictures label, which was the last Studio Ghibli film released through Disney in North America.

Disney also declined to distribute the company's other two then-recent films The Tale of the Princess Kaguya and When Marnie was There for similar reasons, and so were all passed to GKIDS as well. GKIDS later picked up Only Yesterday and Ocean Waves, releasing the films in 2016. Universal Pictures Home Entertainment handled distribution of these five movies on Home Media.

Post Disney-era[]

In 2017, GKIDS fully took over North American distribution of the Studio Ghibli catalog on home media from Disney. The only films from the company's catalog that GKIDS didn't acquire were Grave of the Fireflies (as it’s not directly a Studio Ghibli film in many countries, as the rights to the film remain with the book’s publisher and not Tokuma, although GKIDS holds theatrical rights to the film), The Red Turtle (as it was acquired and released by Sony Pictures Classics), and The Wind Rises (As GKIDS claimed that the movie was "still fairly recent" and because Disney still held the exclusive distribution rights at the time, which have since expired).

GKIDS have since re-released all the Studio Ghibli films on DVD and Blu-Ray under their branding, through Shout! Factory. In October 2019, GKIDS announced that they would issue the movies onto WarnerMedia's streaming service HBO Max when the service launched on May 27, 2020, ending a full legacy of Disney's rights to Ghibli movies in North America.

Starting in December 2019, GKIDS began to release their films digitally in both the US and Canada on numerous platforms including Prime Video and Apple TV in both English and original Japanese formats with the minor exception of The Wind Rises which was released on September 1, 2020, a few weeks before GKIDS reissued the movie on DVD and Blu-Ray under their branding on September 22nd. These films are also currently available on HBO Max in both formats.

On September 11, 2020, Wild Bunch, Ghibli's International sales holder and had already held distribution rights to the catalog in Belgium, announced that their partnership with Walt Disney Studios France had expired on September 2nd, and from that day onwards, they would take over distribution of Studio Ghibli's movies in the country. The last Studio Ghibli products released by Disney in France had been a set of Futurepak releases, released in October 2019. In Early 2021, Wild Bunch released Ghibli's movies on digital download and through their video subsidiary Wild Side Vidéo (a label distributed by Warner Bros. Home Entertainment France), they have began reissuing them on DVD and Blu-Ray beginning in July 2021. These releases feature different covers than the original Disney releases.

The Taiwanese rights to Ghibli's Catalogue went exclusively to Deltamac in 2020 following Disney's exit from the home media industry in the country, with their single-disc Blu-Ray re-releases of certain Ghibli films lacking any mention of Disney or Buena Vista on the back of the packaging. It is unknown if it is the same in China, where Excel Video distributes releases over there.

As of 2020, Walt Disney Studios Japan remains the exclusive Japanese distributor of Ghibli's library on Home Media, with some exceptions like the DVD and Blu-Ray releases of Earwig and the Witch, which will be released through Pony Canyon.

On November 10, 2022, Studio Ghibli posted a teaser on Twitter that suggested that the company would be collaborating with Disney subsidiary Lucasfilm on an upcoming project. The next day on November 11, the second teaser was posted, this time showing an image of a small Grogu model facing the camera, and Hayao Miyazaki, who was blurred in the background. Later that afternoon, it was revealed that the project was an animated short titled Zen - Grogu and Dust Bunnies, which was released on Disney+ the following day on November 12.

Films[]

  • Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind (1984) Second English version dubbed by Walt Disney Pictures.
  • Castle in the Sky (1986) Second English version dubbed by Walt Disney Pictures including Buena Vista Imaging was a title, Buena Vista Sound Studios and Foley was a post-production facility in the USA with the exception for the 2010 version for implied but not shown in the credits in the USA.
  • My Neighbor Totoro (1988) Second English version dubbed by Walt Disney Pictures.
  • Grave of the Fireflies (1988) Disney only released the movie on DVD and Blu-Ray in Japan with the exception for a 2005 DVD release from Warner Home Video.
  • Kiki's Delivery Service (1989) Second English version dubbed by Walt Disney Pictures including Buena Vista Sound Studios was a post-production facility in USA.
  • Only Yesterday (1991) Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan, Taiwan, and France.
  • Porco Rosso (1992) Second English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Ocean Waves (1993) Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan, Taiwan, and France.
  • Pom Poko (1994) English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Whisper of the Heart (1995) English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Princess Mononoke (1997) English version dubbed by Disney. Released worldwide by Miramax Films, re-released under Disney presents on DVD and Blu-Ray in 2012 and 2014 respectively.
  • My Neighbors the Yamadas (1999) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Spirited Away (2001) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney.
  • The Cat Returns (2002) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Howl's Moving Castle (2004) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Tales from Earthsea (2006) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney.
  • Ponyo (2008) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney and Kennedy/Marshall.
  • The Secret World of Arrietty (2010) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. North American English version dubbed by Disney and Kennedy/Marshall.
  • From Up on Poppy Hill (2011) Co-funded by Walt Disney Japan. Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan, Taiwan, and France, also theatrically for the latter country.
  • The Wind Rises (2013) Co-Funded by Walt Disney Japan. English version dubbed by Disney including The Walt Disney Studios and Fox Studios had a ADR recording. Released in North America under Touchstone Pictures.
  • The Tale of the Princess Kaguya (2013) Co-funded by Walt Disney Japan. Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan, Taiwan, and France, also theatrically for the latter country.
  • When Marnie was There (2014) Co-funded by Walt Disney Japan. Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan, Taiwan, and France, also theatrically for the latter country.
  • The Red Turtle (2016) Minority funding by Walt Disney Japan. Released on Home Media by Disney in Japan.

Shorts[]

Trivia[]

  • One of the studios' characters, Totoro, from My Neighbor Totoro, made a cameo in Toy Story 3 as a plush toy.
  • Despite the English dub version of Princess Mononoke being distributed by Miramax Films (which was owned by Disney at the time it came out), it was not one of the films that was sold alongside the Miramax library, with Disney retaining the North American distribution rights.
  • Pixar's Luca pays homage to Porco Rosso. One example is the riviera town being called Portorosso, named after the movie.

External links[]

v - e - d
Studio-ghibli-logo 1
Films
Nausicaä of the Valley of the WindCastle in the SkyMy Neighbor TotoroKiki's Delivery ServicePorco RossoPom PokoWhisper of the HeartPrincess MononokeMy Neighbors the YamadasSpirited AwayThe Cat ReturnsHowl's Moving CastleTales from EarthseaPonyoThe Secret World of ArriettyThe Wind Rises
Characters
Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind: Nausicaä
Castle in the Sky: SheetaPazuCaptain DolaColonel MuskaDola Gang

My Neighbor Totoro: TotoroMei KusakabeSatsuki KusakabeCatbus
Kiki's Delivery Service: KikiJijiOsonoFukuoUrsulaTombo
Porco Rosso: Porco RossoMadame GinaFio Piccolo
Princess Mononoke: SanYakulAshitakaLady EboshiKiyoJigo
Spirited Away: Chihiro OginoYubabaZenibaHakuLin
The Cat Returns: HaruTotoBaron Humbert von Gikkingen
Howl's Moving Castle: SophieThe Witch of the WasteMadam SulimanPrince JustinMarklHowl
Tales from Earthsea: ArrenTherruGed
Ponyo: PonyoSosukeFujimotoGranmamareLisa
The Secret World of Arrietty: ArriettyShō
The Wind Rises: Jiro HorikoshiNaoko SatomiGiovanni Battista Caproni

Locations
Toxic JungleBathhouse
Vehicles
MehvePorco's Plane
Songs
Hey Let's GoTotoroThe Promise of the WorldPonyo
See Also
Ghibli ga Ippai Collection


pt-br:Studio Ghibli

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