The Secret World of Arrietty is one of Studio Ghibli’s gentlest films, but it is not slight. If you are looking for a quiet Ghibli movie about tiny people, hidden rooms, friendship, courage, and the risk of being seen, this is the guide to start with.
The quick answer: The Secret World of Arrietty is best for viewers who want a calm, beautifully observed fantasy rather than a big adventure. It works especially well for fans of Kiki’s Delivery Service, My Neighbor Totoro, and the softer side of Studio Ghibli storytelling.

What is The Secret World of Arrietty about?
The film follows Arrietty, a teenage Borrower who lives with her parents beneath the floorboards of a country house. Borrowers are tiny people who survive by taking small items from human homes: a sugar cube, a sheet of tissue, a pin, or anything else that can be reused at their scale. Their rule is simple. They must never be seen by humans.
That rule breaks when Sho, a sickly boy staying at the house before an operation, notices Arrietty. Instead of turning the story into a chase, Studio Ghibli makes the discovery intimate. Sho is curious and lonely. Arrietty is brave but afraid for her family. Their connection becomes the emotional centre of the movie, and the question is not whether they can become ordinary friends. It is whether kindness can exist when one person’s attention might endanger another person’s whole world.
Why Arrietty feels different from bigger Ghibli adventures
Many Studio Ghibli films build toward flight, battle, magic, or transformation. Arrietty builds toward noticing. A drop of water becomes heavy. A nail becomes a ladder. A kitchen counter feels like a cliff face. The film invites you to look at familiar spaces again and imagine a hidden life moving carefully through them.
That smaller scale is the point. The stakes are huge for Arrietty’s family even when the action is modest. A human hand reaching into a dollhouse can feel more frightening than a monster. A misplaced object can expose a secret. A generous gift can still be dangerous because it changes the balance between two worlds that were never meant to meet.
Main characters
Arrietty
Arrietty is adventurous, proud, and ready to prove she can help her family. She is not reckless in the usual action-hero sense, but she wants to step beyond childhood. Her first borrowing trip is both a coming-of-age ritual and a test of trust. What makes her memorable is the mix of confidence and vulnerability. She wants freedom, but she also understands that one mistake could force her family to leave their home.
Sho
Sho is quiet, observant, and physically fragile. He is not a villainous human threat, which makes the film more interesting. His kindness is real, yet it does not erase the danger his presence creates. Through Sho, the film explores loneliness and mortality without becoming heavy-handed. He sees Arrietty because he is still enough to notice her.
Homily and Pod
Arrietty’s parents give the Borrower world its emotional weight. Homily is anxious because she knows exactly how precarious their life is. Pod is practical, skilled, and protective. Together they make the tiny household feel lived in rather than cute for its own sake. Their fear is not overprotective nonsense. It comes from experience.
Haru
Haru, the housekeeper, brings the film’s clearest external threat. She is suspicious of the Borrowers and determined to prove they exist. The film does not need to make her cartoonishly evil. Her curiosity, control, and lack of empathy are enough to make her frightening.
Key themes
Being seen can be both beautiful and dangerous
The emotional tension of Arrietty comes from visibility. Sho seeing Arrietty gives her a kind of recognition, but it also breaks the safety of secrecy. The film understands that attention is not automatically harmless. Even kind attention can put pressure on someone who lives with less power.
Small lives are not small to the people living them
Ghibli is brilliant at taking domestic detail seriously. The Borrowers’ home is full of repurposed objects, handmade systems, and tiny routines. The film never treats this as a gimmick. It lets the audience feel the dignity of a life built from scraps, skill, and care.
Growing up means leaving some safety behind
Arrietty wants to help, explore, and be trusted. That desire pushes the story forward. But the film does not pretend adulthood is only freedom. It also means accepting consequences, saying goodbye, and carrying courage into uncertainty.
Is The Secret World of Arrietty good for kids?
Yes, for many children it is one of the more accessible Studio Ghibli films. It is gentle, visually clear, and easy to understand on a story level. Very young children may find a few scenes tense, especially when the Borrowers are discovered or trapped, but the film is not intense in the way Princess Mononoke can be.
Parents should know that Sho’s health is part of the story, and there is a bittersweet mood around separation and uncertainty. That said, the film handles these ideas softly. It is more reflective than upsetting, and it can be a good first step for kids who enjoy gentle fantasy.
Where it fits in a Studio Ghibli watch order
If you are introducing someone to Studio Ghibli, Arrietty works well after My Neighbor Totoro or Kiki’s Delivery Service. It shares their calm pacing and attention to ordinary life, while adding a slightly more fragile emotional atmosphere. It is also a useful palate cleanser between larger films like Castle in the Sky, Howl’s Moving Castle, or Princess Mononoke.
For a broader route through the studio, use our Studio Ghibli movies in order guide.
Who should watch it?
- Viewers who like gentle fantasy and detailed world-building.
- Families looking for a quieter Ghibli film for children.
- Fans of tiny hidden-world stories like The Borrowers.
- Anyone who enjoys films about friendship, courage, and saying goodbye.
FAQ
Is The Secret World of Arrietty based on a book?
Yes. It is based on Mary Norton’s classic children’s novel The Borrowers, adapted through Studio Ghibli’s own visual and emotional style.
Is Arrietty connected to other Studio Ghibli movies?
No. It is a standalone story. You do not need to watch any other Ghibli film first.
Is the ending sad?
It is bittersweet rather than bleak. The ending accepts change and separation, but it also leaves room for gratitude, courage, and memory.
What should I watch after Arrietty?
Try Kiki’s Delivery Service for another gentle coming-of-age story, My Neighbor Totoro for childlike wonder, or When Marnie Was There if you want another quiet, emotional Ghibli film.
Image source: official Studio Ghibli stills from ghibli.jp. This site is an independent fan guide and is not affiliated with Studio Ghibli.























