Quick answer: Princess Mononoke is one of the best Studio Ghibli movies to watch when you want the studio at its most epic, serious, and morally complex. It is not the softest beginner pick, and it is not ideal for very young children, but it is a brilliant starting point for viewers who like fantasy, folklore, environmental conflict, action, and stories where nobody is simply good or evil.

What Princess Mononoke is about
Princess Mononoke follows Ashitaka, a young prince who is cursed after defending his village from a corrupted boar god. His search for the source of the curse takes him west, into a conflict between the people of Iron Town and the spirits of an ancient forest. At the centre of that conflict is San, a human girl raised by wolves, and Lady Eboshi, the leader of Iron Town, whose ambition threatens the forest but also protects vulnerable people who have nowhere else to go.
The film is often described as an environmental fable, which is true, but that description can make it sound simpler than it is. This is not a story where nature is pure, industry is evil, and the answer is obvious. The forest gods are beautiful and frightening. Iron Town is destructive and humane. San is brave but consumed by rage. Ashitaka is compassionate, but even he cannot fix the world by wishing everyone would calm down. That tension is what makes the movie feel so alive.
Is Princess Mononoke a good first Studio Ghibli movie?
It depends on the viewer. If someone expects Studio Ghibli to mean cosy comfort, start with Kiki’s Delivery Service, a beginner-friendly starter list, or one of the gentler Totoro guides. If they already enjoy fantasy films with danger, mythology, politics, and moral ambiguity, Princess Mononoke can be an excellent first choice.
The biggest thing to know is tone. This is a grand, violent, urgent film. It has moments of quiet beauty, but it is not a bedtime comfort watch. It asks the viewer to sit with anger, harm, survival, compromise, and the cost of progress. For adult viewers and older teens, that seriousness is a strength. For younger children, it can be too intense.
Main characters to know before watching
Ashitaka
Ashitaka is the emotional anchor of the film. His famous instruction to see with “eyes unclouded” is not a slogan about staying neutral while others suffer. It is a demand to look clearly, even when every side has a real grievance. He wants to stop the curse without pretending the conflict is simple. For a deeper character read, see our Ashitaka character guide.
San
San, often called Princess Mononoke, is human by birth but spiritually and emotionally part of the wolf clan that raised her. She hates Iron Town because she has seen what human expansion does to the forest. What makes San memorable is that the film does not soften her rage into something tidy. Her anger is frightening, understandable, and deeply sad. We cover her in more detail in the San character guide.
Lady Eboshi
Lady Eboshi is one of Ghibli’s most interesting antagonists because she is not a cartoon villain. She destroys forest land and wounds gods, but she also builds a home for women, workers, and people pushed aside by wider society. The film asks whether good intentions can excuse damage, and whether survival built on extraction can ever be clean. Our Lady Eboshi guide goes further into that contradiction.
Themes that make the movie worth rewatching
The central theme is balance, but not in a neat “both sides are equally right” way. The film is interested in what happens when different kinds of need collide: the forest’s need to live, Iron Town’s need to survive, San’s need to defend her home, Ashitaka’s need to stop hatred spreading through his body and the wider world. The curse is physical, but it also works as a symbol for resentment, vengeance, and violence that keeps moving from one person to another.
Another key theme is the cost of seeing clearly. Ashitaka’s role is not to stand above the conflict as the perfect answer man. He keeps choosing mercy, but mercy does not erase consequences. That is why Princess Mononoke feels more adult than many animated adventure films. It allows repair without pretending the wound never happened.
Age guidance and content notes
Princess Mononoke is best for older children, teens, and adults, depending on sensitivity. It includes battle violence, blood, severed limbs, frightening animal gods, guns, fires, curses, and several emotionally intense scenes. None of that is included for cheap shock, but it is still much stronger than My Neighbor Totoro, Ponyo, or Kiki’s Delivery Service.
For family viewing, a practical approach is to save this for viewers who can handle fantasy violence and talk afterwards about why the conflict is complicated. If you want softer options first, use our Studio Ghibli movies for kids by age guide.
Where it fits in a Studio Ghibli watch order
This film works well after a gentler Ghibli introduction. A strong route is: start with Totoro or Kiki, move into Spirited Away or Howl’s Moving Castle, then watch Princess Mononoke when you want the studio’s mythic, political, and action-heavy side. It also pairs well with Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind because both films explore poisoned landscapes, human fear, and the fragile possibility of coexistence.
If you are building a broader viewing plan, use our Studio Ghibli movies in order guide alongside this beginner guide.
Frequently asked questions
Is Princess Mononoke scary?
It can be. The scariest parts involve cursed animal gods, battle injuries, and a general sense that the natural and human worlds are both under pressure. Sensitive viewers may find it more intense than expected from an animated film.
Do I need to watch any other Ghibli film first?
No. Princess Mononoke is a standalone story. Watching other Ghibli films first can help you appreciate the studio’s range, but the plot does not require prior knowledge.
Is San actually a princess?
Not in the royal court sense. “Princess Mononoke” points more toward San’s feared, mythic identity as a spirit-like wolf girl connected to the forest. The title carries folklore weight rather than a normal fairy-tale role.
What should I watch after Princess Mononoke?
For similar ecological and mythic themes, try Nausicaä. For another ambitious fantasy with a different emotional texture, try Spirited Away or Howl’s Moving Castle. For a calmer recovery watch, go to Kiki’s Delivery Service or My Neighbor Totoro.
Image source note: The still used in this guide comes from Studio Ghibli’s official Princess Mononoke work page, which includes the studio’s common-sense usage notice for official images.























