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The Secret World of Arrietty Characters Guide: Arrietty, Sho, Homily, Pod, and Haru

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Official Studio Ghibli still from ghibli.jp, used under Studio Ghibli’s common-sense image-use notice.

Quick answer: The Secret World of Arrietty works because its characters are small in scale but clear in feeling. Arrietty wants freedom, Sho wants connection, Homily wants safety, Pod wants survival, and Haru turns curiosity into threat. This guide explains the main characters, what each one adds to the story, and why the film feels so gentle even when the borrower family is in real danger.

The Secret World of Arrietty official Studio Ghibli still showing a quiet character moment
Official Studio Ghibli still from ghibli.jp, used under Studio Ghibli’s common-sense image-use notice.

Why the characters matter

The Secret World of Arrietty is not built around a huge villain, a world-saving quest, or a complicated mythology. Its drama comes from size, attention, and perspective. A teacup becomes a landscape. A sugar cube becomes treasure. A human house becomes a dangerous wilderness. The characters matter because each one sees that world differently. Arrietty sees possibility. Her parents see risk. Sho sees wonder and loneliness. Haru sees a secret she wants to expose.

That simple contrast makes the film easy to follow but emotionally rich. It is one of the best Studio Ghibli films for viewers who like domestic fantasy: magic hidden under floorboards, everyday objects made strange, and relationships shaped by quiet acts of trust.

Arrietty Clock

Arrietty is the heart of the film. She is brave, curious, and impatient to prove she can handle the borrower life. At the start, her first borrowing trip is almost a rite of passage. She wants to move through the human house with skill, take only what is needed, and return home as someone her parents can trust.

What makes Arrietty memorable is that her courage is not reckless for its own sake. She is young enough to be thrilled by the human world, but she is also learning that every choice has consequences for her family. Her friendship with Sho gives her a glimpse of a wider life, yet it also threatens the fragile safety her parents have protected for years.

Arrietty fits a classic Ghibli pattern: a young heroine discovering herself through movement, work, and responsibility. Like Kiki, Chihiro, and Satsuki, she grows because she has to act. The film never makes her powerful in a superhero sense. Her strength is attention, nerve, and loyalty.

Sho

Sho is the human boy staying in the house while preparing for heart surgery. His quietness gives the film much of its emotional tone. He is not a loud intruder into Arrietty’s world. He watches, listens, and tries to understand. That gentleness is why Arrietty is drawn to him, even though every borrower rule says humans are dangerous.

Sho’s sadness also mirrors Arrietty’s situation. Both characters feel trapped by circumstances they did not choose. Arrietty is limited by being tiny in a human world. Sho is limited by illness and uncertainty. Their friendship is moving because neither can completely solve the other’s problem, but each can make the other feel less alone.

For viewers comparing Ghibli films, Sho is a softer character than many of the studio’s young male leads. He does not drive the plot through action. He changes the story by paying attention and by choosing care over possession.

Homily

Homily, Arrietty’s mother, is often remembered for her anxious energy, but she is more than comic panic. Her fear is practical. The borrower family’s safety depends on not being seen, not being followed, and not being treated as a curiosity by humans. From her point of view, Arrietty’s contact with Sho is not a sweet adventure. It is a direct threat to their home.

That makes Homily one of the film’s most important grounding characters. She represents the cost of wonder. A viewer may want Arrietty to explore, but Homily reminds us that exploration can carry real danger when your entire family can fit inside a dollhouse. Her worry gives the film stakes without making it harsh.

Pod

Pod, Arrietty’s father, is calm, resourceful, and almost wordlessly capable. He teaches Arrietty how to move through the house, how to borrow without waste, and how to respect danger. In a louder film, Pod might have been a heroic adventurer. Here, his heroism is practical: ropes, routes, timing, and judgement.

Pod also shows how borrower culture survives. He is not simply protecting Arrietty from the world. He is passing down a way of living. That makes his scenes with her feel important even when very little is said. The quiet competence of Pod is one reason the miniature world feels believable.

Haru

Haru is the closest thing the film has to an antagonist. She is not evil in a grand fantasy way, but she is dangerous because she refuses to respect the borrowers as people. To her, discovering them becomes proof, gossip, and control. That attitude is exactly what the borrower rules are designed to avoid.

Haru works because her threat feels ordinary. She does not need magic or weapons. She only needs access to the house and the confidence that she has a right to interfere. In a film about tiny people trying to remain unseen, that is enough to create real tension.

Spiller

Spiller appears later in the film and expands the sense of the borrower world beyond Arrietty’s family. He is rougher, more independent, and more adapted to life outside the house. His presence suggests that survival can take different forms. Arrietty’s family has one kind of domestic borrower life; Spiller hints at another, wilder version.

He also gives the ending a little more possibility. The story is not only about loss or leaving. It is about movement into an unknown world where borrower life continues, even if it cannot continue in the same place.

Best character relationships

The central relationship is Arrietty and Sho, but the family triangle between Arrietty, Homily, and Pod is just as important. Arrietty’s parents are not obstacles to her growth. They are the reason growth is complicated. They love her, need her to learn, and fear the risks that come with her independence.

That balance gives the film its tenderness. It understands that growing up can be exciting for the child and frightening for the parent at the same time. Arrietty wants to become capable. Homily wants her safe. Pod quietly prepares her for both.

Where to go next

If you enjoy Arrietty’s gentle courage, read our Secret World of Arrietty movie guide next. For another grounded coming-of-age story, try our Kiki’s Delivery Service characters guide. If you are planning a broader route through the studio, start with the Studio Ghibli movies in order guide.

FAQ

Who is the main character in The Secret World of Arrietty?

Arrietty is the main character. The film follows her first major steps into the human world and the consequences of being seen by Sho.

Is Sho a villain?

No. Sho is gentle and sympathetic. The danger comes from the wider human world and from people who would treat the borrowers as objects or proof rather than as a family.

Why is Homily so worried?

Homily understands that discovery could force the family to leave their home. Her anxiety is exaggerated at times, but the risk she fears is real.

What makes Arrietty a strong Ghibli heroine?

She is brave, observant, loyal, and willing to learn. Her strength comes from courage under pressure rather than magic or physical power.

Image credit: Official Studio Ghibli stills from ghibli.jp, used under Studio Ghibli’s common-sense image-use notice.