Leafie in her cage emphasises the two main themes of the film: maternal love and civilisation vs nature. http://fims.kofic.or.kr/upload/up_img/2011/05/mov_1925B2_20110502153737_3.jpg
First and foremost I feel compelled to give a fairly brief plot overview so that when I use specifc examples within this analysis it is easy to understand their place in the overall narrative of the film. So Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is about a hen, named Leafie, who has had enough of living in a factory-like battery farm where all she does is lay eggs. In order to escape into “the yard” she starves herself, faints and is thrown out along with other dead chickens, by the emotionless farmer. Here she is attacked by a one-eyed weasel, apparently looking for fresh prey, rather than the corpses around Leafie. She is saved by a duck she later names Wanderer as he traps the weasel, named One-Eye, under a wheelbarrow. Leafie finds her way back to the farm and she assumes she can now live in “the yard”, however the rooster of the farm, along with his two hens and four white duck companions, is not as welcoming as she would have hoped. Leafie is kicked out and goes on a journey showing her the world is bigger than just the farmyard. She wanders into the wilderness and, thanks to the help of a realtor-come-mayor otter, is able to find a suitable home in a thicket near a stream that will hide her scent from the weasel. Wanderer, and his lover white duck, inhabit a nearby thicket. One night the weasel attacks their abode and kills Wanderer's partner. As he chases the weasel, Leafie investigates their house and finds an egg left over from the recent victims. Leafie is naturally drawn to sit on the egg and keeps it warm until it hatches with Wanderer bringing her the sustainable she needs as she sits over his child. The weasel returns for another meal some nights later only to be thwarted by Wanderer. However sensing he cannot keep the fight up forever, Wanderer tells Leafie to take his child (once it has hatched) to live in the Everglades, explaining she will know why when the time comes. The next night the weasel finally gets Wanderer but the egg hatches and Leafie and the newly hatched chick, she names Greenie, go off to live in the Everglades. There the seasons go on and Greenie learns how to swim from the otter and fly from an owl and a bat. However, as time goes on (and after a few more weasel attacks) Greenie disassociates himself, being a duck, from his “mother” who is a hen and can thus neither fly nor swim. He therefore runs away and finds himself in the farmyard Leafie once tried to inhabit. However, he is captured by the farmer who wants to cut off his wings to subdue him in order to cook Greenie for dinner. Leafie, along with some help from friends, storm the farmyard and save Greenie, whilst simultaneously freeing all the other chickens in the cages. Greenie then sees his mistake and makes up with his adoptive mother. But before long it is winter and now Greenie has the urge inside of him to migrate. A flock of ducks comes and Greenie wants to become the head of the flock, the Guard Duck. In order to take up this prestigious position he must win a flying contest. Greenie does of course do this, being cheered on by the ever-supportive Leafie, and wins the race and thus the position his father once held before him. Then in a final goodbye between Greenie and Leafie, they are attacked by the weasel again who pins Greenie to the ground. However, this is just outside the weasel's own den and we learn she too is a mother, hunting only to fed her young, who Leafie threatens. The two trade children and Greenie says a tear-shedding goodbye before flying off. The weasel then returns and Leafie gives herself up without a struggle to feed the weasel and thus also her pups.
Greenie's departure will start this thematic analysis. http://azzai.deviantart.com/art/goodbye-mother-335592214
The film ends as it had been throughout, an example of a mother's sacrifice to her children. Leafie's sacrifice is from one mother to another to help One-Eye feed her pups. The ending is purely emblematic of the film as a whole. The main theme of Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is obviously a mother's love and her sacrifice for her children. The reason Leafie starves herself is not only to leave the farm and be free, but it is so she can sit on one of her eggs, which are otherwise taken away by what is basically a factory line conveyor belt. Her motherly instinct is the reason she ends up taking care of Greenie in the first place. She even says this to Chirpie, her sparrow friend, when Chirpie tries to convince her the farm is safe and gives her food. Then when she sees the Wanderer's lonesome egg in his house she sits on it out of a natural desire from within her. When she does so he gets a physical sensation of pleasure, showing how much this meant to her, to sit on an egg. Admittedly Leafie is often ignorant of her position in life, but she continues to sit on this egg despite the heartbreak she must feel from her unrequited love for Wanderer. So even when her crush gets dragged away by the predator weasel, she does not run off after him, she instead remembers her duty as a mother, even if she is not the biological mother. So too she uproots her life, which had just started a short time ago, to go to the Everglades due to the dying wishes of Wanderer who tells her to go there only under the justification that she will know why when the time comes. This relocation was not for her benefit or pleasure, as she had been advised by the mayor/apartment manager to live in the brier patch bushes that were more suitable for her traits and abilities or rather a lack thereof. Notably the Otter had earlier ruled out the Everglades as a suitable place to live due to her feet not being webbed and later on he tells her to leave as her feathers are not water resistant like a duck's and this could make her sick. Therefore Leafie moves in order to give her child the best possible life for him, not for her. We realise this when the flock comes and Leafie is reminded of why they came to the Everglades, under the wishes of the Wanderer. She thus encourages Greenie to go out and make friends and then leave with the flock. Leafie is not only willing to sacrifice her livelihood for Greenie but also she would give her life for him. She is willing to fight One-Eye in scraps that could mean been eaten by her hungry weasel predator. This doesn't just happen once but several times. Leafie fights tooth and nail (or beak and claw I suppose) to save her son. The same potential sacrifice is made when Greenie finds himself on the farm, Leafie runs off to his aid with a second thought. She saves her son, this time confronting all those from her past, the animals from the farmyard and even the farmer himself. We must note that she did this after Greenie had denounced her as his real mother, saying that she is not his real mother, as she is a hen and he is a duck. It is a testament to Leafie as an adoptive mother that she helps him after this sort of an argument. She could have quite easily just walked away but her maternal instinct kicks in. In conjunction to this Leafie is willing to try and fight her limitations in order to help her son. She wants to learn how to swim despite being discouraged by the Otter. The last sacrifice any mother must make is of course to let her child go on their journey without any restrictions. So too when it comes Greenie's time to follow his destiny and take up his late father's post as Guard Duck of the flock. She supports him in the contest to take up the position and then lies to her son, so he would follow his dreams without worry. She tells him to go so that he would not stay to protect her from the weasel, even though she intends to sacrifice herself for One-Eye's pups. Thus the main theme of this film is a mother's love for her child.
The main theme is about the maternal love Leafie shows: http://whiteliolynx.deviantart.com/art/Baby-295619564
The film ends as it had been throughout, an example of a mother's sacrifice to her children. Leafie's sacrifice is from one mother to another to help One-Eye feed her pups. The ending is purely emblematic of the film as a whole. The main theme of Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is obviously a mother's love and her sacrifice for her children. The reason Leafie starves herself is not only to leave the farm and be free, but it is so she can sit on one of her eggs, which are otherwise taken away by what is basically a factory line conveyor belt. Her motherly instinct is the reason she ends up taking care of Greenie in the first place. She even says this to Chirpie, her sparrow friend, when Chirpie tries to convince her the farm is safe and gives her food. Then when she sees the Wanderer's lonesome egg in his house she sits on it out of a natural desire from within her. When she does so he gets a physical sensation of pleasure, showing how much this meant to her, to sit on an egg. Admittedly Leafie is often ignorant of her position in life, but she continues to sit on this egg despite the heartbreak she must feel from her unrequited love for Wanderer. So even when her crush gets dragged away by the predator weasel, she does not run off after him, she instead remembers her duty as a mother, even if she is not the biological mother. So too she uproots her life, which had just started a short time ago, to go to the Everglades due to the dying wishes of Wanderer who tells her to go there only under the justification that she will know why when the time comes. This relocation was not for her benefit or pleasure, as she had been advised by the mayor/apartment manager to live in the brier patch bushes that were more suitable for her traits and abilities or rather a lack thereof. Notably the Otter had earlier ruled out the Everglades as a suitable place to live due to her feet not being webbed and later on he tells her to leave as her feathers are not water resistant like a duck's and this could make her sick. Therefore Leafie moves in order to give her child the best possible life for him, not for her. We realise this when the flock comes and Leafie is reminded of why they came to the Everglades, under the wishes of the Wanderer. She thus encourages Greenie to go out and make friends and then leave with the flock. Leafie is not only willing to sacrifice her livelihood for Greenie but also she would give her life for him. She is willing to fight One-Eye in scraps that could mean been eaten by her hungry weasel predator. This doesn't just happen once but several times. Leafie fights tooth and nail (or beak and claw I suppose) to save her son. The same potential sacrifice is made when Greenie finds himself on the farm, Leafie runs off to his aid with a second thought. She saves her son, this time confronting all those from her past, the animals from the farmyard and even the farmer himself. We must note that she did this after Greenie had denounced her as his real mother, saying that she is not his real mother, as she is a hen and he is a duck. It is a testament to Leafie as an adoptive mother that she helps him after this sort of an argument. She could have quite easily just walked away but her maternal instinct kicks in. In conjunction to this Leafie is willing to try and fight her limitations in order to help her son. She wants to learn how to swim despite being discouraged by the Otter. The last sacrifice any mother must make is of course to let her child go on their journey without any restrictions. So too when it comes Greenie's time to follow his destiny and take up his late father's post as Guard Duck of the flock. She supports him in the contest to take up the position and then lies to her son, so he would follow his dreams without worry. She tells him to go so that he would not stay to protect her from the weasel, even though she intends to sacrifice herself for One-Eye's pups. Thus the main theme of this film is a mother's love for her child.
The main theme is about the maternal love Leafie shows: http://whiteliolynx.deviantart.com/art/Baby-295619564
This film obviously tells a tale of an adoptive mother and her struggles in a very artistic way by sing the animal kingdom: how a mother’s instinct and the desire of women to be a mother is portrayed through a hen, a bird renown for being motherly; how the idea of maternal love being through an adoptive relationship is shown through how she adopts a duck, a different bird species; and how the mother must eventually let go of their baby is shown through Greenie’s need to migrate, which ducks are obviously known for but hens are not. However there is more than this, as symbolism plays a large piece in this storytelling of the relationship between a mother and son. Mainly it tells some of the implied parts of the relationship between Leafie and Greenie, and thus between a mother and her child. The first and most important symbol is the purple flower Leafie puts in her tail and keeps it in there until the wind blows it out. This flower symbolises her adoptive son Greenie as it is only blown out of her tail feathers, which looks like the leaves of the plant, when Greenie flies away (is taken by the wind) with the other mallards. It is notable that our protagonist's name is Leafie and even more so when we consider the way in which she introduces herself to Wanderer. She calls herself Leafie as in the things trees have, explaining her name. Now while trees have leaves so do flowers. So whilst the hen or rather mother is the leaf, the child, or duck in this case, is the flower. I think this symbolism is another extremely artistic way to metaphorically talk about a mother's relationship with her child. A leaf gives the flower what it needs to survive: the top of a leaf contains chloroplasts, which through photosynthesis, absorb sunlight and subsequently use it to make food for the flower as a whole; on the underside leaves also breathe for the flower, inhaling carbon dioxide and exhaling oxygen. Despite all this, unless it is autumn or people are looking at Sakura (cherry blossoms) no one will describe leaves as beautiful. Leaves are not the centre piece of a plant, the flowers are. This goes into the relationship within the symbolism of a child as a flower. The leaf or the mother provides the things the child needs in order for the child to go on and succeed or look beautiful. It should be noted that Leafie even says that flowers cannot bloom without leaves as she explains her name to Wanderer. We could also speculate on how flowers breed (not the leaves) but the idea of carrying on a family line is not present in the film. So this symbol, rather than focussing on the sacrifice in maternal love, highlights the aims of a mother and also implies the rewards she gets from providing the necessary means for the success. Whilst a flower is beautiful, a child can be successful too. In the case of Greenie he is successful when he learns the skills he needs to fulfill his natural role as a duck, particularly he needs to be able to swim and dive underwater, so he can catch food, and he needs to be able to fly, so that he can migrate with his flock. Greenie is able to achieve this, and more than this he becomes the flock's Guard, with the support of his mother. The film then shows a mother's reward, which is her pride in her child's success. Leafie is immensely proud of her baby when he learns to swim and fly, she shouts to anyone able to listen (even if they don't want to hear it). We might remember Leafie is mocked for having a flower in her tail, just as she is for raising her child in the way she chooses, but she perseveres and is rewarded for it with her pride. Anyway the relationship between a mother and her child is thus given other aspects through the symbol of a flower and a leaf(ie).
The main symbol of the film is the flower, representing a child of the leaf. http://taskidog.deviantart.com/art/Leafie-277363139
The second symbol main symbol of Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is the red tape that is tied around Greenie's ankle. This red cord, was forcefully attached to him in order to restrict him by the farmer, thinking he had found himself a nice dinner. Leafie removes some of it before Greenie must leave her but some of it is still there. This red tape symbolises the attachment parents, in this case a mother, has to a son. It is notable that Greenie gets this ribbon when he is trying to break ties with his adoptive mother and even more notable this mark came from a place where his mother had presumably spent a large portion of her life, the farm. During their time in the Everglades, Greenie had been teased by other ducklings. He compares his physical appearance to his other and sadly sees their differences. Greenie does yell at her about this, to which she says their differences to do matter. Greenie thus runs away to the farm, however when he is being pinned by the farmer and being tied up with this red string, that Greenie (through fear) instinctively calls for his mother, Leafie. He thus understands that this shows how much he depends on her and how much she means to him, as he apologises afterwards. He flies around with this bond on his leg and is only embarrassed about it again as other ducks won't socialise with him due to it. We might parallel this to how peers of our own age would not talk to use due to our mother's over-affectionate nature. He laments this but is not overly angry by it as he has grown to accept and cherish his mother's love. We should note here a comparison to him before when he was mocked (not for the symbolic red tape) but for the real relationship between him and his mother that influenced his decision to run away and led to the red tape being attached as in the first place. Greenie through accepting the red string on his leg also accepts his place as his Leafie's son and although he is ready to leave, he will not do so if she doesn't want him to. That night Leafie then realises that if she does not remove the red band Greenie might never fulfill his potential and it is after revelation she really pushes him on in his conquest and stops being as protective as she was when they first moved to the Everglades. In doing this it shows that she accepts that if she does not let go of her son he will never reach his full potential, he will always be pulled down by her. She pecks away as much as she can, notably leaving a band still around Greenie's leg, and tells him that it will be her mark, so he knows they know he is her baby and so she can recognise him in the flock. It ties them together but is no longer restrictive. This is her letting go of Greenie so he can become what he was born to be, but at the same time leaving a bond between them. Thus the red string too symbolises the relationship between a mother and a son, how it will never fully go away, but it is one that must be slightly severed if the child is to fulfill their dreams and potential.
The red ribbon shows Leafie must let go of her son. http://rascal4488.deviantart.com/art/Leafie-FanArt-505358304
As we have seen Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is a very artistically told story with a theme about maternal love, sacrifice and a mother's connection to their child. This however is not the only animated picture that does this. More recently, so after Leafie, there was an anime directed by the very talented Mamoru Hosoda named Wolf Children Ame and Yuki. It also artistically portrays the same themes, rather than through a natural setting with animals as characters, it has a fantastical setting with werewolf-ish children and their relationship with a real world life. It also takes into account of modern societies treatment of animals, as Leafie does, which will be discussed below, and has many of the same motifs, such as a mother letting go of their child to fulfill their role as a leader or a family relocating in order to give the child a better opportunity in life. First both have mentor characters that give the children the advice or the training the child needs that the parents cannot provide. Yuki, the younger brother werewolf, needs advice on how to get in touch with his wolf side so, without the father around (who was a werewolf) the human mother seeks guides in the form of other wolves. After she is unable to find anything Yuki finds a mentor in the forest, the forest guardian, a fox he calls his master. From this fox, who the mother deeply respects, bringing him a gift, Yuki grows into the wolf that can become the new forest guardian. So too when Greenie needs to learn skills in order to become a fully fledged duck it is not Leafie that teaches them to him, it is a goup of mentors. Namely the otter teaches Greenie to swim and dive underwater and then Greenie is taught to fly by both a bat living in a cave and an owl from the nearby forest. Although there is perhaps not as much respect given to these characters perhaps their natures as mentors are quite Korean. Korea, like Japan, has many afterschool private academies where parents pay teachers for advanced (or remedial) tuition. Yuki's mentorship allows Yuki to find his place in the world, however Greenie's mentorship pushes him to be the best as he remembers these teachings during his contest to be the Guard (the best) duck. This idea of mentorship that leads to success is a very Korean idea where child will go to numerous hagwons and have numerous teachers (mentors) to ensure they have the best marks possible in order to get into a good university. Thus Wolf Children Ame and Yuki has a distinctive Japanese feel to it, with the forest and the wolf and the stories of the wolf, and I also think that Leafie too has a Korean feel to it too that ties into the comparison of these two films. Another different aspect of the two films, which illustrates Leafie: A Hen into the Wild's Koreaness, is the way in which the single parent is treated. In Wolf Children Ame and Yuki, the single mother is helped by the whole community, but Leafie is often ridiculed and persecuted by the other families in the Everglades. It seems to be indicative of how very particular Korean culture can be about having very standardised parents. Supposedly one of the first questions a set of parents would ask a potential son or daughter in-law is what their parents' jobs are. Also maternal care is definitely a universal theme that can easily be understood but at the same time this is an especially Korean one. Korean parents are very protective, especially mothers and I think this also comes across in the film with the sacrifices Leafie makes for her children. So the way this film portrays motherhood shows it can stand up to a contemporary Japanese animated film of a very high calibre and still show it Koreaness.
As we have seen Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is a very artistically told story with a theme about maternal love, sacrifice and a mother's connection to their child. This however is not the only animated picture that does this. More recently, so after Leafie, there was an anime directed by the very talented Mamoru Hosoda named Wolf Children Ame and Yuki. It also artistically portrays the same themes, rather than through a natural setting with animals as characters, it has a fantastical setting with werewolf-ish children and their relationship with a real world life. It also takes into account of modern societies treatment of animals, as Leafie does, which will be discussed below, and has many of the same motifs, such as a mother letting go of their child to fulfill their role as a leader or a family relocating in order to give the child a better opportunity in life. First both have mentor characters that give the children the advice or the training the child needs that the parents cannot provide. Yuki, the younger brother werewolf, needs advice on how to get in touch with his wolf side so, without the father around (who was a werewolf) the human mother seeks guides in the form of other wolves. After she is unable to find anything Yuki finds a mentor in the forest, the forest guardian, a fox he calls his master. From this fox, who the mother deeply respects, bringing him a gift, Yuki grows into the wolf that can become the new forest guardian. So too when Greenie needs to learn skills in order to become a fully fledged duck it is not Leafie that teaches them to him, it is a goup of mentors. Namely the otter teaches Greenie to swim and dive underwater and then Greenie is taught to fly by both a bat living in a cave and an owl from the nearby forest. Although there is perhaps not as much respect given to these characters perhaps their natures as mentors are quite Korean. Korea, like Japan, has many afterschool private academies where parents pay teachers for advanced (or remedial) tuition. Yuki's mentorship allows Yuki to find his place in the world, however Greenie's mentorship pushes him to be the best as he remembers these teachings during his contest to be the Guard (the best) duck. This idea of mentorship that leads to success is a very Korean idea where child will go to numerous hagwons and have numerous teachers (mentors) to ensure they have the best marks possible in order to get into a good university. Thus Wolf Children Ame and Yuki has a distinctive Japanese feel to it, with the forest and the wolf and the stories of the wolf, and I also think that Leafie too has a Korean feel to it too that ties into the comparison of these two films. Another different aspect of the two films, which illustrates Leafie: A Hen into the Wild's Koreaness, is the way in which the single parent is treated. In Wolf Children Ame and Yuki, the single mother is helped by the whole community, but Leafie is often ridiculed and persecuted by the other families in the Everglades. It seems to be indicative of how very particular Korean culture can be about having very standardised parents. Supposedly one of the first questions a set of parents would ask a potential son or daughter in-law is what their parents' jobs are. Also maternal care is definitely a universal theme that can easily be understood but at the same time this is an especially Korean one. Korean parents are very protective, especially mothers and I think this also comes across in the film with the sacrifices Leafie makes for her children. So the way this film portrays motherhood shows it can stand up to a contemporary Japanese animated film of a very high calibre and still show it Koreaness.
The relationship between Greenie and Leafie also show the artistic storytelling and Koreaness of the film. http://bukoya.deviantart.com/art/Leafie-And-Greenie-332677661
However, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is much more than just a mother's story, it also has a comment on modern civilisation and its relationship with animals and nature made apparent with its very poignant ending. So as Leafie literally sacrifices her life for the weasel’s children upon learning One-Eye is a starving mother with no way to feed her pups, we are given both an immensely bittersweet ending. This illustrates a point of nature that is very often ignored in animated features. Numerous animated adventures explore or take part in the world of animals. Some animated features do have a struggle between the hunter and the hunted, however, very few, if any, look into the potentially depressing story of a realistic food chain within an ecosystem. The Lion King, for example, features lions, the king predator, yet they are never seen eating any live animal, that we might want to see in a zoo (such as a zebra): perhaps the evil Scar does almost eat a mouse but Simba and his father do not do anything of the sort. In fact Simba basically either becomes a vegetarian with Timon and Pumba or he just eats the insects in the jungle, something that is very hard to sympathize with. Leafie: A Hen into the Wild does however deal with this harsh reality that animals need to eat and some of animals do it by feeding on other animals. We should note here that by the end of the film weasel is no longer a villain, she is just a mother that is doing what she must to survive. When Wanderer first saves Leafie he paints a bad picture of the weasel saying she is cruel, vicious and only like live prey. But by the end we realise One-Eye is not murdering animals for fun (although why she needs live prey leaves this up for debate), she is killing in order to give herself nutrients to pass on to her immobile young children. Although we see her as some entity to try and fight off or even kill due to her actions against Wanderer and his family, we feel emotion on the side of One-Eye in this ending for two reasons. First, the obvious twist is meant to show sympathy for the weasel and show she is not an antagonist of pure evil. She is a caring mother who is herself starving as well and yet continues to fight to feed her children. On top of this One-Eye, like Leafie, is a single mother. She has to go out and hunt for herself; she is not provided for by a male partner. She caringly licks her pups, saying she knows they are hungry and wants to be able to feed them but she needs to hunt first. We sympathise with One-Eye for the same reasons that Leafie does, and because of this we realize Leafie’s sacrifice is a reasonable decision. As an adoptive mother she has learnt to feel for children of a different species. It is notable the caring piano music that plays when Leafie first sees One-Eye's pups. Anyway, the other revelation that makes us feel some pity for One-Eye is that she cries for antagonist, much like the audience would be doing. One-Eye shows her as a mother and one that has emotions. She isn't merciless and doesn't villainously plot to kill our protagonists, she is caring for her otherwise helpless pups that Leafie also decides to help. At one point Leafie asks One-Eye she is picking on her family, to which One-Eye replies she is just hungry. Thus just as Leafie connects with One-Eye, we as an audience do too. In this we are confronted with the reality of nature: the prey and the predator, in this case the chicken and weasel, cannot live simultaneously, one must die for the other to survive. Leafie understands her role in nature, much as the audience comes to realise this too. The harshness of this reality is furthered with the last panning shot in the film. Before we see Greenie flying off with his new comrades, we are shown One-Eye dragging the limb and lifeless body of Leafie off. We are reminded and reinforced that this is part of nature, just as it is Greenie flying off was what he naturally needed to do as a mallard. Leafie’s death should be no less accepted and seen as in the same terms as Greenie’s migration, both are natural parts of the world.
However, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild is much more than just a mother's story, it also has a comment on modern civilisation and its relationship with animals and nature made apparent with its very poignant ending. So as Leafie literally sacrifices her life for the weasel’s children upon learning One-Eye is a starving mother with no way to feed her pups, we are given both an immensely bittersweet ending. This illustrates a point of nature that is very often ignored in animated features. Numerous animated adventures explore or take part in the world of animals. Some animated features do have a struggle between the hunter and the hunted, however, very few, if any, look into the potentially depressing story of a realistic food chain within an ecosystem. The Lion King, for example, features lions, the king predator, yet they are never seen eating any live animal, that we might want to see in a zoo (such as a zebra): perhaps the evil Scar does almost eat a mouse but Simba and his father do not do anything of the sort. In fact Simba basically either becomes a vegetarian with Timon and Pumba or he just eats the insects in the jungle, something that is very hard to sympathize with. Leafie: A Hen into the Wild does however deal with this harsh reality that animals need to eat and some of animals do it by feeding on other animals. We should note here that by the end of the film weasel is no longer a villain, she is just a mother that is doing what she must to survive. When Wanderer first saves Leafie he paints a bad picture of the weasel saying she is cruel, vicious and only like live prey. But by the end we realise One-Eye is not murdering animals for fun (although why she needs live prey leaves this up for debate), she is killing in order to give herself nutrients to pass on to her immobile young children. Although we see her as some entity to try and fight off or even kill due to her actions against Wanderer and his family, we feel emotion on the side of One-Eye in this ending for two reasons. First, the obvious twist is meant to show sympathy for the weasel and show she is not an antagonist of pure evil. She is a caring mother who is herself starving as well and yet continues to fight to feed her children. On top of this One-Eye, like Leafie, is a single mother. She has to go out and hunt for herself; she is not provided for by a male partner. She caringly licks her pups, saying she knows they are hungry and wants to be able to feed them but she needs to hunt first. We sympathise with One-Eye for the same reasons that Leafie does, and because of this we realize Leafie’s sacrifice is a reasonable decision. As an adoptive mother she has learnt to feel for children of a different species. It is notable the caring piano music that plays when Leafie first sees One-Eye's pups. Anyway, the other revelation that makes us feel some pity for One-Eye is that she cries for antagonist, much like the audience would be doing. One-Eye shows her as a mother and one that has emotions. She isn't merciless and doesn't villainously plot to kill our protagonists, she is caring for her otherwise helpless pups that Leafie also decides to help. At one point Leafie asks One-Eye she is picking on her family, to which One-Eye replies she is just hungry. Thus just as Leafie connects with One-Eye, we as an audience do too. In this we are confronted with the reality of nature: the prey and the predator, in this case the chicken and weasel, cannot live simultaneously, one must die for the other to survive. Leafie understands her role in nature, much as the audience comes to realise this too. The harshness of this reality is furthered with the last panning shot in the film. Before we see Greenie flying off with his new comrades, we are shown One-Eye dragging the limb and lifeless body of Leafie off. We are reminded and reinforced that this is part of nature, just as it is Greenie flying off was what he naturally needed to do as a mallard. Leafie’s death should be no less accepted and seen as in the same terms as Greenie’s migration, both are natural parts of the world.
The portrayal of One-Eye's pups turn the weasel's characterisation http://studio2morrow.com/bbs/bbs/board.php?bo_table=Character_mechanic&wr_id=111
However, what is quite obviously unnatural and to be contrasted against the harshness of nature is the harshness of civilisation in its interactions with nature. We can compare the death Leafie faces from One-Eye the hungry yet motherly weasel, compared to her “death” from starvation that lets her escape the farm in the start of the film. The latter death she accepts, just as we should accept the natural pecking order of animals, in order to help out a fellow single mother. It is seen as a very sad moment yet one that is ultimately necessary in some sort of circle of life. But her near death experience in the farm only emphasises the cruelty of the farm. Leafie: A Hen into the Wild, like the film Chicken Run, is shown with the farmer, his farm and how he treats birds, particularly the hens. The very start of the film shows a very clear message about battery farming. We get huge imagery with the barn where numerous hens are kept in cages not big enough to move and the hens have their necks stuck through the bars of their cage in order to be fed. These hens are also forced to lay eggs onto a moving conveyor belt that takes them away immediately. Everything about it is like an industrialised machine, but we must remember animals are not machines, they are living breathing things that can feel emotions and pain. They need room to live a proper life. If we look at the visual representations of the hens that are in the long line of cages, they look ill, not just physically with their lose of feathers, but also mentally with the way their eyes don't look in the same direction and the way they hold themselves up. Leafie is the only one that looks remotely healthy. However, after she is out of her cage and in the wild for a while she looks notably better, with a brighter colour and the worn out skin on her neck is replaced with a healthy set of feathers. Chirpie, Leafie's sparrow friend from the farm, notes such positive physical changes. Leafie too shows how her claws and her beak have gotten stronger due to being outside the farm. On top of this we can compare the clean and sparkling pond in the Everglades with the murky polluted water system in the farms that the tame white ducks are willing to swim in just after they have used it as their toilet. The method with which Leafie had to go to in order to escape further this idea of cruelty and horrors in battery farming. First of all Leafie was literally willing to starve herself for three days to escape. Such desperate measures just illustrate how oppressive this system is. Second, the farmer's lack of concern about his chickens is furthered when he takes Leafie out of her cage. She is tossed on the top of numerous other dead chickens, with no sense of lamentation for the lose of life. This pile of corpses is dumped in a hole en masse like some sort of mass grave from a war or natural disaster. There is no compassion shown for the chickens shown by the farmer, illustrating clearly what the creators think about battery farms. So why does Leafie want to escape? Of course freedom is its own reward that is very desirable, but Leafie also reasons she wants to sit on her eggs. She wants to be free in order to be a mother. Leafie is not wanting to do something unnatural, like she does in the latter parts of the film when attempting to swim, Leafie wants to do what it is natural for a hen to do, be a mother to her eggs. Freedom seems like a condition more natural than captivity but her urge to be a mother is emphasised more than anything. I have mentioned how Leafie's maternal instincts and actions are a main theme but this motherliness is portrayed as very natural from within her. In fact Leafie has such a natural urge to sit on her eggs that she even settles for sitting on an abandoned egg left by Wanderer's deceased wife. Because the farmer wants to restrict and stop these motherly urges from within Leafie and her fellow hens, the farm and human interactions with this sort of farming are seen as unnatural and just plain cruel. The way the farmer and the farm restrict and oppress Leafie's natural urges is just a representation of how civilisation destroys and tries to control nature generally. In fact if we see Leafie's inner natural voice telling her to be a mother, Greenie's inner natural voice obvious tells him to fly. It is notable then that when Greenie is caught by the farmer he wants to cut off Greenie's wings, and he rushes away to fetch some scissors. Thus I would suggest that the farm and farmer himself are depicted as taking away the natural urges of animals, to be a mother or to fly. On top of this it is shown as providing animals with substantially worse living conditions, with little to no care about these inadequacies.
The condition of the hens in the battery farm illustrate how modern society has affected nature. http://www.hancinema.net/photos/fullsizephoto354665.png
So the battery farm and thus modern civilisation, at least, are seen as detrimental to animals as it tries to take away their natural instincts. We might wonder how the characters within the farmyard society represent our modern society, because the battery farm represents civilisation. Is our inner human nature being repressed by modern civilisation? We get a view of this farmyard society as when Leafie initially escapes she goes back to live with the chickens living outside the cages. She is however told to get back into the cages and is rejected by those pompous chickens, especially the rooster that demands to be called “Boss”. There is obviously a class based society where the working class is kept in their pitiable place (the hens in the cages) whilst the upper class, the rich, live in comparative luxury and relaxation. They women are able to fulfill their dreams, sitting on their eggs. We can see this as the reason she must go back in her cage is because she disrupts his “order”, in other words his position at the top and her position under him. She refuses saying she doesn't like the rules, the society she lives in and is thus told to leave. Basically it seems like the farmyard presents a society much like a capitalist one where many suffer in a factory like job their lives depend on so that a few can live well. In this capitalist environment, the actual environment, namely the water, is polluted just so the upper class, the ducks, can relax, which they also do in the polluted water. They literally defecate in the environment before relaxing in their exploitation of it to the disgust of Greenie. We should also remember that during the flying contest the commentators note how entries are down due to pollution killing their numbers, again showing downsides of a modern society on nature. Compare this to the beautiful and serene environment the “Mayor” oversees. He is concerned with its tranquility where all the residents get together and can freely voice their concerns, even if their concerns are about some noisy neighbour (Leafie). Overall the natural environment is idyllic compared to the horrible battery farm and not just in terms of the land itself but also the way that life is portrayed for all. Outside civilisation or the farm, everyone is doing what they want and their only concern is life itself. The farm and modern civilisation is much more stressful and few make it out. It represents how the modern capitalist society has many faults, the main being that whilst many must work in pitiable conditions to enjoy very little, others life the good life all the time. It may seem alluring, just how Greenie was lured to it by the four white ducks, but ultimately one could be destroyed by it (losing their true nature) as Greenie almost is. The natural world has all on one level only concerned about living an enjoyable and pleasant life. So too the leadership offered outside the farmyard is much better than that inside. Outside the farm we have the “Mayor” Otter who, more than anything, looks to serve his residents, finding them suitable houses to live in. The “Boss” rooster on the other hand just tells Leafie to go back into her cage where she belongs, after she escapes. He only looks to serve his own enjoyment and position in the film rather than serving those he leads. Also in contrast to this is the role of the Guard Duck, who is presumably the leader duck, but (as implied by the name) we told how it finds the best places for the ducks to land and rest. He, in other words, serves those he leads. The “Boss” is also leadership based on a superficial difference. It is based entirely on the red head piece that mimics a rooster's crest, a very superficial measure of a leader. This is especially the case when this head piece falls off the rooster and onto one of the rather silly ducks. So this duck's reign does not really change anything, it is (like his new head piece) is purely cosmetic in its change as this duck also just seeks to serve his own life of good fortune. Compare this to Greenie's journey to become the Guard Duck. It is based purely on his skills for the job, whether or not he is the best equipped to serve the populace in his term in office. There is some simple antagonistic portrayals for his rivals, but it is just trying to make this contest interesting. Thus within this criticism of humanity and how it treats nature, there is also a criticism of the current political and social system, where classes are not fairly treated and leadership only serves those in power, whilst being based on superficial measures, not on the quality of that leader. It seems that modern civilisation not only is bad for the environment and nature but also for the standard of living and happiness those within as portrayed by the animals that represent the government and society within a modern capitalist society. We might wonder if how the hens escape when Leafie returns to save her son represents the flawed and ultimately doomed fate of a capitalist society because this all results in the downfall of the “boss” rooster. He then escapes to the farm to the brier patch.
So the battery farm and thus modern civilisation, at least, are seen as detrimental to animals as it tries to take away their natural instincts. We might wonder how the characters within the farmyard society represent our modern society, because the battery farm represents civilisation. Is our inner human nature being repressed by modern civilisation? We get a view of this farmyard society as when Leafie initially escapes she goes back to live with the chickens living outside the cages. She is however told to get back into the cages and is rejected by those pompous chickens, especially the rooster that demands to be called “Boss”. There is obviously a class based society where the working class is kept in their pitiable place (the hens in the cages) whilst the upper class, the rich, live in comparative luxury and relaxation. They women are able to fulfill their dreams, sitting on their eggs. We can see this as the reason she must go back in her cage is because she disrupts his “order”, in other words his position at the top and her position under him. She refuses saying she doesn't like the rules, the society she lives in and is thus told to leave. Basically it seems like the farmyard presents a society much like a capitalist one where many suffer in a factory like job their lives depend on so that a few can live well. In this capitalist environment, the actual environment, namely the water, is polluted just so the upper class, the ducks, can relax, which they also do in the polluted water. They literally defecate in the environment before relaxing in their exploitation of it to the disgust of Greenie. We should also remember that during the flying contest the commentators note how entries are down due to pollution killing their numbers, again showing downsides of a modern society on nature. Compare this to the beautiful and serene environment the “Mayor” oversees. He is concerned with its tranquility where all the residents get together and can freely voice their concerns, even if their concerns are about some noisy neighbour (Leafie). Overall the natural environment is idyllic compared to the horrible battery farm and not just in terms of the land itself but also the way that life is portrayed for all. Outside civilisation or the farm, everyone is doing what they want and their only concern is life itself. The farm and modern civilisation is much more stressful and few make it out. It represents how the modern capitalist society has many faults, the main being that whilst many must work in pitiable conditions to enjoy very little, others life the good life all the time. It may seem alluring, just how Greenie was lured to it by the four white ducks, but ultimately one could be destroyed by it (losing their true nature) as Greenie almost is. The natural world has all on one level only concerned about living an enjoyable and pleasant life. So too the leadership offered outside the farmyard is much better than that inside. Outside the farm we have the “Mayor” Otter who, more than anything, looks to serve his residents, finding them suitable houses to live in. The “Boss” rooster on the other hand just tells Leafie to go back into her cage where she belongs, after she escapes. He only looks to serve his own enjoyment and position in the film rather than serving those he leads. Also in contrast to this is the role of the Guard Duck, who is presumably the leader duck, but (as implied by the name) we told how it finds the best places for the ducks to land and rest. He, in other words, serves those he leads. The “Boss” is also leadership based on a superficial difference. It is based entirely on the red head piece that mimics a rooster's crest, a very superficial measure of a leader. This is especially the case when this head piece falls off the rooster and onto one of the rather silly ducks. So this duck's reign does not really change anything, it is (like his new head piece) is purely cosmetic in its change as this duck also just seeks to serve his own life of good fortune. Compare this to Greenie's journey to become the Guard Duck. It is based purely on his skills for the job, whether or not he is the best equipped to serve the populace in his term in office. There is some simple antagonistic portrayals for his rivals, but it is just trying to make this contest interesting. Thus within this criticism of humanity and how it treats nature, there is also a criticism of the current political and social system, where classes are not fairly treated and leadership only serves those in power, whilst being based on superficial measures, not on the quality of that leader. It seems that modern civilisation not only is bad for the environment and nature but also for the standard of living and happiness those within as portrayed by the animals that represent the government and society within a modern capitalist society. We might wonder if how the hens escape when Leafie returns to save her son represents the flawed and ultimately doomed fate of a capitalist society because this all results in the downfall of the “boss” rooster. He then escapes to the farm to the brier patch.
The rooster symbolises everything wrong with a capitalist society. http://www.hancinema.net/photos/fullsizephoto354670.png
Above I showed how the farm is depicted as unnatural and even as something that strips animals of their natural urges. I mentioned how death is used to show the whole nature vs civilisation debate when we compare Leafie's death at the hands of the weasel and Leafie's death at the hands of the farmer. Death is thus a strong motif in this film and is, like many other films, used to evoke emotion from the audience. It is also used in a number of themes, for example it is used to show how much of a hero Wanderer is in his sacrifice to save Leafie in order to give his son a good mother. While death is one very prominent motif, another is standing out of the crowd and accepting others. Whilst Leafie is accepted by the other hens in the cages of the farm, but they show no concern for her when she dies. Then she is not accepted when she makes it out into the yard (the upper echelons of society if we take the previous interpretation) and she is even treated with violence by the rooster. Compare this to her life amoungst others outside the farm. Although she stands out and is condemned slightly by others judging her, she is for the most part accepted by the others and treated reasonably well compared to the disdain the hens in the farmyard (not the cages) have for her. The otter helps her and is nice to her, a huge contrast to the rooster “boss”. So too the old duck chief is very accepting of Greenie when he comes into the flock, even if the other ducks aren't so receptive. We can look at this comparison and how this ties into our view of society as portrayed in the farm above, again showing the negative effects class based civilisation has on us, it breeds discrimination and non-acceptance. This theme of accepting others is also tied to a potential historical interpretation of Leafie: A Hen into the Wild. This film also has quite a historical significance to it in many aspects. For example it is artistically done in what tries to be a distinctly Korean work. In order to feature a traditional Korean ink brush painting style within the work, which would distinguish it from Hollywood and Japanese animated features, the artists took field trips out to Korean mountains, lakes and fields and made over a thousand sketches from these on-site surveys, which were then turned into the background scenes. I also already noted the Koreaness of maternal love. Either way this whole Koreaness inside the film also makes us wonder about the possibility of a historical interpretation within the film. Another animated bird film, Chicken Run, tells the true tale of The Great Escape and how Allied Prisoners of War persevered against their Nazi imprisoners through their animated chickens. So does this tale of Leafie's escape offer any insight into Korean history? One might wonder if the farm is the oppressive North where tales of common people being brainwashed in servitude to some dictator are common nowadays. We could say either or both the farmer and/or the rooster who demands to be called the “Boss” is this dictator. We could see how Leafie, once she escaped her cage and then was forced out into the wilderness, or South Korea, struggles to adapt to her new life, especially around the very conservative and keep-themselves-to-themselves ducks. This could potentially be a fairly interesting historical interpretation as most of these ideas of freedom and its benefits (such as health) as opposed to oppression and its negatives are primarily used on the theme of humanity's destructive relationship with nature, so to tie these two together would be very intriguing. However, ultimately there is little hard evidence to give this historical interpretation any weight especially with the rooster being overthrown and going to live in the region that would be interpreted as the South with no repercussions. Thus there could be a historical reading but it cannot be read to deeply. What is without doubt is how, just like many Studio Ghibli films (such as Spirited Away) ooze a Japanese feel, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild also exudes a feeling like this is a distinct film from all others, especially artistically. This is due to its Korean qualities (it just depends if audiences can recognise it or not).
A nice piece of fanart of the titular character. http://ghost-peacock.deviantart.com/art/Leafie-s-afternoon-298303131
The use of many motifs show how complex and deep this film is and how really it should be considered alongside the greats from the West and from Japan. Whether or not there is potential for a historical reading, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild, offers audiences a very heartwarming and heartbreaking journey with thematic looks at numerous aspects of human and natural life. Admittedly other films have looked at themes of oppression and freedom of chickens (Chicken Run) and the struggles of motherhood through animals (Wolf Children Ami and Yuki) but none has done it in this way, nor has either of them offered it such a way that leaves the audience in a conflict of emotions. In the way it treated a variety of themes, using animals not to appeal to kids but to illustrate some harsh realities of life, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild shows how truly different it is and (for me as a viewer) really puts Korean animation on the map. This is only further emphasised with the way it is beautifully illustrated and animated, being inspired by a traditional technique of painting. The film maybe slightly predictable but that takes nothing away from its aesthetics, its deeper narrative or the emotion it evokes in the audience. In terms of its interpretation the way it presents civilisation as opposed to nature and how this condemns modern society is the most interesting part of the film, not to mention the artistic way it shows the theme of maternal love.
Above I showed how the farm is depicted as unnatural and even as something that strips animals of their natural urges. I mentioned how death is used to show the whole nature vs civilisation debate when we compare Leafie's death at the hands of the weasel and Leafie's death at the hands of the farmer. Death is thus a strong motif in this film and is, like many other films, used to evoke emotion from the audience. It is also used in a number of themes, for example it is used to show how much of a hero Wanderer is in his sacrifice to save Leafie in order to give his son a good mother. While death is one very prominent motif, another is standing out of the crowd and accepting others. Whilst Leafie is accepted by the other hens in the cages of the farm, but they show no concern for her when she dies. Then she is not accepted when she makes it out into the yard (the upper echelons of society if we take the previous interpretation) and she is even treated with violence by the rooster. Compare this to her life amoungst others outside the farm. Although she stands out and is condemned slightly by others judging her, she is for the most part accepted by the others and treated reasonably well compared to the disdain the hens in the farmyard (not the cages) have for her. The otter helps her and is nice to her, a huge contrast to the rooster “boss”. So too the old duck chief is very accepting of Greenie when he comes into the flock, even if the other ducks aren't so receptive. We can look at this comparison and how this ties into our view of society as portrayed in the farm above, again showing the negative effects class based civilisation has on us, it breeds discrimination and non-acceptance. This theme of accepting others is also tied to a potential historical interpretation of Leafie: A Hen into the Wild. This film also has quite a historical significance to it in many aspects. For example it is artistically done in what tries to be a distinctly Korean work. In order to feature a traditional Korean ink brush painting style within the work, which would distinguish it from Hollywood and Japanese animated features, the artists took field trips out to Korean mountains, lakes and fields and made over a thousand sketches from these on-site surveys, which were then turned into the background scenes. I also already noted the Koreaness of maternal love. Either way this whole Koreaness inside the film also makes us wonder about the possibility of a historical interpretation within the film. Another animated bird film, Chicken Run, tells the true tale of The Great Escape and how Allied Prisoners of War persevered against their Nazi imprisoners through their animated chickens. So does this tale of Leafie's escape offer any insight into Korean history? One might wonder if the farm is the oppressive North where tales of common people being brainwashed in servitude to some dictator are common nowadays. We could say either or both the farmer and/or the rooster who demands to be called the “Boss” is this dictator. We could see how Leafie, once she escaped her cage and then was forced out into the wilderness, or South Korea, struggles to adapt to her new life, especially around the very conservative and keep-themselves-to-themselves ducks. This could potentially be a fairly interesting historical interpretation as most of these ideas of freedom and its benefits (such as health) as opposed to oppression and its negatives are primarily used on the theme of humanity's destructive relationship with nature, so to tie these two together would be very intriguing. However, ultimately there is little hard evidence to give this historical interpretation any weight especially with the rooster being overthrown and going to live in the region that would be interpreted as the South with no repercussions. Thus there could be a historical reading but it cannot be read to deeply. What is without doubt is how, just like many Studio Ghibli films (such as Spirited Away) ooze a Japanese feel, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild also exudes a feeling like this is a distinct film from all others, especially artistically. This is due to its Korean qualities (it just depends if audiences can recognise it or not).
A nice piece of fanart of the titular character. http://ghost-peacock.deviantart.com/art/Leafie-s-afternoon-298303131
The use of many motifs show how complex and deep this film is and how really it should be considered alongside the greats from the West and from Japan. Whether or not there is potential for a historical reading, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild, offers audiences a very heartwarming and heartbreaking journey with thematic looks at numerous aspects of human and natural life. Admittedly other films have looked at themes of oppression and freedom of chickens (Chicken Run) and the struggles of motherhood through animals (Wolf Children Ami and Yuki) but none has done it in this way, nor has either of them offered it such a way that leaves the audience in a conflict of emotions. In the way it treated a variety of themes, using animals not to appeal to kids but to illustrate some harsh realities of life, Leafie: A Hen into the Wild shows how truly different it is and (for me as a viewer) really puts Korean animation on the map. This is only further emphasised with the way it is beautifully illustrated and animated, being inspired by a traditional technique of painting. The film maybe slightly predictable but that takes nothing away from its aesthetics, its deeper narrative or the emotion it evokes in the audience. In terms of its interpretation the way it presents civilisation as opposed to nature and how this condemns modern society is the most interesting part of the film, not to mention the artistic way it shows the theme of maternal love.
A very cool piece of fanart to end this analysis. http://fainalotea.deviantart.com/art/Unconditional-495939951
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