Susuwatari

Susuwatari (ススワタリ lit. meaning "travelling soot") are the "dust bunnies" or "soot sprites" that appear in two Studio Ghibli anime movies, My Neighbor Totoro (1988) and Spirited Away (2001). They are fictional, shy, slightly frightful creatures that live in abandoned buildings such as old houses.

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My Neighbor Totoro

In My Neighbor Totoro,[1] the house the main characters move into is full of Susuwatari, which are rationalized as Makkuro Kurosuke (pitch-black blackie), an optical illusion caused by moving quickly from light into darkness. Later, the family drives the Susuwatari out of the house, as the home that was once abandoned is now inhabited. They would move to another abandoned area.

Spirited Away

They later reappeared in Spirited Away as workers in Kamaji's boiler room.[2] They are small, black as soot and apparently fuzzy, with spherical bodies and two inquisitive eyes. They move by hovering around, but they can extend stick-like legs and arms from their bodies to do certain tasks, and can lift objects many times their own weight.[3] They make a squeaky murmuring sound when excited, and dissolve into powder (soot) if crushed.

The protagonist Sen (Chihiro) befriends a number of them by helping them carry coal. Sen is told that if these Susuwatari aren't given a job to do, they turn back into soot. Another character, Lin, feeds the Susuwatari much like farmers feed chickens, throwing handfuls of the Japanese candy kompeitō onto the ground for them to eat.[2] After Sen is accepted among the staff of the bathhouse, chiefly by Kamaji and Lin, the Susuwatari become almost admiring of her,[4] and help her in their small ways.[3]

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