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Studio Ghibli
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Anime over Hollywood: how Japan is redefining storytelling

Luca Fontana
8/8/2025
Translation: Katherine Martin

For a long time, the West considered anime to be kids’ stuff. Today, it’s global pop culture. From streaming platforms to cinemas, bookshelves to The Oscars, this Japanese medium is taking over the world. And it’s no coincidence.

Recently, I was in a bookstore. As I was browsing the latest releases, my gaze fell on a huge shelf full of mangas. Solo Leveling, Jujutsu Kaisen, Blue Lock, Gachiakuta – all neatly arranged, prominently placed. Gathered in front of the shelves were three teenagers, a couple in their mid-twenties and a man with hair greying at the temples, maybe in his late thirties. All of them browsing, rummaging, comparing. «What’s happening?,» I thought to myself

When did manga and anime go from being kid’s stuff to a being a cultural movement?

I, for one, spent a long time thinking of anime as children’s entertainment. When I was about ten, my eyes would light up over Pokémon, Dragonball and One Piece. As I got older, anime disappeared from my day-to-day life. In my early 20s, people I knew tended to make fun of it. But today? It feels like half the world watches anime. Nobody’s shrugging it off anymore, that’s for sure.

There’s no doubt that this change of perspective has played out to anime’s benefit. In the West, the medium is becoming increasingly mainstream. But don’t just take my word for it. The figures tell the same story.

Anime, the new streaming gold

It’s especially striking that over the course of the year, 33 different animes appeared in the top ten most-watched non-English titles globally.

In fact, Wall Street analysts say Crunchyroll probably doesn’t even see Netflix as competition – rather, it’s a valuable supporter. People who get a taste for anime on Netflix, they say, often end up on Crunchyroll sooner or later. So it’s no surprise that business is booming. Having been profitable for a while now, Crunchyroll is considered one of the most important strategic pillars of its Japanese parent company, Sony.

In the US, Hulu (part of Disney+ in Switzerland) is reinforcing this course. Anime accounts for around 12 per cent of the platform’s streamed content, compared to just under seven per cent on Netflix. Most recently, its anime presence was given a boost by Predator: Killer of Killers. Reportedly, director James Cameron is even pondering animated Avatar spin-offs for Hulu.

Anime in cinemas: from event to permanent fixture

Streaming may be the driving force behind the anime boom, but the medium’s surge in popularity is impacting cinema too. And what an impact it is.

For a long time, anime films were a marginal phenomenon in the West. You’d maybe get one Ghibli event a year, a Pokémon premiere if you were lucky, and that’d be it. Today, animes regularly make it to the big screen, filling theatres and attracting an audience that goes far beyond cosplay-loving Gen Z fans.

And it’s all paying off. If you go to the cinema today, there’s a good chance that an anime will be on the programme alongside the Marvel and Pixar fare.

Manga boom: more and more comics suddenly available in Japanese

Interestingly, the boom is being driven by new target groups as well as new readers. Even in the West, manga is no longer just a male-dominated, teenage phenomenon. It now also appeals to young adults, women, queer communities and people in general who’ve never felt a connection to western Marvel or DC comics.

It’s not a trend, it’s a sea change

Header image: Studio Ghibli

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I'm an outdoorsy guy and enjoy sports that push me to the limit – now that’s what I call comfort zone! But I'm also about curling up in an armchair with books about ugly intrigue and sinister kingkillers. Being an avid cinema-goer, I’ve been known to rave about film scores for hours on end. I’ve always wanted to say: «I am Groot.» 


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