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Inside the Studio Ghibli Museum Part 3

After reading up on all the awesome exhibits and attractions in Part 1 and Part 2 at the Studio Ghibli Museum, you're bound to have worked up a tremendous appetite! Luckily there's plenty of mouth-watering food available in the museum cafe!

Straw Hat Cafe
The Straw Hat Cafe

A trip to the Studio Museum should not end without dining at the Straw Hat cafe. You can get snacks, drinks, desserts, and both cold and hot meals. The menu is all sourced from organic farms and very healthy! Favorites include the katsu curry, fried pork cutlet sandwich and strawberry short cake.

Inside the Studio Ghibli Museum Part 2

Now that you've caught up on Part 1, let's find out about those short films shown exclusively at the Studio Ghibli Museum and the rooftop garden!

Short Films

There are a total of 9 short original Ghibli films shown exclusively at the museum, of which I have seen three (fell a little short of the goal! Unfortunately I can’t give you my opinion on all of them). Again, the films are all shown in Japanese, with two showings a day featuring Japanese subtitles, but many of the films have very little dialogue or even none at all. Even without understanding Japanese, you’ll enjoy the film anyway!

Takara-sagashi – “Treasure Hunting”


A little boy named Yuji and a rabbit named Gikku compete to determine who gets to be the owner of a stick they both found by race, jump rope, and sumo wrestling. However they are always equally matched! Thus they decide to play a final game of treasure hunting. It's based on the picture book by Rieko Nakagawa.

Inside the Studio Ghibli Museum Part 1


The Studio Ghibli Museum in Mitaka, Tokyo

One of my favorite places I've visited in Japan is the Studio Ghibli Museum, located in Mitaka, Tokyo. Case in point, I've been there three times in three years! In case you've got any doubts as to why this place would be worth visiting more than once, check out my article on izanau, including tips on how to snag tickets, costs, and transportation. The hard part is simply getting the tickets; other than that admission costs only 1000 yen (around 10 bucks!) so it's very affordable! What is not, sadly, is the gift shop, depending on your level of Ghibli fandom.

Everything about the museum is detailed and cute, even the special bus that goes straight to the museum from Mitaka station (sadly it's not a giant fluffy cat with twelve legs, but still good).

The Ghibli bus! Not an actual cat bus as we were all hoping.

It has all the cute characters from the opening scenes of My Neighbor Totoro!

Or you can walk about fifteen minutes from Mitaka station. Just follow the signs!

Ghibli Museum this way!

Visiting the Kit Kat Chocolatory, and Trying Butter Kit Kats!

If you've read any of my blogs or articles, you'll know all about how much I love Japanese Kit Kats! Unlike their American counterparts, they come in awesome flavors like beni'imo (purple sweet potato), hazelnut, pumpkin, and even wasabi and Japanese sake. You can even collect specialty flavors and packaging available exclusively in certain regions of Japan, like momiji manju in Hiroshima or azuki toast in Nagoya (both are specialty sweets in these regions). Kit Kats are highly popular during the test-taking time of the year in February and March because they sound like "kitto katsu" (you'll surely win) in Japanese. Did you know Kit Kats are so popular in Japan they even inspired their own specialty chocolate shop?! It's called the Kit Kat Chocolatory, and naturally it was a must-see for me.

The Kit Kat Chocolatory in Tokyo