Box office The film debuted at first place during its opening weekend in Japan, grossing (). By 2 February 2014, it had grossed ¥2,313,602,733 ($22,613,153) at the Japanese box office. It subsequently grossed () in Japan, where it was the eleventh top-grossing Japanese film of 2014. It grossed $703,232 in North America and $969,920 in other countries, for a worldwide total of .
Home media The Tale of the Princess Kaguya was released in Japan on DVD and Blu-ray by Walt Disney Studios Japan on 3 December 2014. The Blu-ray sold 13,784 units . The DVD release sold 8,208 units by 7 December 2014 and a further 15,718 units between 8 December 2014 and 7 June 2015, for a combined DVD units and at least physical home video units sold in Japan . In North America, the film was released on DVD, Blu-ray and digital download by
Universal Pictures Home Entertainment on 17 February 2015. The DVD and Blu-ray releases grossed in physical sales, . In the United Kingdom, it was 2015's second best-selling foreign-language film on home video, below
Indonesian action film
The Raid 2.
Critical reception The film received critical acclaim. It was the first film of the 2010s to receive an approval rating of 100% on the website, making it one of the highest-rated
films of the decade. In February 2014,
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya placed 4th in both
Kinema Junpo's Best Ten and their Reader's Choice Awards. David Ehrlich of
The A.V. Club gave the film an A, deeming it "the best animated movie of the year", adding that it is "destined to be remembered as one of the revered Studio Ghibli's finest achievements." Nicolas Rapold of
The New York Times praised the artwork calling it "exquisitely drawn with both watercolor delicacy and a brisk sense of line". For
IndieWire's 2018 list of the best Japanese films of the 21st century, Carlos Aguilar expressed agreement with the common view that
Spirited Away is the greatest, but still chose
The Tale of the Princess Kaguya for the list and referred to the latter as "a work of nearly identical caliber [...] an artistic triumph that delights with exuberant handcraft where the each pencil stroke comes alive on screen. Takahata made something at once pastoral, timeless, and epic in proportion with an emotional depth rarely seen in films – animated or not." In July 2025, it was one of the films voted for the "Readers' Choice" edition of
The New York Times list of "The 100 Best Movies of the 21st Century," finishing at number 279.
Accolades ==See also==