This was a "meh" movie for me. At least on first watching. I might like it more on subsequent viewings. It's about a thirteen-year-old witch, Kiki, who must leave her home and live in another city by herself. Her only real talent is flight, so she establishes her own delivery service. She begins the movie as an ingenue lost in a big city and ends it belonging to her new surroundings and somewhat wiser.
The setting is European, but not identified with any particular nationality. The animation is beautifully done. (One of the themes in the movie is rural vs. urban.) There is certainly more to the plot than in Spirited Away, but there is less at stake. Spirited Away feels more thematically significant to me.
Monday, January 30, 2012
Friday, January 27, 2012
Reading Anime 001: Spirited Away (2001) by Hayao Miyazaki
Spirited Away is a charming movie and an opportune choice for my first anime in the series. At its heart, it is a coming-of-age fairy tale.
Ten-year-old Chihiro and her family are moving to a new town. They become lost and come across what appears to be an abandoned theme park. But it is not really empty, but rather is the boundary between material and spirit realms. Her parents become trapped by gluttony and transformed into pigs.
At this point, Chihiro must navigate the fairy-tale logic of this spirit realm and rescue her parents. She is befriended by a young boy Haku (whose alternate form is that of a dragon) who instructs her that the realm is ruled by the witch-hag Yubaba from her magical bath house.
To succeed in her quest, she must indenture herself and yield her name to Yubaba. In the bath house, she befriends a number of spirits -- some of them rather mysterious -- and she unravels the secrets of this spirit realm, thereby freeing her parents and returning with them to the material world.
Like any fairy tale, the actual plot is bare. But the world is extravagantly imagined and so animated. But the logic it follows is that of the dream. The plot is associative, rather than strictly logical. One element leads to another, leads to another, not so much by causal necessity, but more so by stream-of-consciousness.
To my surprise, I found this movie to be, well, charming. I accepted its dream logic, rather than fighting it. And I thought it was beautifully conceived and animated. Did I want more plot? Yeah. But ultimately not to the detriment of the film and my enjoyment of it.
(It won the 2001 Academy Award for Best Animated Film.)
Ten-year-old Chihiro and her family are moving to a new town. They become lost and come across what appears to be an abandoned theme park. But it is not really empty, but rather is the boundary between material and spirit realms. Her parents become trapped by gluttony and transformed into pigs.
At this point, Chihiro must navigate the fairy-tale logic of this spirit realm and rescue her parents. She is befriended by a young boy Haku (whose alternate form is that of a dragon) who instructs her that the realm is ruled by the witch-hag Yubaba from her magical bath house.
To succeed in her quest, she must indenture herself and yield her name to Yubaba. In the bath house, she befriends a number of spirits -- some of them rather mysterious -- and she unravels the secrets of this spirit realm, thereby freeing her parents and returning with them to the material world.
Like any fairy tale, the actual plot is bare. But the world is extravagantly imagined and so animated. But the logic it follows is that of the dream. The plot is associative, rather than strictly logical. One element leads to another, leads to another, not so much by causal necessity, but more so by stream-of-consciousness.
To my surprise, I found this movie to be, well, charming. I accepted its dream logic, rather than fighting it. And I thought it was beautifully conceived and animated. Did I want more plot? Yeah. But ultimately not to the detriment of the film and my enjoyment of it.
(It won the 2001 Academy Award for Best Animated Film.)
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Anime 500 Challenge
While checking in library materials this morning, I came across the book 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide by Helen McCarthy. Now I'm a sucker for a good list book, and this one intrigued me, so I checked it out. Browsing through it, I decided to take up this challenge: to explore the genre by watching as many as I reasonably can.
Now I must confess that I've never really understood anime as a genre. I know it's a popular genre within nerd/geek culture, but I've never really taken to it myself. (I've never really understood the aesthetic and it's appeal. So the real point of this challenge is for me to really watch them and to reserve my judgment of the genre until the very end.)
Now I must confess that I've never really understood anime as a genre. I know it's a popular genre within nerd/geek culture, but I've never really taken to it myself. (I've never really understood the aesthetic and it's appeal. So the real point of this challenge is for me to really watch them and to reserve my judgment of the genre until the very end.)
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