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Who would live in a house like this and more to the point where even is it?
but this part looks more like an Alpine chalet it has a steep roof oriel windows, a
veranda, a pergola, plantation shutters.
veranda a pergola plantation shutters there's a beautiful dissonance about
that's the secret of the Studio Ghibli effect
Here in the West Ghibli's films are often thought of as the pinnacle of
here in the West jubblies films are often thought of as the pinnacle of
Japanese animation with a perspective that's inseparable from the national
identity of their artists and filmmakers but so much of what makes Ghibli Ghibli
comes down to the way their films wriggle into the space between cultures
so that wherever you're from they have that elusive fairy tale quality of
Studio Ghibli was founded in 1985 by Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata
although the two men had already worked together for years
first at Toei where Takahata made his first feature The Little Norse Prince.
out of its early Disney hero-worship with its mature, morally-nuanced
storytelling and dizzyingly dynamic framing and movement.
was inspired by an epic saga of the Ainu, the marginalised indigenous
people of northern Japan. Fearing political fallout Toei demanded
that Takahata ensure the film couldn't be identified as a specifically Ainu story.
wove in elements from other epic and mythic traditions he saw that the world
and plot of the film had both become excitingly hard to pin down and
that Takahata ensure the film couldn't be identified as a specifically I knew
sense of wonderment. That discovery later became Ghibli's MO. Look at
its inspirations come from far further afield. The architecture and landscapes
were inspired by Miyazaki's visits to Wales in the early 1980s where the
strange iron sentinels came from an early animated Superman short by the
sense of wonderment that discovery later became Ghibli Zemel look at Laputa
Swift its title. Even in the real world this technique
can be just as effective. Take this sequence from the studio's unsung
masterpiece Only Yesterday. A present-day Japanese safflower harvest is
accompanied by a traditional Bulgarian folk chant creating an astral pastoral
mood that's dreamily unmoored to particulars of time and place
Ghibli's magpie eye for great ideas and images from all cultures and their
Swift its title even in the real world this technique
their work feels so culturally alive. Among their most fruitful finds have
been three children's books by English writers Diana Wynne Jones' Hell's
Moving Castle, Mary Norton's The Borrower's and Joan G Robinson's
When Marnie Was There. All of these were brought into the Ghibli canon with a
cross-cultural twist. The latter two by director Hiromasa Yonebayashii who has
since set up his own studio Ponoc with some former Ghibli artists.
children's book Mary Stewart's The Little Broomstick
it feels ineffably English but also ineffably not. Characters greet one
Moving Castle Mary Norton's the borrower's and Georgie Robinson's when
cloth. By now that artistic dissonance is familiar but the effect of its magic is
cross-cultural twist the latitude by director hiramasa Yanni by Oishi who has
This half has traditional Japanese furniture and fixtures there's even a family bath
There's a beautiful dissonance about
When it was released in 1968 that film redefined Japanese animation shaking the industry
The little Norse Prince, which was originally released as The Great Adventure of Horus, Prince Of The Sun
At first he resisted but as his team
Laputa, Castle In The Sky the first film produced under the studio brand.
Its art style is typical anime: wide expressive eyes in a heightened fantasy setting but
Ponoc's first film was Mary And The Witch's Flower, an adaptation of another English