STUDIO GHIBLI, the animation studio behind the Oscar-winning
feature film “Spirited Away”, has frequently been described as Japan’s answer
to Disney. It’s perhaps closer to the truth to call it Japan’s antidote to
Disney. Studio Ghibli’s lush, hand-drawn, 2-D animation, disregard for
Hollywood narrative formulae and guiding philosophy—that animated films can be
for grown-ups—are sadly foreign concepts in the paradigm of modern animation.
This is the studio that released the whimsical cinematic lullaby “My Neighbour
Totoro” on the same bill as “Grave of the Fireflies”, a devastating
second-world-war drama that Roger Ebert called the most realistic animated film
he’d ever seen, not because of how it looked, but how it felt.
In the wake of the retirement of its visionary director,
Hayao Miyazaki, last year, Studio Ghibli is taking an indefinite break from the
production of new feature films, citing high production costs. This is a
profound loss to animation and cinema, and “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya” is
a vivid, bittersweet illustration of all the reasons why. With no British or
American release dates announced for the studio’s latest effort “When Marnie
Was There”, “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya” may go down as Studio Ghibli’s
swansong on the international scene.
Directed by Isao Takahata (director of “Grave of the
Fireflies”), “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya” is a gorgeously asymmetrical
blend of celestial fantasy, folksy parable, romance and coming-of-age story,
beginning with the discovery of a tiny, thumb-sized princess in a stalk of
bamboo. The princess magically transforms into a baby who grows, at an alarming
rate, into a young woman of exquisite beauty, and is whisked away by her
adoptive parents to a regal life more befitting her.
Not only does “The Tale of the Princess Kaguya” set itself
well apart from anything you’re likely to see by Disney these days, it’s also
miles away from Studio Ghibli’s own sumptuously detailed style. Instead, Mr
Takahata has created a striking and expressionistic storybook aesthetic, with a
subdued watercolour palette, sketchy character outlines and plenty of white
space. In an age saturated by computer-generated gloss, these visuals make us
aware of the artists and their handiwork. It all feels as charmingly antiquated
as the handcarving of wooden bowls depicted in the film.
In the movie’s most breathless sequence, the princess
escapes from her royal mansion and races headlong into the night, gowns and
long hair fluttering—at which point the visuals burst into vibrant life,
sweeping up the audience in a blurry rush of frantic graphite strokes, as if
the film itself has become gloriously liberated from its constraints. The
captivating sequence is accentuated by the portentous soundtrack of the
composer, Joe Hisaishi, another artist whose signature style has become beloved
of Ghibli fans.
As wondrous as it is, it’s the sort of stylistic flourish
that has the potential to alienate Western audiences accustomed to more
homogenised animation. When a sample of these scenes was revealed in an online
teaser trailer in 2013, one American film sitesuggested that it resembled
“unfinished storyboards waiting to be animated”. And, naturally, “The Tale of
Princess Kaguya” has been dubbed into English for its American release, an
egregious (though well-meaning) practice initiated by Disney even for films
clearly intended for mature audiences capable of reading subtitles. With that
kind of treatment to be expected at the hands of mainstream Western audiences,
it can be little wonder that a dazzling lodestar on the international animation
scene is fading away.
Source: economist.com
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