Monday, April 20, 2009

千と千尋の神隠し:Spirited Away Part 1

Miyazaki actually came out of retirement to make this film. I think that's pretty significant, and should make us sit up and pay closer attention to the intent, the different meanings, tropes, and images in the film. After all, in animation, everything is deliberate. It isn't so much a conscious-expressing art as it is the careful crafting of a fictional piece like a short story. Why would Miyazaki do this? 

So along those lines... 

1) How is the dual fantasy world of Spirited Away different from the dual fantasy world provided in, say, Totoro? What are the distinguishing factors, what purpose does it serve? 

2) The first half of Spirited Away centers around the personal growth and challenge presented to Chihiro. How do you think that Miyazaki is addressing the experience of meeting his friend's daughter?

A survey from 2004 about Junior High students in Japan (READ! really interesting!)
http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/DATA/MONO/EASY/index.html
Japanese children and their fathers!
http://www.childresearch.net/RESOURCE/DATA/SPECIAL/FATHER/FIGURE1.HTM
Actually, this whole site is really interesting... helpful for people doing their projects if they need it. 
http://www.childresearch.net/RESEARCH/DATA_JCHILD/index.html

3) The setting of Spirited Away is really important. Why would Miyazaki set this movie in a bathhouse, let alone a spiritual one? 

Here's a website about water and religious purification : 


Friday, April 10, 2009

もののけ姫:Princess Mononoke

THANK YOU AGAIN GUYS for being so flexible on Monday. I know it was kind of confusing but at least we mostly got to watch the movie and discuss a little (from what I hear). 

ALERT! If you are reading this, I hope you have thought about what you're doing for your final project. I hope there is some topic that you're interested in pursuing more deeply that you will have ready by Monday or at least by next Friday. Mandatory final project you know! I sent out an email about it, so email miyazaki.decal@gmail.com if you didn't get the email. 

.: . :. .: . :. .: . :. .: . :. .: . :. .: . :. 

So! Discussion questions for Princess Mononoke. It's a movie that's pretty well-known among most people, and I suspect that a lot of you that had scene it came into the class with presuppositions about it. Or at least, being a fairly didactic film, you guys probably can sense a lot of themes that Miyazaki is trying to portray, and have some opinions on it. so.... 

Miyazaki's interview on 
http://www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/interviews/m_on_mh.html

A lot of you guys mentioned in your first application sheets, and in class, is that Miyazaki deals with a lot of ambiguities. Moral, social, what-have-you. We talked about the ending, (is it happy or not? Can it even be defined or categorized?), the nature of progress, etc. Here's a quote from Miyazaki that acknowledges his own understanding of the complexity - I don't think he's just condemning or judging.
When you talk about plants, or an ecological system or forest, things are very easy if you decide that bad people ruined it. But that's not what humans have been doing. It's not bad people who are destroying forests.
1) Can you identify one of these ambiguities, and lay out the arguments within it? Defend/advocate for both sides, or the many sides? Where is it difficult to judge or have a definitive answer, and why? 

2) What kind of future do you think Miyazaki wants to see humanity living? (if not the indistrialized Lady Eboshi or the civilized samurai overlord life) What is he advocating for us to do here? How do you personally feel about what he seems to be saying? 

3) What do you think that Miyazaki is trying to say about loss, destruction, time, and consequence? Jenny said, "What happens when we destroy the spiritual sanctuary of our imagination, when we desecrate the innermost place of purity." 

4) How does Mononoke compare to Miyazaki's other films? It was the first of his films to actually use CGI :P 

5) Any personal responses or other comments you wanted to say about the film? 

Somebody cosplayed as San. 

But then again they also dressed up as Totoro. 

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Porco Rosso!

Good ole Miyazaki at home with his model planes. 

Hi everyone! Sorry, it's a day late... but better than doing it on Sunday night :) 

So Porco Rosso was originally intended as just a nice, relaxing short film, less than an hour, for weary Japanese businessmen on business flights... but as we've seen, Miyazaki can't just sit and let it go - he puts a lot of thought and integrity into each one of his films, even if some of the concepts (i.e. the postwar masculinity thing) aren't as original as some of his other ones.

Yet why is his film still so filled with motifs that we know mean something more; he's making statements about the old and new, and the nature of humanity. So many things just seem to come out naturally as he makes a film to his perfection. 

1) What are some of the themes/motifs that you noticed in Porco Rosso that we have seen before in Miyazaki's films? What do you think it says about him as a filmmaker, or his disposition, or the points he's trying to make about humanity? 

But though the film is about that, perhaps it's nearly completely self-indulgent for Miyazaki, because he loves pigs and airplanes... and both are in Porco Rosso. I uploaded scans from the manga 飛行艇時代 「雑想ノート」(The Age of Flying Boats - Daydream Notes) for your reading/browsing pleasure. It's in Japanese but you can get the general gist of it. 

Interesting stuff. HERE IT IS! DOWNLOAD

As you can see, Miyazaki is absolutely obsessed with airplanes. This is partly due to the fact that during World War II, Miyazaki's father Katsuji was director of Miyazaki Airplane, owned by his brother (Hayao Miyazaki's uncle), which made rudders for the Zero fighter plane. So Miyazaki grew up surrounded by flight, but it's of a very different sort than those that were made for the World War II purpose. Think even about Nausicaa and Kiki.

2) What are some elements of flight that you've noticed in the films so far? What do they mean symbolically, literally, what do they mean to Miyazaki? What does it mean, to be able to fly?

Finally, Japanese salarymen. Did you know that Japan is the only country with a condition called 過労死 karoshi, death by overworking? Up until now, people would be hired by a company and stay with them their whole lives.... there are a lot of stereotypes about "sararimen" and it's often parodied in manga and anime... you guys probably have seen or heard something about it. 

Here's a wikipedia article about it: 
Salaryman "Timeline"

3) Reading these articles, or knowing what Miyazaki's target audience was for this movie, how do you think he constructed it? What are some aspects of the film that you notice that might have been conceived because of the target audience for the film?

Have fun posting!