"In Japan, animation is not seen as the exclusive realm of children's and family films, but is often used for adult, science fiction and action stories, where it allows a kind of freedom impossible in real life. Some Hollywood films strain so desperately against the constraints of the possible that you wish they'd just caved in and gone with animation." --
Roger Ebert on anime, with this excerpt being related to
Tokyo Godfathers. Ebert has been a fan of anime for a while, especially the works of
Hayao Miyazaki. Ebert has reviewed 6 of the 18
Studio Ghibli films released to date, and
even interviewed Miyazaki with a bit of fanboy glee.
More reviews and videos inside. [more inside]
posted by filthy light thief
on Aug 30, 2010 -
92 comments
Le Roi et L’oiseau - is an old school “anime” by
Paul Grimault, the script and score were contributed to by
Jacques Prévert. If those two names are not good enough for you then I also submit for your approval that the style in this film has been referenced as a source of inspiration for
Hayao Miyazaki. Although the wikipedia article doesn't back it up, so ill link to another site that
does. At any rate watching this movie will leave you wondering just how many people have ripped it off over the years.
posted by sourbrew
on Dec 15, 2005 -
29 comments
Among
Hayao Miyazaki's masterpieces are
Nausicaa of the Valley of Wind,
Princess Mononoke, and, most recently,
Spirited Away. With the April 15 US release of
Spirited Away,
Kiki's Delivery Service, and
Laputa: Castle in the Sky, an
Academy nomination for Spirited Away, and
Disney's commitment to release re-dubbed, re-mastered versions of Miyazaki's films in the US and worldwide, the American public is getting more acquainted with this legend of animation. Miyazaki's films are not your regular anime [more inside...]
posted by azazello
on Mar 21, 2003 -
55 comments