Titus wrote:Only Yesterday is, IMO, the best film Ghibli has released (along with Totoro), and is one of my personal favorites of any genre. It's a shame Disney's not in a rush to release it, but I suppose it would be hard to market here.
I recall
Omoide poroporo (
Only Yesterday) as one of the most wistful films I have seen... The recollections of a 60s childhood, mixed with the -somewhat melancholy- gaze of an urban office girl to the rural world she has grown to love -but is in danger of dissapearing- makes it well worth viewing.
It must be as close as an anime can get to Yasuhiro Ozu. Wonderful!
Gropius wrote:I had previously been sceptical about anime (all those 'cute', westernised faces), but I just saw a couple of Miyazaki films on one of the cable channels here, and of course have been forced to change my opinion.
I am often sad at the fact that some people has prejudices about animated films (and not just the Japanese ones) as a lesser form of filmaking. Even though most of the animated production is aimed at a young audience, this does not necessarily mean that they are sloppily done... I could say a number of animated features that would put to shame a great deal of "real-image" films. And animated films are, stylistically, one of the most visually exciting films on average (not to mention the most
purely cinematic), and awesomely varied in form, from Disney to Malcolm McLaren.
Gropius wrote:souvenir wrote:Well, in Walt's defense, he has been dead since 1966.
Disney's last credit as a director was in 1945, but his brand lives on. I'm actually of the (vaguely controversial?) opinion that Disney did more damage to the growth of animation as a serious art form than anyone else in the 20th C.
Maybe the fault should not be entirely laid at Disney's floor? There are a number of people who just plagiarize the Disney style without offering anything new.
There is a lot of people who just limit themselves to imitate Disney, and then pretend they're giving you something new...and others, like Maclaren or the boys from Termite Terrace, who found their own language or riotously subverted the stablished Disney formula
There's a great period, in my opinion, at Chez Disney's, and it is the one that goes up the big strike. "Snowhite", "Pinocchio", "Fantasia" and "Dumbo" showcase a will to explore the medium and trying new formulas for the -then new- world of feature animation films: they remain still quite fresh and certainly powerful films.
However, the high cost involved in such exploration nearly made the company go bankrupt, so, that's why they evolved to formulas where they could keep in a safe ground.
Another factor is that, after the strike at Disney, the boss got rid of people whom he found too vindicative, or just those with an enormous creative talent that wouldn't submit to certain trite requests. Vladimir (Bill) Tytla and Norm Ferguson, for instance, were forced to leave the company. Others like Freddie Moore (the
real father of what we know nowadays as "the Disney Style") was ostracised as (company-man explanation) "he didn't adapt himself to the needs of feature films"... Moore (like Tytla and Ferguson) was as much talented as any of Walt's "nine Old Men" or even more, but the "Nine Old Men" were no doubt better camp followers of good ol' Uncle Walt. (IMHO, I think that this was what originated the conformism of the"Disney style" as we identify it today)