Hayao Miyazaki, known to many in the states as the Walt Disney of Japan, is coming out of retirement. Miyazaki has created some of the most memorable movies of my life, including My Neighbor Totoro, Porco Rosso, Spirited Away, and my all time favorite, Howl’s Moving Castle.

The vast amount of detail in Howl’s bedroom is amazing (Howl’s Moving Castle, 2004)

His movies not only have gripping stories, often with strong female leads, but also interesting supporting characters, and are beautiful to look at. The amount of detail and care that goes into every scene is amazing, and I would argue, better than many modern American cartoons and movies.
I was very sad when Miyazaki announced his official retirement in 2013, a few years after the release of Ponyo. The announcement today of his work on a feature length film is one of the most exciting things I’ve heard from the movie world this year, and hopefully more details about this new project will come out soon – until then, we’ll just have to be content with the vague date of before the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

Briefly: We’re all huge fans of everything Studio Ghibli here at Geekscape, so we’re beyond excited to be bringing all you ‘Scapists a giveaway for the studio’s latest critically acclaimed film, which will also be up for the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature this coming weekend.

You’ve heard all about this gorgeous feature, haven’t you? If not, check out the trailer below, and keep reading to find out how you can win a copy for yourself:

http://youtu.be/tM6hcHp0_kU

Yeah, we know. That’s some insane art, right? The film is currently sitting at 100% Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes (with nearly 60 reviews), so that’s clearly not the only thing its got going for it.

The Tale of Princess Kaguya stars Chloe Grace Moretz, James, Caan, Mary Steenburgen, Darren Criss, Lucy Lui, James Marsden, and more, and is available on DVD and Blu-Ray RIGHT NOW. The release also contains some pretty radical special features which I’ve listen below:

– “Isao Takahata and His Tale of The Princess Kaguya” – 86-minute documentary on the making of The Tale of The Princess Kaguya
– Announcement of the Completion of the Film
– Japanese Trailers and TV Spots
– US Trailers

I’m really looking forward to checking out that documentary.

Now, onto the good stuff. How to win a copy for yourself! It’s pretty freakin’ easy, so here’s what you need to do:

– Like Geekscape on Facebook
– Share this photo on your Facebook wall, AND comment, letting us know your favourite Studio Ghibli Project and why.
– Reside in the United States

That’s it! The contest will close next Monday, and we’ll be in touch with the winner! Get sharing! And if you don’t win, you can pick up The Tale of Princess Kaguya from Amazon!

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When I get the chance to write on the site, it’s usually to profess my love for all things Studio Ghibli. And why not? It’s my site and I might as well use it to share with you the joy of a studio I first discovered over 20 years ago. I’ve often stated that Hayao Miyazaki is one of the top 5 living filmmakers in the world and that his films like Princess Mononoke, Laputa: Castle in the Sky and Nausicaa Of The Valley Of The Wind played a big part in my life.

Funny then, that I recently realized while watching the new Blu-ray release of his classic Porco Rosso that I’d been watching it completely wrong this entire time!

I consider myself as close to a purist as you can get. I watch my Studio Ghibli films with the original Japanese language track on with English subtitles. John Lasseter and Disney Home Video have done a great job for years of doing English language translations upon releasing these films in the U.S. but for an old fan like myself, who grew up with the original language tracks, I have to accept no substitutes. That is, unless it comes to Porco Rosso.

The English language track great. Michael Keaton and Cary Elwes do a great job of headlining the American cast of this strange yet sweet story of a peerless Italian pilot who’s been cursed to fly as a pig. This really is one of my favorite Ghibli films, as the humor and tale of missed opportunities strikes a fantastic balance between levity and depth that surrounds the entire movie. Scenes in which Porco Rosso (Keaton) is flying circles around and thwarting the ridiculously cartoonish sky pirates and his rival aviator Curtis (Elwes) are some of the funniest moments in any Studio Ghibli scene. But the storyline that really grounds the film, the one revolving around Porco Rosso’s curse and the impossible love story with the beautiful Gina reveals Porco Rosso to be a tragic fairy tale with the same level of character depth as any other Ghibli film. It’s one of my favorite endings to any of Miyazaki’s films, as it leaves you with more questions than answers and must be seen to understand what a sweet gift this movie really is. Kids will love it because it’s got a flying pig and adults will love it for all the reasons on layers and depth that I’ve just listed.

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Porco Rosso

 

But neither the English or Japanese language tracks are still the way to watch this film.

No. You want to watch Porco Rosso with the French language track on. I’m serious. And I don’t even know French. But I know that Jean Reno’s rendition of Porco Rosso is the best version of the character and that the film, which takes place in the Adriatic in the years after WWI and whose majority of characters are Italian, just feels RIGHT experienced in a romance language. Obviously, an Italian language track would be the absolute best way to watch this film, but are you really going to turn your nose as Jean Reno playing an ace combat flying pig?

Disney has spared no expense in bringing the absolute best version of the film to Blu-ray. The image is sharp and the audio quality is top notch. Like their Blu-ray releases of Princess Mononoke, The Wind Rises and Kiki’s Delivery Service from last year, we know that the folks at Disney are as big a fans of these films as we are and put care into bringing them Stateside. Porco Rosso goes one step further in also including the original film’s trailers, storyboards and an interview with film producer Toshio Suzuki taken from an earlier release of the film. It’s not just an interview either but a mini-documentary on the production of the film. For fans who bemoan the industry wide shift from traditional cell animation to CGI, it’s worth watching. And trust me on the French language track. It IS the best way to watch this classic, and is available in top form here.

Also released this week on Disney Blu-ray are two other Studio Ghibli films. Tales From Earthsea, directed by Hayao’s son Goro, is a mixed narrative bag that is probably reserved for only Ghibli completionists. Based on the “Earthsea” fantasy book series by Ursula K. Le Guin, the urgency of the film’s story never gets off the ground. The protagonists split the storyline in semi-Episode 1 fashion between following archmage Sparrowhawk and young prince Arren in their quest to solve the deep seeded chaos that is overcoming their kingdom. The plotting is vague and you honestly don’t meet the villain (voiced in the English track by Willem Dafoe in of the Blu-ray’s highlights) until almost halfway through the film.

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Tales From Earthsea

 

 

Although Earthsea does feature some incredible animated sequences, some of them do feel like they were handled by secondary studios without the care or the time necessary to pull them off. Fans consider this to be one of Studio Ghibli’s big missed opportunities and it’s pretty apparent here. The technical quality of the Blu-ray translation is top notch but the movie is pretty flawed. That being said, you should watch the English language track if only for one of my favorite Willem Dafoe lines in any movie. It happens towards the end and will have you howling. I won’t spoil it for you here but you’ll know it when you see it. Trust me.

On top of that, Disney Blu-ray also brought out an incredible translation of Isao Takahata’s strange but very enjoyable Pom Poko, about a community of raccoons battling against the encroachment of civilization. There aren’t a lot of bells and whistles to this Blu-ray but the film is one of the more curious ones in the Studio Ghibli library. It has it’s charms and is definitely worth picking up if you’re even a modest Anime fan. The level of weirdness (and humor) in this movie is just something that you’re not going to find in many other cinematic corners. This one is a must watch if only for the risks that it takes in being told. It is not the typical Studio Ghibli story of nature versus civilization and deserves to be experienced at least once.

All three films, Porco Rosso, Tales From Earthsea and Pom Poko are available this week on Disney Blu-ray from Disney Home Entertainment.

pom-poko
Pom Poko

 

If you’ve been a Geekscape reader/listener/follower for at least a month then you no doubt know about my endless love for all things Studio Ghibli. It started in the mid-90s while I was a high school student. I would attend Friday night Anime Club screenings at the University of Texas, where I discovered my love for movies like Laputa: Castle in the Sky and Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind. Plus, I thought it was cool to be hanging out with college students years before I went on to college (where I shamefully would never attend a single Anime Club screening or meeting at my own alma mater).

In 1997, Studio Ghibli released Princess Mononoke, one of their most successful films of all time. It followed a wild, forest spirit of a princess as she rode a giant wolf and engaged the human forces that encroached on the natural world and upset the forest gods. It stands as one of Studio Ghibli’s greatest accomplishments and if you’re going to start exploring their library (what’s been keeping you?!?), Princess Mononoke is a great place to start. I’ve loved the film since I first saw it on the big screen.

Which is why it’s amazing to learn that the Princess Mononoke that I know and love is not the original version… by a wide shot. Just take a look at this:

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In 1980, 17 years before the film’s release, Hayao Miyazaki envisioned a much different story for Princess Mononoke, and now it’s being detailed in a book from Viz Media entitled Princess Mononoke: The First Story. The book sounds about as epic as the movie too. According to the press release:

The oversized (11¾ x 11¾ inch) hardcover release is published under the Studio Ghibli Library imprint and carries an MSRP of $34.99 U.S. / $39.99 CAN. The beautifully illustrated storybook features Hayao Miyazaki’s original watercolor artwork, which complements his thoughtfully written fable about man’s need to maintain ecological balance with nature that became the origin for the 1997 feature film. An afterward written by Miyazaki lends further context and insights to the Mononoke story and its deep and lasting impact upon the director.

 

This is the original Princess Mononoke story, created by Hayao Miyazaki in 1980 while he was first conceptualizing the landmark animated film that would be released to universal acclaim seventeen years later. As an initial version of the tale, it offers a new and significantly different perspective from the final version presented in the film. After a long, exhausting war, a samurai lost in a forest encounters a giant wildcat – a mononoke. The beast saves his life, but at the price of his daughter’s hand in marriage…

 

Princess Mononoke was a historic release for Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli and propelled the animation auteur to an entirely new level of international fame,” says Masumi Washington, Senior Editorial Director. “But few know of THE FIRST STORY, the imaginative fable that was the genesis for his groundbreaking film. This premium storybook fittingly presents it for the very first time in English and prominently displays his expressive watercolor characters and landscapes. We look forward to readers discovering Princess Mononoke in a whole new way in this unique release!”

Um, a giant wildcat?!? Just look at that picture! He’s riding a unicycle with strings attached to mice pulling him and a princess on his back. This is like getting a completely different story! And seeing as Hayao Miyazaki has officially retired (again!), it’s worth picking up this book just to get yet another story from this living legend!

I’m excited to receive my copy. Viz does a great job with their Studio Ghibli line of releases. The editions that they put out for My Neighbor Totoro are incredibly well done, with really handsome presentations and a print and binding quality deserving of Studio Ghibli’s level of excellence. But this one might just top all that. A giant wildcat riding a unicycle being pulled by mice on string.

Princess Mononoke: The First Story is currently available so go out and pick up your copy or visit www.VIZ.com for more info!

 

Cosplaying is something that I’ve always had an interest in, and I’m beginning to think that I’d like to take that interest even further. I put together a costume for this year’s Fan Expo Vancouver (check out my awesome experience at the Expo here) and was actually quite proud of my work. It was suggested that I share with you my experiences with making my first costume and just the act of cosplaying as well, so here we go!

I had decided (and had this decided for quite awhile before knowing I was going to a convention) that I would dress up as San from the Studio Ghibli film Princess Mononoke. Studio Ghibli films have always held a big ol’ spot in my heart as My Neighbour Totoro and Kiki’s Delivery Service were two of my favourite movies growing up. I would sometimes catch glimpses of Princess Mononoke when my older brother was watching, but I found it too scary back then and had a hard time getting through the whole thing. Okkoto (the white boar god) really freaked me out! Anyways, when I was older I watched Princess Mononoke myself and thought it was so awesome. I loved how it reflected our world and showed how destructive it really is against our beautiful forests and the animals that live there. The movie made me want to be like San, to live for the animals and to protect them from nasty humans. So, basically, I wanted my first cosplay to be something I related to and also just really liked the look of! I also thought it’d be a pretty simple costume to make (ha).

Mononoke 

Making the costume was…interesting. I didn’t really have any sewing skills whatsoever. I mean, I could sew pieces of fabric together but it never looked nice and I lose motivation very quickly if I feel like I’m failing at something, however, I was determined to cosplay at the upcoming Fan Expo, so I went for it anyways.

I didn’t think I could sew up my own dress at this point so I decided to go to the thrift store in hopes to find a navy blue dress that could easily be altered to look like San’s. I did end up finding one, but it ended up being the most uncomfortable article of clothing I had ever put on, therefore it just wouldn’t work. Thankfully I realized I had a long navy dress sitting in a bag of hand-me-down clothes in my closet. The dress being a little on the large side, made tailoring it to fit my body a lot of “fun”. In the end it all worked out and was also super comfortable! The white over shirt/apron that goes over the blue dress was just a plain white t-shirt I found at the thrift store and cut the living daylights out of!

The necklace was difficult but a fun challenge to take on. The white “teeth”(I believe they are) I made with air dry clay, then used some wooden beads I found at Michaels, put them on a long piece of ribbon, and yay I had the necklace! One tooth broke at one point so I had to make another one, I didn’t enjoy that much.

Necklace

The armbands and headband I just made with buttons I picked out at Fabricland and with the same ribbon I used for the necklace. I decided to just tie the arm bands on in the end cause I didn’t take the time to figure out a better way to keep them on, which was kind of irritating in the end because they kept slipping down my arm, but you live and you learn, right?

My hair was already a fairly dark brown which was nice, but a little longer than I would have liked, I just really didn’t want to cut it again ‘cause I’m trying to grow it out! I also really don’t enjoy wearing wigs, so I didn’t bother with that.

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For the face makeup, I used a dark red lipstick, which ended up being a really stupid idea since it doesn’t really dry, it just sits there on your face, just waiting for you to smudge it all over and make you look like a fool. I don’t know why I didn’t think about that before, just please don’t judge me.

The earrings I had at first were some blue dyed wooden hoops that I painted white but the dye was so intense it came through the white paint and made it just a light blue, also the paint was crap and had clumps in it…it just didn’t really work out, soooo I was super excited when I found an earring set at Michaels with the circular shiny shell style stuff I was looking for in the first place.

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Then finally my boots. These I felt like were one of the most important components of the costume. My first attempt was ridiculous and was rather embarrassing. I attempted to make boots out of plastic, crappy, fake leather fabric. I don’t even want to get into that they looked so dumb. Anyways, I was super super lucky to find a pair of boots, again at the thrift shop, that were pretty well perfect (and fit perfectly too)! I was so excited and when I got home and altered them, they looked even better. At that point I felt a lot more confident and was eager to walk into Fan Expo in my costume! I was really quite proud of my work.

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There is more to Princess Mononoke’s apparel, such as the big white fur cape, the mask, and the ears, but I didn’t like how the white fur fabric I bought looked in the end, and I was having a hard time making the mask. (I was also having a hard time motivating myself to paint and be artful)

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In any case, I had so much fun wearing it all day on the 2nd day of Fan Expo. I had a few people ask for pictures, and I had pictures taken with fellow Princess Mononoke cosplayers and lots of wonderful compliments too! It was cool to see other peoples renditions and how they went about making certain parts of the costume. Most people had the white fur cape and the mask, and some even had the dagger or spear. I was really wishing I had made those parts to the costume after that, but I guess it was also more comfortable without them!

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I’m now slowly getting into sewing and am eager to increase my skills to make better costumes in the future! I think cosplaying is a really fun hobby, and I can’t wait to do it again!

Fan Expo Vancouver was also my first convention EVER! You can take a look at my recap here!

Briefly: Anime legend and Studio Ghibli cofounder Hayao Miyazaki has just announced his retirement.

Miyazaki’s latest film, the controversial historical fantasy The Wind Rises, will also be his last. The feature is currently competing at the annual Venice Film Festival, where the news of Miyazaki’s retirement was announced.

Ghibli president Koju Hoshino declined to answer questions about the announcement. A press conference in Tokyo has been set for sometime next week, as  “He [Miyazaki] wants to say goodbye to all of you. ”

It’s sad news, but it had to happen sometime. Miyazaki has crafted some of the most beautiful pictures that the world has ever seen, and he’s more than earned a good, long rest.

Thanks for the memories, Hayao.

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Can you believe that it’s been five years since a Hayao Miyazaki directed film has been released? How much more exciting does that make this movie?

The Wind Rises is just a few weeks away from Japanese theatres, and Studio Ghibli has just debuted the first teaser for the film. The movie is an adaptation of a novel about the life of Tatsuo Hori, the individual who designed the Zero Fighter plane used by the Japanese in World War II.

The teaser is, of course, in Japanese, so I don’t really know what’s going on. In any case, it looks absolutely gorgeous, and I can’t wait until The Wind Rises hits North America. Watch the teaser below, and let us know what you think!

Speaking of Studio Ghibli, is anyone playing Ni No Kuni?

http://youtu.be/Hhwp74C3uO4

It’s a good time to be a Ghibli fan.

 

Late last month, the studio’s collaboration with Level-5 finally made it to North America. The game is called Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch, and the sheer quality of the title has cause it to quickly climb to the top of my favourite games list.

 

Now, in just over a month, us North Americans will be getting another dose of Studio Ghibli. Goro Miyazaki’s From Up On Poppy Hill is set to hit theatres on March 15th; the film released back in 2011 in Japan, but it’ll be hitting our shores with a fresh new vocal track featuring Jamie Lee Curtis, Christina Hendricks, Ron Howard, Aubrey Plaza, and more.

 

Watch the trailer below, and let us know what you think!

 

 

From Academy Award(R) winner Hayao Miyazaki and director Goro Miyazaki comes this uniquely inspired coming-of-age story. Set in Yokohama in 1963, as Japan is picking itself up from the devastation of World War II and preparing to host the 1964 Olympics, the story centers on Umi and Shun, two high school kids caught up in the changing times. But a buried secret from their past emerges to cast a shadow on the future and pull them apart. With its rich color palette, stunning exteriors, sun-drenched gardens, bustling cityscapes and painterly detail, From Up on Poppy Hill provides a pure, sincere, and nuanced evocation of the past, and marks yet another creative triumph for Studio Ghibli.

Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch may just be one of my favourite games ever. It’s been years (and years!) since I’ve been so addicted to a title; since I’ve been so engrossed in a world that wasn’t my own. It is, without a doubt, one of the most beautiful games of all time; Level-5 and Studio Ghibli have crafted an absolute masterpiece, and if you’ve EVER enjoyed an RPG before, you owe it to yourself to check it out.

 

Catching and training creatures (called familiars) is a huge part of the game. It’s a little bit like Pokémon, and acts as a clever party system in the game. Europe has had a neat little dragon familiar (called Draggle) available for download since Ni No Kuni‘s launch last month.

 

Draggle... the dragon.
Draggle… the dragon.

 

Just when I started to wonder if we’d ever see the cute little guy on our side of the pond, BOOM. Draggle’s coming, for free, on February 12th. That’s right, FREE! Now go have a babana in celebration.

 

How are you liking the game so far? Were you one of the lucky folks who got their hands on the Wizard’s Edition?

 

Remember the Level-5 developed PS2 classic Dark Cloud? How about Studio Ghibli’s wonderful line of animated films like Howl’s Moving Castle and Spirited Away? Wouldn’t it be incredible if the two collaborated and made a video game?

 

Well, they did; Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch released in Japan (to much fanfare) all the way back in 2011. Now, in 2013, the PS3 version of the acclaimed JRPG is just a few days away from hitting North American shores (and just a couple weeks away for European gamers).

 

Popular YouTube channel Dealspwn has just revealed the first 30 minutes of the game (including the opening cutscene and some gameplay). If you weren’t already insanely excited for Ni No Kuni, watching this for just a few minutes should do the trick, it looks absolutely incredible.

 

Seriously, this looks like it could be one of the best games of the year, and it’s only January. Watch the game’s opening below, and let us know what you think!

 

 

Again, Ni No Kuni: Wrath of the White Witch hits North America THIS Tuesday, January 22nd.

Studio Ghibli is know for many well loved family films such as My Neighbor Totoro, Spirited Away, Howl’s Moving Castle, and many more. However, there is another lesser known award winning film that was actually screened as a double feature with My Neighbor Totoro, and that film is Grave of the Fireflies (1988).

Dresden Pictures recently acquired the rights to Grave of the Fireflies and will be producing a live action version that is scheduled to start filming in 2014 (Produced by Liam Garvo and James Heath). In 2005, a made for TV live action version was produced, which aired on NTV to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II. The plot of the TV version greatly deviates from the original animated version.

How much will this new adaptation change the original story? The plot of  Grave of the Fireflies (the animated version) is extremely sad, and it definitely yanks on your heart strings numerous times throughout the film. I actually re-watched it before writing this review and I must say, I cried more than once. When I learned that a live action version was in the works, I wondered how Dresden Pictures would tackle this delicate subject matter. It’s similar to how I felt when I learned there was a film adaptation of The Road (SUPER depressing). Why would anyone want to watch such a downer movie when it was hard enough to read through the book? With animation, tragedy can be addressed, but of course is not as graphic as live action can be.

Grave the Fireflies follows an orphaned brother, Seita (age 14) and his little sister Setsuko (age 4) as they struggle to survive in constantly fire bombed Kedo, Japan during WWII. The story is based on a novel of the same name by Akiyuki Nosaka, and is a semi-autobiographical tale/apology to his sister he could not save.

Another question I have is will the characters actually be played by Japanese actors? There were quite a few complaints when non-Japanese actors played characters in Memoirs of  Geisha. This film is about people who lived through the fire bombings in Japan and it would be disrespectful to take their history away from them. Also, is the film audience ready to watch young children suffer? Hopefully Dresden Pictures will keep the integrity of Setsuko’s age and not make her 10 years old or even age her brother. There is something very raw and real about watching these young characters persevere against all odds and even risk everything so they can be together and maintain their own way of life.

Maybe this is a film that needs to be made today to remind people that in war it is usually the innocent that suffer the most. Even though the story is heart wrenching, it is a beautiful film that follows the love of a brother who does everything he can to keep his sister alive.

I’m up at 5am and there’s no way I’m going to sleep after having just seen this story and PS3 gameplay trailer for Ni No Kuni, the videogame collaboration between Level-5 (The Professor Layton series) and Studio Ghibli (Princess Mononoke, Howl’s Moving Castle, Spirited Away and so many more incredible movies it’ll make you crazy) coming to both the Nintendo DS and PS3. And included at the end of the trailer is a Western release date for the game of January 22nd!

Unless The Last Guardian suddenly gets a release date (and gets finished), this looks like it might be my favorite game of 2013 already. Yes, I’m still a GTA fanatic, and we’ll see what GTA 5 holds in store, but this game looks like a complete and fresh opposite to that experience so I’m going to start it off in my “Most Anticipated Game of 2013” slot (and I’ll only have 22 days of 2013 in which to wait for it!

It was the summer of 1995 when I first went with a friend to the UTexas Anime Club screening of Studio Ghibli’s Laputa: Castle in the Sky and I have been a Studio Ghibli fanatic ever since, still owning all of my fan for fan made VHS tapes of Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind and My Neighbor Totoro and everything else Studio Ghibli that I could feverishly get. This trailer brought many of those feelings that I was discovering a new form of masterful storytelling right back. And after last weekend, in which Laura spent both plane flights back and forth to Mexico playing one of Level-5’s Professor Layton games, this household is prepped and ready! I’m still excited to see more details on the DS version of the game and hopefully I’ll return from E3 next week with more to share!