2012-11-16
My favorite Miyazaki movies
This all started with The Cart Driver's top 30 anime list; I wound up both thinking about what my own top 30 list would look like and raising my eyebrows that they only included one Miyazaki movie (my untempered first reaction was that basically all Miyazaki movies would make my list). In the end, while I like all of Miyazaki's movies that I've seen and think that they're all very good I'll admit that I like some more than others. I'm not going to try to rank them against other anime (not right now at least), but I'm going to list the ones that I've decided are my current favorites and picks as the very best of his work.
First, I haven't seen any of Ghibli's films since Spirited Away, including both Howl's Moving Castle and Ponyo; however, based on commentary I've read about both, I doubt that seeing either would change this list. Given that, my choices today are:
- Tonari no Totoro:
I can't possibly be objective about Totoro; I watched it at exactly
the right time for it to settle firmly into my heart and as a result
it's my emotional favorite of all Miyazaki movies. But beyond my
personal attachment, Totoro is the Miyazaki movie that is most
purely about joy and wonder, with essentially no plot or tension to
distract you. The movie is all about Satsuki and Mei having a series
of happy, joyful experiences, from discovering and chasing around the
soot spots to Mei falling on Totoro's fuzzy stomach to waiting in
the rain with Totoro to, well, almost every moment in the film. Even
the ending climax is not really tense and is most memorable for the
cat-bus's spectacular run (speeding across the fields with people not
seeing it, trotting along the high-tension wires, and if you've seen
Totoro your memories may be flooding back here too). It is sentimental
in the best way.
Or in short, Totoro is Miyazaki's love letter to the wonders of childhood, the distilled essence of wandering around and having marvelous things happen. And it is a very, very well written love letter.
(Totoro also has what's probably my single most favorite moment of flight in all Miyazaki movies, and that's saying something given that Miyazaki movies are just full of spectacular flight sequences.)
- Porco Rosso: I might
not have listed this without the Cart Driver's prompting,
but they're right. This is Miyazaki's most grown up and
adult movie and at the same time also his most numinous; while other Miyazaki movies
have more magic and more fantasy, in them it is more mundane, routine,
and explicable than the one restrained, transcendent scene in Porco
Rosso. Porco Rosso makes no attempt to explain the things that are
not real and in doing so makes them more powerful. As his most adult
movie it's also the one that's the most indirect and restrained,
deliberately not showing us things and not giving us direct, clear
answers.
(As a result of this, Porco Rosso is the least straightforward and accessible Miyazaki movie, which is why I might have skipped over it initially.)
I feel that this is the movie where Miyazaki most wears his heart on his sleeve. Miyazaki loves flight in general, but this film is filled with so much love for a particular realistic sort of flight (ie, between-war small airplanes) and for its time and place. Miyazaki also does us the service of not forgetting or ignoring what is in the background of this time and place, the way that might have happened in the hands of a lesser filmmaker.
(There is nothing in the straightforward plot of Porco Rosso that required us to be carefully reminded of the growth of Italian fascism.)
- Spirited Away: This is Miyazaki's best adventure story (Porco Rosso has an adventure but is more a meditation on Marco's situation) and best fantasy. It is about children (or at least a child) without being childish, and is not so much about growing up as about growing into yourself and into what you can do. As a fantasy it presents the best-realized, most interesting world of fantasy in any of Miyazaki's works, full with both beauty and terror, because Miyazaki understands that the fantastic is both; you cannot have the different without also having the disturbing and the dangerous.
Again, I like all of Miyazaki's films and think they're great. The other films are just not as great in various ways as these three; these are the ones that I think are the purest, most refined Miyazaki.
(I feel conflicted about Mononoke-Hime. There's a lot to like about it and maybe I'm underrating it, but somehow I feel that it doesn't completely click with me. Maybe I need to see it again. Call it something close to an honorable mention for now.)
PS: I don't think that Miyazaki's messages in Mononoke-Hime, Nausicaa, and Castle in the Sky are flaws in any of those films, although some people disagree with this view. I don't rate any of those as highly as these three for other reasons.
Sidebar: going outside of Miyazaki
I've deliberately confined myself to Miyazaki's films here. If I was to go outside of that to films by Studio Ghibli people in general I would immediately point you to Gauche the Cellist, an early work by Isao Takahata. If you like classical music (as I do), this is a beautiful 'sense of wonder' film that's well worth your time.
(That it's entirely built around classical music probably makes it inaccessible to people who don't at least somewhat like the music.)
2012-11-12
Looking back at the Summer 2012 anime season
As before it's time I got around to taking an honest look back at the Summer 2012 season, to go with my early impressions and my midway update.
Shows that I actively watched (and finished where applicable), in descending order:
- Jinrui wa Suitai Shimashita: My favorite show of the summer, which
I've written a chunk about.
- Eureka Seven AO: My second most enjoyable show of the summer, only
a little bit behind Jinrui. I don't have an overall opinion on the
series yet since we're still waiting for the last two episodes.
(I wrote some stuff about it at the end of here.)
- Moyashimon Returns: I take back my grumpyness from my midway
update. The best way I can put it is that the final plotline
of Returns shows the series growing up and maturing, shifting from
a bunch of ultimately lightweight stuff to something more nuanced. I
liked this tone shift but I understand not everyone did. Also, I
enjoyed a seiyuu overlap.
(It's not just that Returns got serious, although it did in a way. It's that things became more complex and nuanced and felt more real as a result. There were no easy answers or one-dimensional characters.)
- Campione!: I'm sure people are going to laugh at me, but I quite
enjoyed this all through. Part of this I can attribute simply to
its execution, but I argue that it's less recycled and cliched
than it might look on the surface. I mentioned Erica Blandelli
in my midway update and another example (per a tweet) is that
victory in fights was about gaining knowledge and solving mysteries,
not more power. All of this made it fun to watch, for all that it
doesn't particularly aspire to be deep.
(This sort of calls for an entire entry that I'll probably never have the time and energy to write.)
- Sword Art Online: My views turned out not to fit
in a paragraph, so I put them in an entry of their own.
Short version: I don't think it can really be called good but it was
clearly watchable because I did and do. I attribute this more to good
production values than anything else.
- Kyoukai Senjou no Horizon II: I wound up watching this all the
way through, purely for the absurd spectacle. The advantage of Horizon
as compared to, say, Aquarion EVOL is that the non-spectacle bits
made so little sense and I cared so little about them that it was easy
to tune them out. Also, there weren't that many of them since Horizon
packed most of its exposition into the first season.
If I'm a smart person, I will not watch any future seasons this gets.
- Dog Days': as I expected, nothing really happened in this season; it
never went anywhere. The show wasn't boring exactly
and it was idly enjoyable throughout, but I did wind up kind of
feeling that watching it was wasted time. Light entertainment is not
quite what I want out of my limited time. In retrospect I stuck with
this mostly out of nostalgia for the first season (and the inability
to let that nostalgia go).
The thought of another season doesn't fill me with enthusiasm.
- Oda Nobuna no Yabou: In the end most of this was merely ordinarily
entertaining and the show's complete inability to let Nobuna do
anything got rather irritating. In retrospect I should have skipped
it, but I got captured by my initial enthusiasm and it was never quite
bad enough to push me to stop watching it.
(It's not that this was bad; it was acceptably entertaining. It's just that I'm trying to do better than merely 'acceptably entertaining' these days.)
Watching slowly:
- Joshiraku: my views haven't changed: it's entertaining and amusing but I don't find it funny enough to watch very fast.
Declared as misses:
- Hagure Yuusha no Estetica: I dropped this right after I wrote my midway update, as I mused about in the update. I have no regrets, especially since apparently its ending is basically 'continued in the light novels'.
Overall there were four shows that I unapologetically enjoyed, one show that I found compulsively watchable but seriously flawed (SAO), one show that a smarter person might not have bothered with, and two shows that I probably should have dropped. Oh, and in retrospect I stuck with Hagure much longer than I should have; I could have bailed out in the second episode when it made its taste for excessive fanservice clear.
(In general I was, as usual, far too optimistic and willing to stick with shows.)
This season makes me happy in one specific way, after last season: my favorite show wasn't an action show. On the flipside, most of the rest are (I count Dog Days' as an action show, despite how little real action it had; it was more of an adventure show, but that's close enough).
(I could be happy that my third most favorite show is also not an action show, but not really; there's a big gap between my feelings for AO and my feelings for Return. Return was nice, AO was very good to great.)