Film Review: Howl's Moving Castle
I'm not quite sleepy yet, so another film review.
Howl's Moving Castle is... probably better cinematically than Castle in the Sky and not quite as good as Spirited Away. In my opinion, at least. Miyazaki is a visual genius. The war scenes in particular... were clearly by someone who had lived through air raids. And the flowingly organic machinery were just beautiful.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. HMC is a romance fantasy, along the vague lines of Beauty and the Beast except most of the characters are cursed at one point or another with different needs to be met in order to be freed. At the same time it's the story of an adopted family running from a warring Wizard Queen. Running in a castle on spindly stick legs. Lots of fun, that castle.
In addition to really fun visuals, it has very well done voices by Jean Simmons (Grandma Sophie), Christian Bale (Howl), Lauren Bacall (Witch of the Waste), and Billy Crystal (as Calcifer, the incredibly cute but powerful fire-demon). I don't usually note who does voies for an animated film, but these actors seemed particularly well-suited.
So, why didn't I like this as much as Spirited Away? The plot, in the last third, seemed to unravel, and the last 5 minutes felt like a letdown. It was particularly a frustrating to me because the story seems to fall apart relatively shortly after a breathtaking scene involving tiny shooting stars falling and skittering across the waves... Dunno, maybe if I see it again, it will be less frustrating.
Yes, worth seeing if you like anime.
Howl's Moving Castle is... probably better cinematically than Castle in the Sky and not quite as good as Spirited Away. In my opinion, at least. Miyazaki is a visual genius. The war scenes in particular... were clearly by someone who had lived through air raids. And the flowingly organic machinery were just beautiful.
But I'm getting ahead of myself. HMC is a romance fantasy, along the vague lines of Beauty and the Beast except most of the characters are cursed at one point or another with different needs to be met in order to be freed. At the same time it's the story of an adopted family running from a warring Wizard Queen. Running in a castle on spindly stick legs. Lots of fun, that castle.
In addition to really fun visuals, it has very well done voices by Jean Simmons (Grandma Sophie), Christian Bale (Howl), Lauren Bacall (Witch of the Waste), and Billy Crystal (as Calcifer, the incredibly cute but powerful fire-demon). I don't usually note who does voies for an animated film, but these actors seemed particularly well-suited.
So, why didn't I like this as much as Spirited Away? The plot, in the last third, seemed to unravel, and the last 5 minutes felt like a letdown. It was particularly a frustrating to me because the story seems to fall apart relatively shortly after a breathtaking scene involving tiny shooting stars falling and skittering across the waves... Dunno, maybe if I see it again, it will be less frustrating.
Yes, worth seeing if you like anime.
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I like that Disney can afford some good actors for the voices. Although I've heard that all Disney movies have an annoying feature that they force-show the previews, it didn't seem to happen on my DVD player. (oops, wrote that as VCR the first time; my age is showing)
Hm, or that might just be on "Disney" Disney movies. Shrug.
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My opinion is that Spirited Away was more satisfying because it had been conceived from the beginning as a motion picture, while Howl had to be adapted and, while it gained something in the translation from page to screen, it lost something as well.
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Maybe I will check out the novel; I usually like back-story on something I liked the front-story of, and the first sentence has potential.
In the land of Ingary, where such things as seven-league boots and cloaks of invisibility really exist, it is quite a misfortune to be born the eldest of three.
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This only applies to fiction. Non-fiction can easily be interesting just for the information it passes on.
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I've found counter-examples where the style and tone weren't enough for me; Connie Willis/"To Say Nothing of the Dog" is one. I couldn't keep reading it, though I liked the premise and the first few pages. The dialog and plot (holes) made me very frustrated. :)
However, I did like her novel "Bellwether," which also had plot problems. I think ultimately it's whether I can suspend disbelief long enough to get into the story. If the author introduces something idiotic (to me) near the beginning, I'm not going to get into it because I start critiquing.
You've reminded me I should review a non-fiction book which met this test also: "Iran Awakening." Stay tuned. ;)
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However, one show displayed an image fractal and the expert mathematician said, "Hmm... I'm going to have to analyze this for a while." I yelled, "It's a fractal," at the screen. I mean, I basically have calc 102 and that's the extent of my math background. This guy is supposed to be a genius. 15 minutes later he comes back, with the information, "This is a fractal."
They could have at least used a less recognizable image. I couldn't stand to watch the show after that. So I totally understand how some things just eliminate any possibility for respect for the characters and/or the world they live in.