Monday, February 20, 2006

 

Editors of the world: pay attention


This is my OPINION OF COURSE LOL but I believe this guy, John of the Ask John thing over at Anime Nation: http://animenation.net/news/askjohn.php?id=1239 needs a bit of editing. So it's not so boring.

Color-coded for convenience. Blue = Miyazaki is making movies for himself. Green = Positives and negatives of his recent movies. Red = ZOMG his earlier movies are better. Black = stuff that's mostly okay. Pink = spelling error.

The question is something like "Why is Hayao Miyazaki a self-serving asshat instead of a pandering clown anymore?"

Ironically I suspect that it is exactly Miyazaki's desire to make personal films that is doing the most harm to his movies.
I thought that Mononoke was a breathtaking film, yet it still had minor flaws. Spirited Away was amazing to look at, but lacked fully effective characterization for Chihiro and suffered with disjointed narrative. Howl suffered even further from that trend. Sophie's first meeting with Howl ranks among the best sequences of animation Miyazaki has ever produced. The entire film is amazing to look at. But Howl's Moving Castle doesn't feel like a single evolving story, in part because its characterizations aren't established well enough, and in part because the story feels like a series of consecutive events rather than like a narrative in which events naturally occur. While I respect, appreciate, and enjoy Hayao Miyazaki's recent films, none of them are as powerful or emotionally moving as earlier classics like Nausicaa, Laputa, Totoro and Kiki.

I mean no offense when I say that I suspect that age and status is making Miyazaki more obstinate. Despite his claimed desire to create authentic art untethered to commercial restraints, he's spent most of his career making films for viewers.
It seems as though recently he's earned the right and ability to make more personal films, which is resulting in beautiful looking but opaque films. In his recent interview, Miyazaki points out the visual impact of the train sequence in Spirited Away and the falling stars in Howl's Moving Castle. These references may be representative of Miyazaki's increasing focus on satisfying his own wishes for his films, instead of concentrating foremost on creating a fulfilling and satisfying experience for viewers. The fact that Miyazaki made repeated public statements that his target audience for Spirited Away was ten year old Japanese girls, and his relatively recent statements that Ghibli movies are primarily made for native Japanese viewers affirms that he hasn't entirely lost sight of his target audience. But I have the feeling that increasingly lately the target audience of his films is as much himself as it is his audience.

I've watched Princess Mononoke, Spirited Away, and Howl's Moving Castle several times each. I've purchased nearly all of the Studio Ghibli movies on imported Japanese and domestic DVD. I own a fairly large collection of Studio Ghibli memorabilia. I've enjoyed Miyazaki's recent films, but I can't deny that they lack some of the dramatic narrative impact and some of the warmth and soul of his earlier films. Ironically I think this may be because the director is increasingly concentrating on excluding commercialism from his movies. Making movies that satisfy his own tastes and desires results in technically highly artistic films, but also films that make perfect sense to the director, but leave the viewer slightly lost and confused. I don't think that Hayao Miyazaki will ever loose his relevance to the international film community or among viewers. Even when flawed, films like Howl's Moving Castle are still stunning accomplishments and wondrous cinematic experiences. Each films that Miyazaki has directed has had impressive and memorable visual impact. In recent films consider the marvelous natural scenery and the giant god of the forest's movements. Spirited Away had its phenomenally ornate bath house and its menagerie of patrons. Howl's Moving Castle featured the castle itself, and Sophie's amazingly rendered thriving home town. I do have doubts, though, about whether or not Miyazaki will again create a film that has the empathetic impact of his earlier works. I suspect that the man's personality and perspective have evolved since the time he made films like Nausicaa and Laputa, and I have a feeling that he's no longer inclined to make films precisely in the way that he did ten or twenty years ago. Regardless of his future production, Hayao Miyazaki's existing body of work guarantees his place in film history. And even his most insubstantial or unsatisfying films are still more creative, interesting, and beautiful than most of the world's cinema. I think that Hayao Miyazaki has reached a point in his career at which he is concentrating more on creating art than creating commercial film. I respect that goal, but the problem with that principle is that it results in movies that are somewhat more meaningful for the director than for the audience.

Saturday, February 11, 2006

 

Why are there people like Frank??!


I didn't sleep through Nausicaa! I actually like it a lot more the 2nd time.

Joe sent me his Wacom tablet! I love you, Joe!









Friday, February 10, 2006

 

Stop fighting everyone! Stop fighting everyone! Stop fighting everyone!


I gotta watch Nausicaa in anime class today.

I'm so gonna sleep through it.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

 

Because I'm a nerd


And this is what nerds do:

Res Evil DS - 2/7
Drakengard 2 - 2/14
Super Princess Peach - 2/27
Black - 2/28
Tales of Phantasia - 3/6
Onimusha: Dawn of Whatever - 3/14
Metal Gear Solid 3: Substinence - 3/14
Metroid Prime Hunters - 3/20
Tetris DS - 3/20
Mother 3 - 4/20 Japan
Phantasy Star Universe - May??
Rogue Galaxy - ???
Zelda: Twilight Princess - ???
Final Fantasy 5 Advance - ???
Final Fantasy 6 Advance - ???
Final Fantasy 12 -???

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

 

AI no SENSHI


Some more of my sketches scanned from various workbooks, notebooks, sketchbooks.




Locke from FF6.



Kenshin and some girl.



Kenshin again. Expect more.



I started drawing something else but it just ended up as a dumb Sephiroth.



Ah. One of the main characters from Pulse (Kairo), the delectable horror movie by Kiyoshi Kurosawa. The American version is coming out in March with Boone from Lost and Veronica Mars starring. Ugh. The Japanese actor was really good in a goofy, charming way, like if Tidus from FFX was in a J-horror, as damning as that sounds.



Goofy Kenshin from the 50/50 awesome/awful series.



Supposed to be a sort of self portrait. Y'know, if I looked great from a profile angle, my hair obeyed me and I had Hughes scruff from Fullmetal Alchemist.



The last OVA-styled Rurouni Kenshin this time with a Bruce Timm-styled square jaw. I'm taking a modern Japanese literature class which involves a lot of the Meiji Restoration of 1868. The fictional Kenshin was supposed to have fought in that uprising so it was really cool to learn some of the history that went into the anime. Thus the sad, scarred ronin sketches.



Four views of Ashley Riot from Vagrant Story. In a Vagrant Story film adaptation I imagine him looking pained and/or determined in the rain, in the dark, at the end... Anthony Hopkins for Duke Bardorba!



Taking an anime class this semester. So far the first episode of Astro Boy was all we watched but we read some material about mythology. Evangelion matches nearly everything a myth needs like the father abandoning the hero. What would anime and RPGs be without that old chestnut?



I wanted to do something with dramatic shading but it ended up like some kind of emo thing. Bleh.



Goofy Batou. Grr! Teeth!



Now here's a Batou I can get behind! Unf! I like his Steven Seagal ponytail.



An ugly noir guy I've been drawing. I'd like to use him in something but I dunno what... Parts of me want to give him vampiric superpowers or make him a zombie or something if only because of his ghoulish appearance. Otherwise I see him as a Jonah Hex/Goliath from Gargoyles type of do-gooder.



More ugly guy. I just thought of Rutger Hauer so I'm thinking of naming him Rutger. Or something. I really like the left one most. The top guy was supposed to be someone Rutger could interact with maybe but he just turned out to be either Vincent from Silent Hill 3 or my brother if he was a devilish cur. That's probably the best pair of glasses I ever drew.... drawed. Drew.



Most recent Rutger pic. I like the big expressive eyes even if that expression is "angry" or "skeptical" most of the time.


I got some more things in the tubes I plan to color. Hopefully I'll receive that tablet from Joe soon. Can't wait to try that baby out!


Monday, February 06, 2006

 

Beaverton


Turbulent weekend. Birthdays and things. I saw The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada and The Squid and the Whale. Independent movies love AWFUL SEX. And awful people.

They were both good but Squid and the Whale has the grand distinction of being short. Melquiades is a journey movie but DAYMN it feels like it. When movies feel like they need to be overlong epics it's refreshing to see a movie so concise and punctuated. Both flicks featured heavily bearded, filthy lead actors yet both focused more on the younger co-stars and
their journies, coming-of-age, redemption, whatnot. Each story was, ultimately, about their sorry asses.

Squid/Whale also has the music from Risky Business - that trance-y synth theme that plays when Tom and Becky (big ups) do THE BUSINESS on the train. It was nice to hear that again albeit in slimier, somehow-seedier circumstances.

2nd Gig was on last night so I got a chance to show it to my pals. Even for a slow courtoom episode they were impressed! The music, the animation, the dense-as-hell dialogue... w00t! That was during Hanae's birthday party. I think I was the only American there but I was still (very) surprised no one saw the Alien movies or knew Kyle MacLachlan. =(

Important news: Snakes on a Plane is still en route. Important links:
- Sam Jackson confirming the title of the movie
- An unbelievable tee
- Read the customer review

Thanks to Jeff for the snakemazement.

That's oekaki down there. I drew those with a mouse. It was difficult at first but you can see my progression. That's Wander from Shadow of the Colossus, Batou from Ghost in the Shell, Poison Ivy from uh BATMAN, and the Major from GitS. Wander was my first, Major the last and my favorite.


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