{"id":1091,"date":"2009-08-14T09:30:24","date_gmt":"2009-08-14T14:30:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bspcn.com\/?p=1091"},"modified":"2009-08-13T10:38:13","modified_gmt":"2009-08-13T15:38:13","slug":"hayao-miyazakis-nine-best-movies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/localhost\/wordpress\/2009\/08\/14\/hayao-miyazakis-nine-best-movies\/","title":{"rendered":"Hayao Miyazaki’s Nine Best Movies"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Written by Alex Vo<\/a><\/p>\n Hayao Miyazaki<\/a>‘s last three films (Princess Mononoke<\/em>, Spirited Away<\/em>, and Howl’s Moving Castle<\/em>) platformed in America to mild success. For his 10th and latest movie, Ponyo<\/a><\/em> (the story of an ocean goldfish and her quest to become human), Disney will be granting it a more confident, nationwide release this Friday. Frankly, the more opportunity America gets to see a Miyazaki movie, the better: they expertly breach multiple genres and fulfill the visual promise of hand-drawn animation. But they also feel deeply personal. Always directing from his own scripts, Miyazaki can take any story and mold it to his likeness, creating across 10 films a thematically consistent, rich and rewarding universe. This week’s Total Recall explores the career of Hayao Miyazaki, animation’s grand auteur.<\/p>\n <\/a>9. Howl’s Moving Castle<\/strong><\/a><\/em> <\/p>\n The film begins with a meek hat girl falling in love with a charming wizard and then being transformed into an old woman by a jealous witch. This is Miyazaki’s lowest-rated movie (still insanely high at 86 percent), but let’s not think for a second he’s slipping in his late period. Howl’s Moving Castle<\/em> is his most challenging work, a patient movie with a purposefully diffused narrative. Even if you’re confused by the plot (and it gets pretty weird in spots), it can be enjoyed for its stunningly baroque artwork and playful sense of mystery and wonder. Richard Nilsen of the Arizona Republic was bewitched: “The world it gives us to live in, for a couple of hours, is pure magic. It is one of those places we might wish never to leave.”<\/p>\n
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