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My Neighbor Totoro and Ebert

peter_gzowski writes "Well known film critic and closet otaku, Roger Ebert, has a bi-weekly segment on his website where he reminisces about the greatest films of all time (in his opinion, anyway). The most recent installment covers My Neighbor Totoro. This is the second anime to make the list, joining Grave of the Fireflies. For those unfamiliar, Totoro is a film by anime master Hayao Miyazaki, the man behind Princess Mononoke, amoung many other great films (Castle of Cagliostro being my favorite)." Always pleased to see anime get more mainsream cred. And Miyazaki always deserves it.

178 comments

  1. Good starting point? by TrumpetPower! · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I must admit, I've never gotten into anime. Would those who have recommend this as a good place to start?

    b&

    --
    All but God can prove this sentence true.
    1. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Check out http://www.animeondvd.com/discdata/essential/index .htm
      Apart from battle athletes ( i dont like sports anime to much ) they are cream of the crop (or near enough) for now on dvd.

    2. Re:Good starting point? by inv0ker · · Score: 1

      Good starting off point that link.

    3. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cowboy Bebop is all around kick ass. Everyone I talk to loved it. It's a series, so have 13 or so hours of free time to watch em all. Miyazaki has other films that I loved: Warriors of the Wind --- which was released as a chopped version in the US (get the Japan import or off ebay if you want it, only VHS). I have Princess Mononoke, and love it! :) This one is a goood one to start with, but I do recommend Cowboy Bebop for an all around good time. For ninja stuff I recommend Kenshin, and Jubie Chan for a little more humor.

    4. Re:Good starting point? by Kalabajoui · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about Princess Mononoke? It's a great example of the genre and I enjoyed watching it very much. It has many of the tried and true anime cliches along with a rather unique and warm hearted storyline. It's almost worth seeing for the forest spirits, or 'maraca headed guys' like my friends and I who've seen it call them. I would go so far as to say that Princess Mononuke is to most anime what Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon is to most kung foo movies. So, for what it's worth, I highly recommend Princess Mononuke because it stands on it's own as a great animated film.

    5. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I recommend these titles:

      - Princess Mononoke
      - My neighbour Totoro
      - Grave of the fireflies
      - Kiki's Delivery Service
      - Ghost in the Shell
      - Akira

      These titles cover vastly different topics, are all characterized by wonderful animation and, IMHO of real artistic value.

      In addition, you might find interesting some of the following titles:

      - Some of the Galaxy 999 movies
      - Porco Rosso
      - Cagliostro's castle

      I'm sure I omitted soe great representative of the anime scene. These are good pointers, though. The first list is warmly recommended.

      mario

    6. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.ebaystores.com/sundevildvd
      has good deals on Trigun and Cowboy Bebop as well as lots of other Anime DVDs. These are my two favorite though :-)

    7. Re:Good starting point? by LazyBoy · · Score: 2, Informative

      The Cowboy Bebop series is playing now
      on the Cartoon network, BTW.

      --

      If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.

    8. Re:Good starting point? by CubeDweller · · Score: 5, Informative

      I've been a beginner fan of anime for just under two years now. The biggest problem I've run into is that Anime is just like any other form of media out there. 95 percent of it is crap, but if you know where to look you can find some real gems.

      In my opinion, the biggest pain is figuring out what age category a piece is aimed at. Most stuff isn't rated with the MPAA's G, PG, PG-13, R etc. ratings, or any similar system. Suncoast uses age recommendation stickers, but I've found them to be wildly inaccurate at times. Until recently, you couldn't find much anime at Blockbuster or other rental places, so you had to risk $20-30 on something that might be highly rated, but completely wrong for your interests or age.

      I bought the first couple of disks of Bubblegum Crisis 2040 after reading very positive reviews, only to find out that the target audience is probably in the 12-14 range. The last couple of disks in the series turned into a glorified version of Mighty Morphin Power Rangers.

      But there is quite a bit of Anime that's good. I'll just list off a few of my favorites.

      Cowboy Bebop: An excellent series of 26 half-hour episodes aimed at 15 and up. A small group of bounty hunters track criminals throughout the solar system while dealing with their own shady backgrounds. The music in this one is legendary, and really makes the stories pop. The plot bogs down a bit around episodes 12-15, but the series overall is excellent. This is my favorite Anime and has turned me into a die-hard fan of the music composer, Yoko Kanno.

      Princess Mononoke: An incredible 120 minute movie aimed at 10 and above. I've shown this movie to dozens of members of my friends and family, and with only one exception everybody has liked it. A human mining community is destroying a forest populated by ancient animal spirits. A young boy is cursed by one of the displaced spirits, and goes on a journey to end the conflict. This one really stands out because there are no good or evil characters. Every side has their good and bad traits, and no side is completely innocent or guilty.

      Neon Genesis Evangelion: Another decent series of 26 half-hour episodes. The subplot is aimed at 15 and up, but younger can watch the surface story and be entertained. Giant robot combat on the surface, but with some very interesting religious undertones if you look closely. Basically, what would happen if technology progressed sufficiently that man becomes capable of resisting the will of God? Some don't like this series because the ending leaves so many unanswered questions.

      Gunsmith Cats: A series of 3 half hour episodes aimed at ages 15 and up. This is the Anime version of Starsky and Hutch. A pair of female gun shop owners are forced to go undercover working for the ATF. One of the girls is an explosive expert, and is really the one that sells the show. She's always wanting to blow up anything and everything, and the other characters have to keep her in check. All her grenades have feminine touches, like a pink ribbon tied around the pin, or a lipstick kiss mark. This is a good one if you want to have fun but don't want to think very hard. My wife loves this one.

      My Neighbor Totoro: A 90 minute movie, definitely aimed at children. My son is a bit young to follow most of the movie, but he thinks the Totoros are hilarious. The movie is a warm, fuzzy feel-good childrens movie all the way through. One of the best scenes is at a bus stop in the rain. A Totoro is loaned an umbrella to try to stay dry, and makes a game out of the sounds of raindrops hitting the fabric. My son laughs hysterically at this scene.

      Lain - Serial Experiments: A series of 13 half-hour episodes aimed at 18 and up. A young girl discovers the internet, and a hidden world behind it. It quickly turns into philosophical ruminations on the nature of conciousness and existence. If you're not an armchair philosopher you may get bored with this one, but I liked it. There's not a lot of action here, but plenty of stuff to make you think.

      Grave of the Fireflies: A 90 minute movie that can be watched by all ages, but will probably only be enjoyed by adults. This is a strong anti-war movie, and one of the saddest movies I've ever seen. It's set in the last few days of WW2 Japan, and centers around a pair of children whos parents have both been killed. The children are struggling to survive on their own surrounded by a society that's too caught up in the war to help them. This one's a tear-jerker, but a solid and enjoyable picture none the less.

      Supposedly Garasaki is decent, with a strong political backstory, and I may get into that series next, when I have money again. That might be a while.

      There's a couple of Animes I didn't like, as well. Bubblegum Crisis 2040, as I said above, is aimed for a younger age category than I prefer. Akira is supposed to be great, but I've never read the comic books, and it just didn't do anything for me. The Robotech series (I know, not really Anime) that I loved as a kid turned out to be nothing more than nostalgia. It's truly one of the worst things I've ever seen. The different Gundam Wing variants are awful. I don't know what people see in them. It seems like nothing more than one very powerful hero fighting off hordes of incompetent enemies. The different DragonBall series are very popular with the 8-12 year old category, and even some older people, but really it's nothing more than steriod pumped angry people in a never-ending run of trash talk a la Professional Wrestling.

      If you're interested in Anime, I'd say the best thing you could do would be to lurk on a couple of locations on the internet and look for suggestions. Once you've seen and liked a couple of pieces, and know what types you prefer (political, comedy, action, etc.) people should have a much better idea of what other things you might like. If you go to a site that does ratings, make sure they are honest about bad ratings. Too many sides offer 8.5 of 10 as their lowest possible rating.

      If you get the Cartoon Network, they're always playing Anime for the 10-14 year old category. Late nights on Sundays they play Cowboy Bebop. A lot of stuff on this channel is highly edited to make them suitable for television, but you can still get a taste. So far I haven't been too disappointed in the editing done to Cowboy Bebop.


      Hope that helped!

      Seth

    9. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      here are 5 good anime series, these are more suitable for mature audience (>15 yrs old) than other anime

      (1)city hunter - funny story, a lot of dick joke, for example city hunter use dumb bell to exercise his dick so that it become stronger or use turtle to bite his enemy's dick. lots of beautiful woman. a classic.

      (2)kindaichi case file - detective/mystery story featuring a high school detective, good mystery, need to exercise your mind figuring who is the killer, averagely 5 person is murdered on each story

      (3)inachu table tennis club - the dumbest anime from japan, featuring two ugly and unpopular japanese kid, e.g. i laugh my ass off at an episode where these two ugly kids try to tell an ugly girl that she is ugly (which she deny)

      (4)try to find products from the artist that create hunter x hunter, he has the capability to create characters with cool personality, non of the other artist in japan can surpass him in creating a character with cool personality, sample quote: "i don't like you glance, stop glancing at me like this"

      (5)kimagure orange road - high school love story, brings back your high school memory when you first has a crush on the most beautiful girl that sit next to you

    10. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (4)try to find products from the artist that create hunter x hunter, he has the capability to create characters with cool personality, non of the other artist in japan can surpass him in creating a character with cool personality, sample quote: "i don't like you glance, stop glancing at me like this" i remember a cooler quote from this artist: "i use the honour of our race to curse you"

    11. Re:Good starting point? by *ZiggyP0P* · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Out of the list I must agree with you.

      My favorite anime would have to be Serial Experiments Lain. It had simply beautiful artwork, an interesting story, and it had a subplot that was QUITE away from what it originally looks like.

      No spoilers for those curious but the creators said that this could not be understood by Americans (or, rather, non-Japanese). It deals with the struggle between western influence and the traditional Japanese way of life. Viewed under this context and with a shading of "What else could this mean" you can read a LOT of different plots into lain.

      For this reason (if not the hundreds of others), Lain is definately worth the time of those interested. Describe in 2 words? Fun Headtrip.

      --
      I didn't do it. ;p
    12. Re:Good starting point? by mr.+marbles · · Score: 2, Informative

      To anyone that is disappointed with the evangelion ending. Know that it's widely accepted that the last two movies are held as the REAL ending for evangelion. Essentially the movies says the same thing as the last two episodes, but with MUCH more money!
      The story that i've heard is that the last two episodes resulted from the Studio running out of money at the end of the production of the series. Two years later the studio made it up to the fans with the release of the movies and redoing the ending. And IMHO the movies are the best anime out there, sit back and prepare to have your mind blown to pieces. It's actually more appropreate to watch the series up to the last two episodes and then watch the movie ending.

    13. Re:Good starting point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check out http://www.pantsaflame.com. They have a rather amazing assortment of Def Leppard anime, including the rare 'Yakko Warner' outtakes from the animated version of the 'Hysteria' tour. It's really something. You can even make out the missing arm of their drummer, clearly erased from some frames by a six year old with a poor-quality eraser.

      Seriously, though, pantsaflame.com is a genuine goldmine for spastic colon syndrome.

      Er, I mean, anime.

      -- Wil Wheaton

    14. Re:Good starting point? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      There is also a (very good) Cowboy Bebop feature film, "Knockin' On Heaven's Door," which was released in Japan last summer. (Chronology nitpickers: timewise, it is set between episodes 22 and 23 of the series.)

      There is an Official English-language Website, but no apparent details of a US release (I was able to find a very nice-quality subtitled dub on Usenet).

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    15. Re:Good starting point? by wedg · · Score: 1

      1. Cowboy Bebop is *awesome*. It's a lot more than the simple surface plot. It is a story about people. The characters are the single most important part, and almost all of them are developed incredibly well. You have to pay attention to the recurring themes, the background noise, to get anything more than "bounty hunters killing things" out of this season long series. And it's still entertaining on the surface. Oh yeah. The Art and subtle blends of CG and traditional cel animation is incredible.

      2. Mononoke Hime is incredible. The animation is stunning, but the plot is even better. It really helps to know a little about Japanese myths and the idea of a 'kami', or spirit, as taken from Shintoism. Really a great movie.

      3. Neon Genesis Evangelion (or Shin Seiki Evangelion) is one of the best season long series out there ever. Perhaps one of the most emotionally charged and angst filled too. If you want an idea of how much, the director, Anno, created the series in large part as a way of dealing with his own incredibly deep depression. The story is about the creation of Man, the meaning of Life, and our Purpose in the Universe. It is also very, very confusing at times. They made a 26 (season long) series, then made a movie to explain the series, then made another movie to explain the first movie. But the animation is beautiful, the characters are wonderful. The series is perhaps one of the best, ever, out of all mediums. Truely a work of art.

      4. Gunsmith Cats is great. Sort of like a contemporary Cowboy Bebop. It's earlier animation, and it's a lot more 'fun', and less serious, but it's still great to watch, especially for the fight scenes and technical art.

      5. I haven't seen My Neighbor Totoro yet, but you would suggest that it's for children only. I'm not sure, but most anime work on many levels. Digimon is still entertaining for teenagers, or even adults. If you're watching it with the viewpoint of a child, you'll miss much of the more important parts of the film.

      6. Lain is a half-season long twisting path through the psyche of a 13 year old girl (Lain). I've watched it twice, and I still can't quite figure out what's going on. The movies raise the question of the next human evolution, the possibilities for human consciousness, and many others. And proceeds to answer none of them. The animation is very unique too, but also very well done. The main problem with this film is that you spend so much time wondering what's going on, you don't get to empathize with any of the characters. It gets better each time you see it though, as pieces of the puzzle lock into place.

      7. Grave of the Fireflies is truely a masterpiece. Everything said about it is true.

      There are so many more I can do. The best advice I can give is to go rent or borrow as much anime to watch as possible. The more you see, the more you'll be able to pick out the finer points of each one, and the more you'll learn to differentiate some bad animes (mostly in the 80s), from the really good ones.

      Some you'll like. Some are ok. Some are intolerable. One of the other suggestions I give is to see them in the original japanese language with subtitles. Dubs are easy on the eyes, because you don't have to read, but there's a lot you miss out in terms of nuances of voice, inflection, etc, that just doesn't carry well into English, or sounds just plain stupid when translated. And some dubs are done just poorly.

      And like I said, most anime work on multiple levels, so if it seems like there's something else there - there will almost certainly be.

      Good luck anime'ing. Ganbatte! (You can do it!)

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
    16. Re:Good starting point? by Ehrine · · Score: 1

      Actually, the problem with the ending of Evangelion (as I heard it from some _serious_ anime buffs in the UK) is as follows.

      Throughout the making of Evangelion they would often finish episodes within a day of the transmission on TV Tokyo (the company that funded it). This was all well and good till an episode _fairly_ near the end that was just a little bit gory (and it was shown unseen by the TV Tokyo staff at 6pm).

      After that they insisted on proof watching all the episodes before transmission. The final episodes were rejected and they only had a day or so to make a replacement (so had to use a lot of canned footage), hence an episode that turned out to be a major anti-climax. I've still got to see "End of Eva", the alternate/simultanious ending movie they made at a later date and is _meant_ to be much more what they had in mind...

      (If my facts are wrong, I appologise, but this is what I was told after watching the series at an anime society I attend).

    17. Re:Good starting point? by aka-ed · · Score: 1

      Vastly different topics/genres, true, but heavily weighted toward features and Miyazaki; it's like including 7 Disney films in a sum-up of American animation, and neglecting stuff like The Simpsons, South Park or Animaniacs. TV Anime has a lot of worthy "junk-food" titles that measure up well to the American titles I mentioned, like:

      Excel Saga : In the first minutes of the series, the super-hyper heroine Excel is run over by a truck. Death is a frequent and very elstic occurence throughout this series about two young women who are devoted to the proto-Fascist Il Parazzo; the three together comprise the secret organization Across. The overall tone of the series is similar to early (comic-book format) Mad magazine. Try episode 16 (or perhaps 17, not really sure), where Excel travels to Los Angeles to try to learn the secrets of the American animation industry. A US release of the first 5 eps on DVD is imminent.

      Fushigi Yuugi (Mysterious Play) : A fantasy "soap opera" and love story about a middle school student who is swallowed by a book, and becomes embroiled in a historical fantasy themed to ancient Chinese astrology. Eventually, the world of the book spills over into real life. The anime equivalent of a "chick-flick," but it does achieve a "fantasy epic" feel that overcomes its limited animation. The 52-episode series faithfully followed the plot of the popular manga.

      Jungle wa Itsumo Hale nochi Guu : A series that takes what is alien about anime in the first place, and raises it to an exponential level. Hale is a video-game-addicted youngster; his Mom is a borderline alcoholic who has adopted a young girl who, known only to Hale, has alien-like (possibly supernatural) powers.

      Noir : Kirika, a young woman with no memories, is united with Mirielle, a paid assassin haunted by her past. Kirika's only belongings are an id card, and a watch that bears ancient symbols of the secret society known as "Soldats" -- the same society responsible for the murder of Mirielle's parents. Kirika, for reasons she can't fathom, is as skilled at the tasks of assassination as the more experienced Mirielle, and the two go into business together as paid assassins, under the name "Noir." When evidence starts to emerge that Kirika was involved in her parents' deaths, Mirielle agrees to help Kirika uncover her true self -- and also swears to kill her once that task is accomplished.

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    18. Re:Good starting point? by Kizeh · · Score: 1
      I'd also like to add a mention of Jin-Roh, which at least a while back was in theatrical distribution in the US. It's a movie which happens to be animated; it is certainly not for kids!

      Porco Rosso from Miyazaki is also a nice, warm work, although with more conflict than Totoro.

    19. Re:Good starting point? by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 2

      For the Slashdot crowd, try "Serial Experiments Lain", about a middle-school (?) hacker chick.
      Very geeky, very complicated.

      Can you get this in the states?
      If not, almost any Anime worth seeing can be downloaded via the WinMX P2P network. Install the Japanese patch and search on the Japanese title.

      (If you aren't able or willing to do this, then you are no fan and I SHUN you.)

      --

      "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

    20. Re:Good starting point? by CaptainCarrot · · Score: 2
      I wouldn't. Not that I don't recommend the movie; it's absolutely wonderful. But it is, I believe, almost sui generis. Other than the artistic conventions governing the way the characters are drawn, it has little in common with other anime, from other directors.

      So watch the movie, and enjoy is as you almost surely will. (The American dub is a bit bumpy in places, with some translations not as well done as they might be, but that's just a quibble.) But do not regard it as an introduction to anime. It's just too unique.

      --
      And the brethren went away edified.
    21. Re:Good starting point? by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

      Actually, the problem with the ending of Evangelion (as I heard it from some _serious_ anime buffs in the UK) is as follows.

      Throughout the making of Evangelion they would often finish episodes within a day of the transmission on TV Tokyo (the company that funded it). This was all well and good till an episode _fairly_ near the end that was just a little bit gory (and it was shown unseen by the TV Tokyo staff at 6pm).

      After that they insisted on proof watching all the episodes before transmission. The final episodes were rejected and they only had a day or so to make a replacement (so had to use a lot of canned footage), hence an episode that turned out to be a major anti-climax. I've still got to see "End of Eva", the alternate/simultanious ending movie they made at a later date and is _meant_ to be much more what they had in mind...

      (If my facts are wrong, I appologise, but this is what I was told after watching the series at an anime society I attend).


      Hmm. You may be right though I have my doubts.

      I loved the ending of the TV series myself, and didn't like the movie at all. I suppose the translation might have something to do with it, though. I don't speak much Japanese and the only version of the movie I've seen is a Hong Kong pirate DVD with the worst translation you can imagine.

      But still the TV series ended with ideas that were much deeper and more interesting to me than anything I think you could express within the limitations of the sort of action you expect from a cartoon. I thought the effect was wonderful. You had 24 episodes to get to really know and care about some very complicated characters and then two episodes to use their lives to explore the problems that deep exist under the surface of peoples lives (and a bit of a solution as well).

      Hideaki Anno, the writer and director of Evangelion said "Evangelion is my life and I have put everything I know into this work. This is my entire life. My life itself."

      Here's a quote from an article about an Anime expo in California in 1996:

      A few people asked Anno about why he did the final two episodes the way he did, while noting that they felt the ending was confusing. Anno replied, via his translator, that he did not think there was anything wrong with the last two episodes at all and that if we didn't like the ending of Eva, that was our problem -- at which point he picked up the microphone and, speaking in English, said "Too bad."

      The end of the tv series does suffer from a lack of animation which suggests that there was some sort of problem, but the idea and script is incredible. I don't know if the ending of the TV series is what the author orginally imagined doing, but it's much deeper and so much more interesting than something action based could have been. Perhaps being forced to finish the series without the time (or perhaps the money) to animate it, freed Anno from the constraint of making something that LOOKS like a cartoon and let him express the ideas that really mattered to him better than a cartoon could have.

      The story I heard was that Anno got pretty angry at the reception that the ending got among the fans (Evangelion was a very popular series so there was a big fan base). He shaved his head, made a public apology (I assume his apology was sarcastic, but perhaps secretly sarcastic) and went off to make his movie. The movie, on the other hand was violent where the TV series had been reflective and nilisting where the TV series had been hopeful. I got the impression that Anno was diliberately punishing his audience for not appreciating his original work of art. In any case, I think TV series was a masterpiece and that the movie falls very flat.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

    22. Re:Good starting point? by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

      I'd like to second the recomendations of "Neon Genesis Evangelion" and "Princes Mononoke" and add one more to the list.

      Sazan Eyes (or 3x3 Eyes): There were two series made, the first one "Imortals" is wonderful, though it looks like the producers ran out of money after four episodes and stopped the series right before the climax. The second series "Legend of the Divine Demon" isn't very good. I have a double DVD set with both series.

      I'd rather not ruin anything by trying to descibe the plot, so I'll just say that the program was produced for 15 and up and is a lot of fun.

      The second series changed the main character completely, she acts like a completely different person, eh I mean demon, and seemed to be too consciously aimed at girls (girl's animation, yuck) and at dirty old men.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

    23. Re:Good starting point? by Nykkel · · Score: 1

      > (If you aren't able or willing to do this, then you are no fan and I SHUN you.)

      I might just as easily say that if you're going to get your anime by piracy (downloading it off the net for free), "then you are no fan and I SHUN you."

      A real fan should help support the companies that produce the shows he likes, by purchasing them.

      However, I don't really want to rehash The Generic Copyright Flame War. My only point here is that I don't think a willingness to download anime off the net (piracy) makes you a "real" anime fan any more than downloading MP3 files off the net makes you a "real" music fan, or downloading warez would make you a "real" software fan.

    24. Re:Good starting point? by ryusen · · Score: 1

      your question is about as easy to answer as "i've never read a book, what would you recomend?"

      there are great anime and manga works from all different genre's and what you should let us know is hat kinds of films you like to watch?

      most people who are willing to "risk" watching anime are action/sci-fi fans, so things like Evangelion and princess mononoke are great... if you want serious drama, comedy, love stories, car racing, high school hi-jinks, pornography, horror, whatever.. there's probably an anime that is for you...
      my advise is try watching some of the ones that got the "oldtimers" to watch in the first place:
      Macross, Nausicaa, Akira, Bubble Gum Crisis... basically anything from the 80's back... back then it was much harder to get anime at all, so most of what could be gotten was decent

      --

      I believe sex is highly over rated... unless it involves me
  2. spirited away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just caught Miyazaki's latest film, "Spirited Away" this evening. Absolutely wonderful.

    1. Re:spirited away by aka-ed · · Score: 2

      I just caught Miyazaki's latest film

      Hey, AC, you can't get away with such a brief statement!!!

      Where and how? My understanding was that Disney was running away in fear, and the link you provided only indicates French and Japanese release dates. Is there an English dubbed version?

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    2. Re:spirited away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spirited away is being shown here in Hong Kong in Cantonese and Japanese right now. Its typical Miyazaki stuff - strong moral and environmental themes. The animation is really beautiful. I think it is mixed computer and hand drawn, but has a real high quality hand drawn feel. My four year old found it a bit scary, though.

    3. Re:spirited away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So far all the legitimate Japanese DVDs have had english subtitles, I suspect that this one will as well when the time comes for it's release.
      Doubt there will be an english dub.

    4. Re:spirited away by aka-ed · · Score: 1
      Think, my friend, of normal people. With kids. Who aren't born with the ability to read.

      Miyazaki's stuff is slowly coming out in a form that the young ones can enjoy, but I fear Disney may drop the ball on thsi one, and market it only for adults (ie, subbed only).

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
  3. I'm always pleased... by GiorgioG · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    to see Taco use a spellchecker...

    "Always pleased to see anime get more mainsream cred. And Miyazaki always deserves it."

    -Merry Christmas Everyone

  4. On Ebert's opinions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    I started to disregard Roger Ebert's opinions on movies when he said that Galaxy Quest was a good movie, and Gladiator was not.

    1. Re:On Ebert's opinions by swein515 · · Score: 1

      Galaxy Quest *was* a good movie. Gladiator was good, but WAY overrated. In any case, LOTR makes them both look like grade-school shite.

    2. Re:On Ebert's opinions by LarsWestergren · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I often agree with him, and even when I disagree I can usually respect his opinions. Being a Mystery Science Theatre 3000 fan I bought his "I hated, hated, HATED this movie".

      Most of it was laugh out loud stuff, but really didn't agree with his slagging of
      a) Clive Barker's Hellraiser. Ebert listed lots of "plotholes" that were actually misunderstandings of the movie from his side. He also seemed very upset with the S/M and anti-religious themes and mocked those who call the film a classic. Well, it IS a classic damnit! :)
      b) Priest. Again he seemed very prudish. His main objection is that joining the priesthood and taking a vow of celibacy is a voluntary choice, so claiming that you are opressed later for that or because you are gay is just PC whining. Maybe - but giving such a well written, acted and well shot film such a low score just because of that? One suspects he is subconsciously offended by the topic of the movie and the way it portrayed the Catholic church.

      On the other hand, I really liked how he butchered these two films, so I guess it evens out:
      a) Armageddon. "The movie is an assault on the eyes, the ears, the brain, common sense, and the human desire to be entertained. No matter what they're charging to get in, it's worth more to get out."
      b) Starship Troopers. "The action sequences are heavily laden with special effects, but curiously joyless. We get the idea right away: Bugs will jump up, troopers will spray counless rounds at them, the Bugs will impale troopers with their spiny giant legs, and finally dissolve in a spray of goo. Later there are refinements, like fire-breathing beetles, flying insects, and giant Bugs that erupt from the earth. All very elaborate, but not interesting in the way, say, that the villains in the Alien pictures were. Even their planet is boring; Bugs live on ugly rock worlds with no other species, raising the question of what they eat."

      And he also made me aware of some weak spots in films I really liked and made me re-evaluate them, for instance Blue Velvet, Doom Generation, Dead Poets Society, Caligula.

      Well, getting back to Totoro I must say it sounds interesting. I wish I had read this review before Christmas, it would have been a good present for my brother's kids, and then I would have had an excuse to see it too.
      :)

      --

      Being bitter is drinking poison and hoping someone else will die

    3. Re:On Ebert's opinions by GTRacer · · Score: 2
      ...it would have been a good present for my brother's kids, and then I would have had an excuse to see it too. :)

      I rented Totoro for my boys (4 and 2) since they like all kinds of movies. I was hoping they'd really dig it and then I could use it as an excuse to beef up *my* collection.

      They liked what they saw but I liked it even more when I watched it later that night in peace and quiet!

      On Grave of the Fireflies: I read Ebert's comments on this one months ago and found a SunCoast with it in stock. I bought it, took it home, watched it (subbed of course), and now I don't know if I can watch it again with my wife, who wants to see it. That movie really hit me hard.

      GTRacer
      - Still looking for non-pirated Lain Lunchbox set...

      --
      Defending IP by destroying access to it? That makes sense, RIAA/MPAA. Go to the corner until you can play nice!
    4. Re:On Ebert's opinions by z4ch · · Score: 0

      That's funny, because I feel quite the opposite.

      Ebert is usually right on as far as I'm concerned.

      No offense, but come on - Gladiator borrowed heavily from Braveheart in between scenes of Bruckheimer-esque Hollywood filler.

      --
      Straight Outta' Comdex
  5. WaiWai! by Theodore · · Score: 1

    Domo Arigato Miyazaki-sensei!
    And thank you Ebert for helping to increase the otaku-diaspora!

  6. Re:Don't start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    exactly.

    Exhibit A: CmdrTaco, Jon Katz and the rest of the slashdot staff.

  7. something disturbing about totoro by mickeyreznor · · Score: 1

    I thought it was a somewhat disturbing movie. The animators seemed to have an unhealthy obsession with little children's underwear(panty flashes are ok in anime geared for older viewers, but this was a kids movie for christ sake).

    1. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Aron+S-T · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Ahem.

      So you think panty flashes of little girls in ADULT movies is ok, and in kids movies its perverse. Hmmmm...me thinks you got this one backwards. And why in hell did soeone uptick your comment? Sheez

    2. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Robotech_Master · · Score: 1, Informative

      No one "upticked" his comment; pay attention. If someone had, it would have said "Score: 2, Something-or-other" instead of just "Score: 2." The poster has high enough karma that he posts with a +1 bonus automatically. For that matter, so do I, but I'm foregoing it for this comment because rating it higher would only cause me to lose karma when someone dings it for being off-topic.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
    3. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently you have never raised little kids that age. For some reason, I hope you never will....

    4. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So... Little girls showing thier underpants is unusual? I reckon you don't have any daughters then. ;)

      Seriously, I don't think it was meant as any kind of a turn-on, just as cute realism.

      --

      "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

    5. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Yosho · · Score: 1

      This is completely offtopic, but -- not necessarily. If somebody mods a comment as "Underrated," it'd be bumped up to +2 with no something-or-other beside it.

      --
      Karma: Terrifying (mostly affected by atrocities you've committed)
    6. Re:something disturbing about totoro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Filth, as Tom Lehrer remarked, is in the eye of the beholder, and anyone who gets their kicks from childrens' panty flashing is in need of serious help.

      So what are we to make of the bath sequence? A realistic rendition of Japanese family life, or "containing disturbing overtones" as one US review put it? Clue: the paper had to print a fulsome apology...

  8. Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I've always wondered something:

    WHY do you people like anime so damn much?

    Here's what I see when I watch anime (yes, -any- anime, don't come back with "but DragonBuggy PokeMotoro isn't like that"):

    1) Bad stories
    2) Bad animation, jerkiness with poor color composition
    3) Bad translations of
    4) Bad dialogue
    5) A bunch of people OBSESSED with this shit to a sickening point.

    I used to like dramatic cartoons when I was a kid, but then I grew up. Maybe I'm just too old now, I don't know. I still like the classics like old Warner Brothers and Tom and Jerry cartoons, but this Japanese shit just seems really childish to me and the fanaticism of the fans turns my stomach.

    Nobody should enjoy WATCHING something that much, you should save your fanaticism for creating things.

    Furthermore, I don't like the cultural ideas of Japan (i.e. work till you drop dead of work, hate all other ethnic groups, etc.), which a lot of anime attempts to further.

    1. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      for an opinion on something else u sure do have a WHOLE LOT of "I's" in there... i dont see any "I think" tho... so this must be all from out of ur ass. ;/

    2. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by ostiguy · · Score: 2

      I agree to a point. It also seems so stereotypically geeky, which isn't so problematic when viewed as a art form, but when it seems to become lustful over two dimension female cartoon characters, then it is just a bit *odd*. I just have found traditional film to be much more interesting. That isn't to say I won't get into anime at some point, but I have found hitchcock and kurosawa more interesting and entertaining so far.

      ostiguy

    3. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Your opinion, while alot sux (like hollywood, some are real gems)
      2) Movies and direct to video shows look great actully, while tv series with lower budgets do suffer in this area.
      3) Do you understand japanese?
      4) Your opinion, and probably not warranted if you dont understand japanese.
      5) As much as I like anime, I too hate obsessed otakus

    4. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by jacoplane · · Score: 2

      Have you even seen Princess Mononoke? Ghost in the Shell? (The anime that inspired The Wachowski Brothers to create the Matrix)

      Personally I don't watch that much anime, but I've read a lot of mangas. Anyway, I think you're grossly oversimplifying in your judgement. Sure there are some very bad animes, just like there are bad movies. But you cannot judge animes as a whole, you have to judge each individual movie on it's own.

    5. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by kubota · · Score: 1

      Sure, saying "all animes are good/bad" is just like saying "all novels are good/bad" or "all movies are good/bad".

    6. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by Fenris2001 · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Why do you like [insert YOUR favorite here] so much?

      Anyone can, if they want, find something bad about something you like. I like anime because I think it is a refreshing change from the dreck that spills from American studios. Yes, some anime is boring, and badly translated, and badly drawn, and some people know WAY too much about it, but everything is the same way.

      How many people lined up in the cold to buy tickets for Lord of the Rings? Or Harry Potter? Or to go to a Baptist revival? Or a book signing? Or a software convention? Or.... You get the idea.

      For most people, television and movies are passive entertainment. For the obsessed, however, it becomes active. Instead of just seeing something, the begin to live it. Anime is not alone in this. Witness the Trekkie phenomena, or the following some soap operas have. For otakus (a term which, in Japan, carries a strong negative connotation) of any sort, the world on the screen is real.

      The point is that nearly everyone has something they obsess over, whether they do it quietly or not. It's not fair to condemn someone just because they happen to like something that you don't.

      -----------
      An enlightened man might use a Mac to edit a movie, Windows to play a game, and UNIX to write software. If his neighbor uses Windows to edit a movie, and a Mac to play a game, the enlightened man will accept, and perhaps even celebrate these differences. If someone tells the enlightened man that he should be using Windows 3.1 (the One True OS) the enlightened man will feel free to call that man an idiot. If the same man simply states that Windows 3.1 has always worked for him and he sees no reason upgrade, the enlightened man will nod his assent, and offer the man his copy of MS Word 1.0.

      From the website of Rev. Jim Huber, Heretic
      --
      ---------------
      Vpered na Mars!
    7. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by lymond · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I dont' know what flamebait is, and what it is not. I always feel a good debate is relevant, and that flaming can be artistic, as when William Buckley and Gore Vidal go at it, or Alex Cockburn and Chris Hitchens.
      Let me instead address a couple of small points here, in hopes the poster really wanted some insights, rather than merely rhetorical venting only (which is their right, of course).

      1. "Then I grew up." Well, being what I consider a sorcerer (in the Alan Moore/Grant Morrison sense of the term, or if you like, the Evrett/Wheeler/Graham model, grin), I think it is crucial to make distinction between childish and child-like behaviours. I would hope to lose the former, and never, even at teh advanced age of 48 here, ever, lose the child-like wonder and magick I still find when I visit the worlds of Kiki and Totoro and yeah, even Pooh. Those are nice worlds, utopian, and we maybe ought to try to make OUR world more like them. As to showing these things, as Goedel says, when we show things as they ARE, we make them LEss than they are.

      2. AS to the xenophobic views, and the hideous work till you drop culture, i am in accord with disagreement with those values. However, and this puzzles me, the anime I speak of, Kiki's Delivery Service and Totoro, say, seem to me to teach toleration, tolerance, and the value of dolce fa niente, to mix cultural metaphors.

      3. Use that energy to create? Yes...and no. By all means anyone who ONLY consumes and does not create is not doing all they could be doing to make our world better and more aesthetic. However, what good is a gift with no recipient, as my sifu would say? We must each be both creator and audience, in our turns, so that we may all make magick, and all EXPERIENCE it from others, and thereby inspire and draw inspiration by turns.

      4. Obsession. By all means, anyone who obsesses about anything needs to broaden their horizons. HOwever, I would forgive obsession with sweet utopian benign materials before i would forgive obsession with vindictive acts, for example. Triage sir, triage!

      Thank you for this forum. I am aware that the internet is a place for flaming and debate, and I love those. But I also love discourse of a gentlemanly and noblesse oblige nature. I hope that some of these observations might engnder some reasonabl replies, or rebuttles, as well as any flames. Thanks again, Zanvil

    8. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Anime, like everything, follow Sturgeon's Law. The problem is the fans of it oftentimes refuse to distinguish between the occasional good stuff and the vast majority, which is not.

    9. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by simm_s · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I will agree that anime stories tend to be confusing to the point of torture or nonexistent.

      Although, when an anime story is written clearly, I believe it is usually experience I cannot find anywhere else. That is why I watch anime. The good anime usually overflows with creative and imaginative characters and environments.

      I see you are a fan of the classic Warner Brothers cartoons. I remember when they were xenophobic and sometimes blatantly hateful to minorities. I remember for a time there was a stereotypical Aunt Jemima type character in Tom and Jerry.

      I do agree that some Japanese need to improve on there veiw of the gaijin, but you cannot generalize the Japanese people based on your closed minded views.

      Also the jerkiness is not necessarily a bad thing. The anime style is cheaper to make than the american style.

    10. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by nomadic · · Score: 2

      I see you are a fan of the classic Warner Brothers cartoons. I remember when they were xenophobic and sometimes blatantly hateful to minorities.

      Anyone ever see the Japanese stereotypes done by WB during WW2? Amazingly offensive.

    11. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by simm_s · · Score: 1

      It is amazing what they could get away with in those days. They cut those offensive scenes in the repeats they show nowadays, but I will never forget them.

      kin_korn_karn should not complain about the Japanese being xenophobic, while old looney-tunes as a counter example.

    12. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ?

      There was a war on. People's sons were dying every day fighting the Japanese (who were at the time caught up in a pretty absolutist meme regime... Nanking...Bataan... etc.). The stereotypes are offensive now when viewed through the pink haze of your ever-so-delicate sensibilities, the development of which is at least in part a debt you owe to Americans, British, Phillipios, Canadians, Indians, and many more who laid down their lives in the Pacific. Allow their entertainments the dignity of fading away in peace. They don't deserve your sharp little "tsks".

    13. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't care if you like Anime or not, but I've never come across a Japanese-American who didn't go out of his or her way to make me feel at home or welcome.

      You are dead wrong and an ass.

      Merry Christmas

      "Furthermore, I don't like the cultural ideas of Japan (i.e. work till you drop dead of work, hate all other ethnic groups, etc.), which a lot of anime attempts to further. "

    14. Re:Flamebait, but the perfect opportunity by nomadic · · Score: 1

      No, the comics weren't created by soldiers laying down their lives; they were created by cartonnists who were perfectly safe. And they were offensive, needless, petty little productions that didn't do a damn thing for us.

  9. but taco, by llamalicious · · Score: 1

    weren't you off to see the fam?
    :)

  10. yeah... sure by Niksie3 · · Score: 0
    I'm off to visit the fam... I hope you all have the ability to spend the holidays with the ones who mean the most to you:


    no you aren't, you are posting to slashdot, you LIAR!!!
    --
    Sig you!
  11. Where the DVD..?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, My Neighbor Totoro is a great movie, but when the heck are they going to release it on DVD?! Kiki's Delivery Service would also be a welcome release. Ah well, in the meantime I'll keep wearing out my Totoro VHS tape. :-)

    1. Re:Where the DVD..?! by kubota · · Score: 1

      I heard that Harry Potter is banned. How about the Kiki's Delivery Service? "Conservative Christians" may also hate Totoro.

    2. Re:Where the DVD..?! by mocm · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's already out on DVD in Japan (NTSC, Region2).
      It's a 2 DVD pack with the film on the first DVD wit English and Japanese Audio. On the second DVD you have extra features which are not always with an English audio track. Just look at www.amazon.co.jp.
      I ordered it from them, but ist was quite expensive and shipping was slow.(Got to know at least Katakana to find it)

      --
      ***Quis custodiet ipsos custodes***
    3. Re:Where the DVD..?! by ll1234 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Kiki's Delivery Service" was the target of the CWA (Concerned Women for America). You can read their "press release" here.(1)

      (1): http://www.imasy.or.jp/~fukumoto/n/nshow.cgi?20697

      --

    4. Re:Where the DVD..?! by liquidbrains · · Score: 1

      CD Japan for all your R2 needs (and in English, too).

    5. Re:Where the DVD..?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The film also contains an english subtitle track you can turn on while watching the Japanese Audio.

  12. not only otaku by kubota · · Score: 1

    I like Miyazaki anime very much. However, in Japan, Miyazaki anime is not only for otaku people but also for all average children and adults. Miyazaki's anime movies earn as much as Holywood movies in Japan.

    1. Re:not only otaku by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 2

      Funny you should mention that.

      The bucho of my department, a 50-year old guy with only half his teeth, has a Totoro screen saver. I'm looking at it right now.

      --

      "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

    2. Re:not only otaku by kubota · · Score: 0

      I mentioned that because I didn't know how Miyazaki anime is popular in countries other than Japan. Thus I thought that it is natural that non-Japanese people don't know how Miyazaki anime is popular in Japan.

      FYI: Disney anime movies are also very popular in Japan, though I feel they are a little less popular than Miyazaki anime. It is only my feeling, not statistics.

  13. Attend your local Animi on Sunday by nanospook · · Score: 1

    Is animi a religion then?

    --
    Have you fscked your local propeller head today?
  14. Sign the petition! by Fenris2001 · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those of you who don't yet know, Disney has NO plans to release any more of Miyazaki's films, despite owning the US distribution rights to 11 of his films.

    There's a petition here to get Disney to at least release some of these films on home video.

    Disney's position is based on the poor performance of Princess Mononoke in the US. That release grossed just over $2 million in the US (it grossed over $150 million in Japan). However, it should be noted that Princess Mononoke was a limited release (I drove over 150 miles to see it - twice!), with little advertising before it came out.

    There is hope however. A previous petition convinced Disney to add the Japanese language track and literal English translation to the DVD relese of Mononoke.

    --
    ---------------
    Vpered na Mars!
    1. Re:Sign the petition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, Disney finally seems to be considering a release of some of them. Amazon.com has put up two pre-order pages for Miyazaki films on DVD, apparently testing the waters for Disney. You can find them below:

      Laputa: Castle in the Sky:
      http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005JKY G/ qid=1009298238/sr=1-7/ref=sr_1_75_7/103-6213990-11 55808

      My Neighbor Totor:
      http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00003CXC Z/ qid=1009298238/sr=1-6/ref=sr_1_75_6/103-6213990-11 55808

      If you're interested, make a pre-order. Their sales ranking is already fairly high for something that may not even be released.

    2. Re:Sign the petition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I think Disney's just jealous of a superior animation style, and afraid that it might catch on with THEIR customers.

      This is no MickeyMouse business! Oops... a pun! :)

    3. Re:Sign the petition! by ll1234 · · Score: 1

      "NO plans" is incorrect. Disney has not stated they are totally pulling out of the US market. Believe me, there's been a ton of virtual ink spilled over this issue, lots of information in back issues of MML Traffic.(1)

      Also, signing an on-line petition isn't that helpful. To really make your voice heard, write a _physical_ letter. Address.(2)

      (1): http://students.washington.edu/llin/mmltraffic/

      (2): http://www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/disney/writetodis ney.html

    4. Re:Sign the petition! by rde · · Score: 2

      I got totoro (as well as a bunch of other movies such as Mamoru Oshii's excellent Avalon) from cdjapan . The only thing to watch out for is the language; not all of them have subtitles. For some things like Gatchaman it doesn't matter, but be warned.

    5. Re:Sign the petition! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just import the Japanese Reigon DVD's of his films. All of them so far have English Subtitles.
      All you need is a region free or region selectable DVD player.

  15. Hey! by Dino-Bob · · Score: 1

    Hey, REAL people like the same things we like! WOW!

    --
    "There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts." -- Cecil Adams
  16. The problem with stereotypes by ThePurpleBuffalo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Alot of people are going to think that you are starting a flamewar. Some people get way too fanatical about anime. Being someone who likes *some* anime, I can find a few problems with your conclusions.

    In order to cast vague generalizations, you must meet some criteria. Namely, that you have watched every single anime ever made. As this is unrealistic (and a waste of time) I'm going to prove by counterexample.

    Another thing to keep in mind; just like in North America, some shows just suck. Will people still make the effort to bring sucky shows from Japan to North America? Yes. In fact, several animation translation firms have made alot of money doing this. *cough*animego*cough* *cough*disney*cough* *cough*vizvideo*cough*

    Reductio ad absurdum:

    1) Bad stories

    My Neighbour Totoro doesn't even have a story. Or conflict. In fact, it's aimed at people about 6 years old, and is just a strange sequence of random events.

    2) Bad animation, jerkiness with poor color composition

    This is not true of all anime. For example, Cowboy Bebop had some of the nicest artwork and detail I've seen in years. Macross Plus is also up there.

    3) Bad translations of

    If you're watching it with english dialog, yeah. If you're willing to read subtitles, the translation quality will typically increase several times.

    4) Bad dialogue

    Some things simply can't be translated from Japanese to English. Having studied the language formally for a year, I can sometimes see when the English translation just doesn't cut it. Also, if the anime is geared at 10-year-olds, odds are it will sound lame in any language.

    5) A bunch of people OBSESSED with this shit to a sickening point.

    I hear that! I'm so sick to death of people whining about how much money they don't have because they *MUST* go to convention Y and spend $5,000,000 on trinkets. Let's get some perspective here.

    And for all those posts in this thread that start with "Wai! Wai!"... YOU ARE NOT JAPANESE! STOP FOOLING YOURSELF. SAYING STUPID THINGS DOES NOT MAKE YOU JAPANESE. YOU WILL NEVER BE JAPANESE.

    "Nobody should enjoy WATCHING something that much, you should save your fanaticism for creating things."

    Agreed. In the last week, I've watched about half an hour of TV. In the past year, I don't think I've topped 24 hours. It's amazing how much more I can accomplish when I'm not tied to the idiot box.

    I await the flames.

    Beware TPB

    1. Re:The problem with stereotypes by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yep, pretty much. Actually I consider myself pretty damn otaku, but I think most American so called "otaku" are pretty dumb, mainly because of what you said about them thinking they're so 31337 because they can say "wai" and "sugoi" and "baka". I challenge any of them to actually learn Japanese, but unfortunately most of them have no more intelligence than the average trekkie.

    2. Re:The problem with stereotypes by nomadic · · Score: 1

      YOU ARE NOT JAPANESE! STOP FOOLING YOURSELF. SAYING STUPID THINGS DOES NOT MAKE YOU JAPANESE. YOU WILL NEVER BE JAPANESE.

      Oh thank you. That's probably the most irritating part of the whole anime fan community, especially when they set themselves up as EXPERTS on Japanese culture and language.

    3. Re:The problem with stereotypes by afree87 · · Score: 1
      YOU ARE NOT JAPANESE! STOP FOOLING YOURSELF. SAYING STUPID THINGS DOES NOT MAKE YOU JAPANESE. YOU WILL NEVER BE JAPANESE.


      Actually, if I was Japanese, I'd probably hate it because they promote conformism heavily in their schools (as far as I've heard from transfer students). It's better to be an otaku than an actual Nippon-jin, I'll tell you.

    4. Re:The problem with stereotypes by aka-ed · · Score: 1
      I await the flames

      Actually, your opinions are mostly LCD...I dn't know why you expect flames.

      We are on the same side of this issue, nevertheless, a couple of things you said rubbed me entirely the wrong way.

      My Neighbour Totoro doesn't even have a story. Or conflict. In fact, it's aimed at people about 6 years old, and is just a strange sequence of random events.

      You apparently can't recognize story elements when they bite you on the arse. From the initial frames, when we see that this family has no Mom, we are into the story, which is essentially about kids separated from a parent. Without that unifying theme, this would be a much less-great film.

      Nobody should enjoy WATCHING something that much, you should save your fanaticism for creating things

      Admittedly you didn't say it, but you agreed with it.

      I've been that road; I'm in my mid-fifties now, and in the past I've edited several nationally-distributed magazines, had literally hundreds of magazine articles published, and have screenwriting credits on two produced films.

      At this point in my life, I barely have the energy to create a good piss; I've had more than enough of poorly-compensated work that buys fancy sportscars for a publisher or producer. I work in tech support, and I write for pleasure on occasion, but mostly I don't write, I read and watch and enjoy. Who the hell are you to tell me that's wrong? Or to tell anyone, even if they've never "created?" Every-fucking-body has to be "creative" suddenly, and if you're not, well the world won't respect you? F___ that!

      --
      I survived the Dick Cheney Presidency 7 to 9 AM 7-21-07
    5. Re:The problem with stereotypes by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

      No flames here, but definately a degree of puzzlement as to how one could watch the movie and see only a 'strange sequence of random events'. I'm guessing that you're recently out of college and still have your intellectual 'guard' up uneccessarily high. It'll losen up in another 10 years or so, and you'll start to see the fnords again...

      ; )

      I'm with you 100% as far as throwing out TV, though. We have video and DVD and hardly touch those at all. TV is now a curiosity that I sip in measured amounts when visiting the folks...

      --
      **>>BELCH
    6. Re:The problem with stereotypes by ashitaka · · Score: 1

      "nippon-jin"

      Sorry, no.

      Nihonjin.

      --
      If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    7. Re:The problem with stereotypes by Rob+Simpson · · Score: 1

      Well, considering you're using a language that has about half of its words derived from French b/c of England being conquered - and people using French words because it was "31337" to do so, until such words became integrated into the language - while still using grammar that is more comparable to the German that English derived from...

      Er, what was my point again? Oh, right, languages are fluid. Hell, "kawaii" and "baka" will probably be in the dictionary in a decade or so. What's the problem? Do you need to be able to speak latin in order to use the expression "carpe diem"?

  17. Re:My thoughts on Anime lusers^Wfans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They can't be worse than the no-lifers who spend Christmas trolling on Slashdot.

  18. Studio Ghibli dvd's by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I always liked Ebert's respect for anime classics, whereas lots of other movie reviewers don't even know what anime is. As for Disney holding the rights to all their movies, you can find grey-market dvd's of most of them, often with decent english subtitles

    1. Re:Studio Ghibli dvd's by ll1234 · · Score: 1

      The "Anime Cartoon International" sets are not "grey market", they're bootlegs. Grey market goods are offical, but reverse-imported from the sale country. I refer you to this page with a quote from Tokuma (parent company of Studio Ghibli): www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/video/answers.html

    2. Re:Studio Ghibli dvd's by Yusaku+Godai · · Score: 1

      So I see... Thanks for the correction ^^; Sometimes it's hard to tell with those things.

    3. Re:Studio Ghibli dvd's by Mononoke · · Score: 2, Troll
      The "Anime Cartoon International" sets are not "grey market", they're bootlegs.
      They are damn fine bootlegs, at that.

      Flame me if you want, but I've given up on Disney ever releasing any more Ghibli films. They've been sitting on a ready-to-release version of Laputa for over a year now. I don't think it will ever be released, in any form.

      Don't worry, I've spent plenty on official Ghibli merchandise: I've given over a dozen copies of both Totoro and Kiki as gifts; I've bought at least two Ghibli calendars per year for the last five years; I own multiple copies of Mononoke and GoF; I've bought plenty of other official merchandise. I've even preordered the Laputa DVD on Amazon.

      Basically, at this point I say "Fuck Disney." They've had their chance to get my money. They missed out.

      I'm sorry Ghibli doesn't get any procedes from my purchase of the Archives of Ghibli Studios DVD set. I understand the ramifications. But now I have a complete set of English subtitled Ghibli movies to enjoy and share.

      BTW, the Archives of Ghibli Studios set is very nicely done: Letterboxed; reasonably well done subtitles; a few chapter stops. I'm very glad I bought it.

      --
      NetInfo connection failed for server 127.0.0.1/local
    4. Re:Studio Ghibli dvd's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why dont you just import the legitimate Japanese DVD's of thises films, they have a discs of extras typically and all of them so far have had good english subtitles.

      By supporting the pirates you do no service to the creator.

  19. I won't work till I die, of course. by kubota · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Why do you think Japanese people hate other ethnic groups?

  20. AMEN BROTHER by cosmol · · Score: 1
    Some anime is alright, but the vast majority fits your analyzition which people are calling a stereotype. Even Mononoke, though it had many redeeming qualities, seems like it was written by someone high on crack. And don't get me started on Ghost in the Shell. Can they try to make something that is at least partially believable?

    I hate seeing anime banners on everything2 where they just show a character and some saying that is supposed to be cutesy. How lame.

    Guys we aren't really trying to flame you, we "just don't get it"...

  21. Quelch The Flames: Why To Watch Anime by Catiline · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Okay, let's take these criticisms one at a time. Hopefully, I can get you to see my point of view- not change yours. You are welcome to your opinion; just hear mine out.

    1) Bad stories
    Methinks you have been watching too much Toonami. Yes, you watch a few eps of what CN puts on and you'll think "gawd what garbage!" But switch over to Friends and seriously compare the plot depth. Same for Buffy; now I'm serious here!! Think about it- there are, according to dramatists, less than a dozen basic plot lines (they'll give you different answers according to their view, but noone I know goes over about 10). And on top of that, you're viewing this across a cultural chasm (little bit deeper & wider than a generation gap). Sure, you might have to watch the same thing once or twice, but once you've build some sort of mental bridge you'll see that maybe, just maybe, some of this is deeper than American film. (Princess Mononoke comes to mind; similar enough to Aesop's tales you might find it a jumpable region, yet also a good film on just its' own merits.)

    2) Bad animation, jerkiness with poor color composition
    Hmm... two words. Abstract Art. Yes, you might not think it's 'real art' (I sure don't) but apparently it is to some people. After all, culture truly is a fluid thing and perhaps someday realism may be considered childish art. (But I truly doubt it.)

    3) Bad translations [there]of
    Hmmm. Define 'bad'. Are these translations literal? Most certainly not; but I'd like to see a literal translation preserve the humor of a pun. (Can't be done, except in exceptional cases). Also refer back to point one- that cultural chasm might keep you from understanding a word-for-word translation. True-to-intent translations? Perhaps; I'm not fluent in any language but English, so I've no real grounds to say. All I can say is: if it really is a bad translation, keep up the good work-- I enjoy what anime I've seen.

    4) Bad dialogue
    5) A bunch of people OBSESSED with this shit to a sickening point.

    I'm going to deal both of these one swift blow. Ever been to a Star Trek convention?? I haven't, really, but I did attend Dragon*Con in Atlanta-- general sci-fi but still the point holds. I may enjoy Trek as much as the next geek, but I don't go out and buy the uniform and the badge and tricorder and makeup kits and wear all of it to every convention held. Some people do. Obsession is (IMHO- this is not a statement of fact) hardwired into today's American (if not general Western) culture because of the popularism ('be-like-us' Borg attitude). And after looking hard at trekkies talk to a non-trekkie- they sure as shooting won't 'get it' and the most cultured of them (nye kultoorni! Literal Translation: uncultured! or perhaps, with context: BARBARIANS!) will tell you that the dialog is soooooo hakneyed. Perhaps it is, but that does nothing to diminish the good parts. But these poor souls are so caught up in either critical examination of the medium or interest in what's-the-latest-brand-worn-by-the-latest-boy-ban d that they can't see the social criticism in Trek. (Not that Trek is alone in that.)

    And so in conclusion: hopefully I have answered your question. If you haven't read between the lines and gotten the point, I'll spell it out. We like anime because it is a different take on drama- one not supported by live action nor explored by western animators. If you do not understand this, you are free to find your entertainment elsewhere.

    1. Re:Quelch The Flames: Why To Watch Anime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Same for Buffy; now I'm serious here!!


      I will tolerate NO criticism of Buffy.

      That is all.

  22. "Americans would have done it differently" by Monsieur_F · · Score: 1

    What amazes me in the article Roger Ebert wrote is the number of times he compares Totoro with how American animations movies would have treated it. For example here:

    The film is about two girls, not two boys or a boy and a girl, as all American animated films would be.

    Why does he need to compare the two styles ? They are different, are based on different cultures and history... so they are not the same. As simple as it is.

    Totoro is one of the movies I enjoyed most ! I do not care if it is Japanese or American or even Czech, it is just excellent :)

    --
    McCartney fans pay bus tickets. [...] Lennon fans too, with discretion.
    1. Re:"Americans would have done it differently" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because he's a movie critic. He's paid to analyze movies.

  23. Re:My thoughts on Anime lusers^Wfans by The+Turbinator · · Score: 0

    Aww yea, preach it! PREACH IT!
    Demons, begone!

  24. This was submitted by Peter Gzowski? by dstone · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    The "real" Gzowski? If you're Canadian, your eyebrows may have raised like mine.

    Anyways, Merry Christmas, everyone!

    1. Re:This was submitted by Peter Gzowski? by peter_gzowski · · Score: 1

      No, I'm not the real Petet Gzowski. Long ago, and far away, I was trying to come up with a login name for something (Yahoo games, I think), and whatever I picked, it told me it was already taken. I reasoned that the majority of users of the service were American (or, at least, non-Canadian), so all I had to do was think of a Canadian personality and it shouldn't be taken. peter_gzowski was the first name I thought of, and lo and behold, it was unclaimed. From then on in, it was the user name of choice for me. This helps me avoid having annoying login names like mojojojo7687907.

      --
      "Now gluttony and exploitation serves eight!" - TV's Frank
    2. Re:This was submitted by Peter Gzowski? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, there are dozens of sites out there that I've had to register with, and all of them think I'm Mojo Jojo with an email of mojo@nixon.gov.
      I started using it 2 years before the Powerpuff Girls came out!

  25. How about this one ? by OneInEveryCrowd · · Score: 0

    My all time favorite is Twilight of the Cockroaches. It always surprises me that so many people haven't heard of it. Check it out if you haven't seen it already, i consider it as good as Akira.

    1. Re:How about this one ? by haggar · · Score: 1

      I am an avid DVD collector. Got any links where I can order it? I don't mind if it's Region 2 or Region 1, I can watch both (modchip).

      Thanks in advance.

      mario

      --
      Sigged!
    2. Re:How about this one ? by gpinzone · · Score: 1

      Ugh. "Twilight of the Cockroaches" and "Grave of the Fireflies" always come up. I've seen both and they are NOT good for Anime first timers. They are both slow moving stories that will bore many people. Check out some of the shows on Toonami (Cartoon Network). Hell, they're free.

  26. Mod this up ! by tempmpi · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most of time I don't like post like mine now, but here it is different. An anonymous coward posted a really important information for all ghibli fans out there, and very likely most people won't notice him because it has a score of 0.
    You don't have to be registered at amazon.com or have your credit card information ready, in fact you must just enter you email address and amazon.com will send you an email when the disc will be released. You don't really preorder, if you enter your mail address there, you just tell them that you would very likely buy a dvd of this title if it becomes aviable. These films are really wonderfull, please help that they get a dvd release in english language.

    --
    Jan
  27. Grave of the Fireflies by Glytch · · Score: 2

    This was the first anime I'd seen since Robotech when I was 5. It made me cry. Grab a box of kleenex or two before watching it.

  28. The R2 Totoro DVD is quite good by tuffy · · Score: 2
    Find yourself a R2-capable NTSC player and an importer and you can enjoy Miyazaki films in letterboxed digital glory. For those who prefer dubs to subs, there's even an english language track on the disc.

    The sad fact is, Disney acquired the Ghibli rights mainly for all the yen they'll get for the japanese releases as a distributor, not for any US DVD release - heck, they don't even *have* the DVD rights for anything but Monoke, last I checked. And Miyazaki doesn't give a rat's ass about whether his work is released overseas (which, frankly, is his prerogative and I can't complain). So, if you wanna see Ghibli flicks on disc, I highly recommend a multi-region player.

    --

    Ita erat quando hic adveni.

    1. Re:The R2 Totoro DVD is quite good by Cryptnotic · · Score: 2

      This is sad, but true. Disney most likely has no intention of releasing the rest of the Ghibli library, including such amazing classic films as "Nausicaa", "Laputa", "Porco Rosso". Miyazaki's latest film, "Spirited Away", will also most likely never see release in the United States.

      Thank god it's not illegal to modify your DVD player to play Region 2 DVD's. Oh, wait...

      By the way, all of the releases of Studio Ghibli films on DVD in Japan (Region 2) have also included English subtitles and sometimes also English dubbing.

      I'm sure Miyazaki wants his works to be enjoyed by as many people throughout the world as possible. If doing a commercial release in the United States doesn't make sense financially, that's fine. All the really hardcore fans will buy the Japanese DVD anyway.

      By the way, you can order Japanese DVD's from sites like CDJapan or Amo-Tokyo or even Amazon Japan.

      Cryptnotic

      --
      My other first post is car post.
    2. Re:The R2 Totoro DVD is quite good by Robotech_Master · · Score: 2

      There are also some legitimate Hong Kong versions of the Miyazaki films coming out on DVD more inexpensively; someone like HiViZone could get them for you. Reviews indicate that the quality of these discs isn't as good as the Japanese ones, and they are still region-locked, but even so, they might be a more economical alternative for the budgetarily cautious.

      --
      Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  29. Re:My thoughts on Anime lusers^Wfans by Pxtl · · Score: 2

    You know, I almost agreed with you until you made your arguments universal. Yes, there are some real freaks out there - there are some real freaks in here too - does that mean the internet sucks? Agreed, most anime is crap, and somehow the crap manages to maintain a substantial following (I remember trying to watch the pilot episode of something called "nurse angel" egad that was painful) but there is a good volume of good stuff out there, just like there are always a few episodes of star trek that are fun to watch.

    Besides, you're posting on slashdot. Odds are, half the world finds you just as scary.

  30. A master by forgoil · · Score: 2

    Miyazaki is a master story teller, and for those who are willing to embrace the media they are in for an emotional ride. Some might never find it interesting at all, others like me will be amazed by the stories he tells. It's a shame that Studio Ghibli themselves are not subtitling and dubbing (even though I will never be able to stand them) the movies to release them into the west.

    So to give you all a chance to have something to do until the next installment of LotR, go out and see if you can find one of Miyazaki's movies and maybe, just maybe, you can also find what I found, a treasure worth keeping in your heart.

    1. Re:A master by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High quality English dubs do exist for most of Miyazaki's movies. Most of them have been shown on TV here in Hong Kong in Cantonese, Japanese and English. Its a pity the disks and tapes are not more widely available. I can only find VCDs and DVDs in Japanese and Cantonese.

    2. Re:A master by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Japanese Legitimate DVD releases of Ghibli Films have English Subtitles.

  31. buying anime by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    eh, i wouldn't go from an e-bay source. check www.dvdpricesearch.com for good anime prices. and sundevildvd is trying to pass off "fan made" cases as "limited edition", trying to get $60 when i last saw them sold from the maker at $30.

  32. torching on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    anime is more than cartoons (start the "rabid otaku" bashing). there are some that really are for kids, but you can't say in ANY way that the End Of Evangelion movie was aimed at kids. Anime is just a form of entertainment, covering ALL genres. Record of Lodoss War is a great OVA series set in a fantasy realm. Ghost In The Shell (the manga is better) is pretty keen future/sci-fi (and since when has sci-fi had to be purely believble?). sure there are slews of mushy love dramas, but there's something for everyone. just as you've spent time sorting through the tv shows and movies you like and don't, you'll have to sort through anime too.

    and for those who are too cheap to rent / buy anime and have a decent 'net connection, the "digisub" (digital fansub) "scene" is alive on irc and hotline.

  33. re: fanatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    haahaa .. yes, fanatics of any sort are scary. i fear the rabid sports fanatic, who will paint their face and trudge through the snow to scream at the refs who must be blind. i fear the computer geek who rabidly defends any os / company, because everything has flaws. i fear the psychotic fan of any tv show / movie / author / director, for not being able to see that there are other things in life. rabid fans of anything are limiting their views on life. there is value in almost anything, if you take the time to look for it.

  34. Some unabashed gushing about Totoro by TekkonKinkreet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Totoro is an unqualified masterpiece in my semi-informed opinion (I'm a CG animator). Even beyond the constraints of the imaginary cat-owl-bear genre. :) I've inflicted it on any number of friends and acquaintances, always with happy results.

    At SIGGRAPH two years ago I was fortunate enough to see a presentation by a Ghibli AD in which he talked the audience through a bunch of scenes from this movie. "Here," he would say (through his translator), about a scene where the younger daughter picks flowers in the garden and stands on tiptoe to put them on the edge of her father's desk while he is working, "everything in the scene is intended to emphasize the innocence of Mai and the fatherliness of her father." Or waiting at a bus stop: "We kept the camera here for two more seconds to give the proper sense of spacial composition in time." (I've heard people call it slow, but I blame MTV fast-cut editing for salting the earth for more subtle techniques.) Amazing work.

    Miyazaki himself is a gruff, chain-smoking perfectionist by all reports, but he writes some beautiful stuff, the acting is subtle, some of the backgrounds look like Maxfield Parish, in Totoro for once the dubbing is excellent, and the whole is greater than any description of the elements can convey.

    YMMV, but I hope not.

  35. Eating habits. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Roger Ebert needs to eat less fatty foods.

    -Penguin Kicka.

  36. humm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You like Hitchcock?
    Watch Perfect Blue..

    Realy when looking at anime rember It is so varied.
    its just like turing on the TV.
    You could be watching Buffy, You could be waching X files, Dark Angel, The Sapranos, or Sienfield..
    But to compare buffy to The sopranos or OZ is sort of foolish.

    Same thing in anime, just find what your intrested in and theres probalby an anime that you will like.

    I have seen
    Historical, Biographical, Science fiction, Comedy, Drama, Action, type animes.
    So far what I have not seen done in Anime format is.

    1. the news. [i bet it will happen though]

    2. talk Show

    But anyone who thinks ALL anime is "sailor moon" and "dragon ball Z" has definetly not seen the good stuff.

  37. Akira by Jormundgard · · Score: 1

    Ebert was, I think, also primarily responsible for Akira's popularity in the U.S., as he was the first (only?) movie critic to review and praise it.

  38. Re:CWA by blamanj · · Score: 2

    Hmmm. Look's more like Concerned Fundamentalist Women. They trash "Kiki" because it portrays "witches" in a favorable light. Can't have that.

  39. I recommend... by Squeeze+Truck · · Score: 2

    Miyazaki's newest film, "Sen to Chihiro no Kami Kakushi". Just came out in Japan. I think the English title is "Spirited Away" or something like that.

    I saw it in the theater. Absolutely spactacular.

    --

    "Reactionaries must be deprived of the right to voice their opinions; only the people have that right." - Mao

  40. Re:Cheers to that by Skip666Kent · · Score: 2

    Hear Ye!

    It's so tempting for me to lose patience with people who see Totoro as 'slow', but it takes a while, I suppose, to get acclimated to a way of storytelling which often places as much emphasis on the spaces 'between the notes' as it does to scenes or moments of frantic activity. Those beats and pauses are very intentional and very Japanese, and immensely effective once you get over the ingrained Western horror of silence and subtlety.

    The bus-stop scene with the droplets of water on the 'umbrella' is priceless.

    Ne?

    Laputa has a similar appeal, in a format that is more appealing to those who squirm uncomfortably in the absence of giant flying robots.

    As long as it is, I just wish that Laputa was a bit longer...in the quiet parts. After awakening on the cloud city, I'd like to see an entire hour devoted to the characters quietly exploring an unconvering the ancient and overgrown wonders of the city. As it is, the sence of quiet majesty is a bit too quickly dispelled by the reappearance of the antagonists and the main story line. Great movie tho', and a must see if you can find it. I have it in Japanese, but I don't know if it's available with subtitles...

    --
    **>>BELCH
  41. heartily seconded by juno · · Score: 1

    Tonari no Totoro is amazing :) He does such a great job of portraying the young girls... it never feels faked or like a gloopy paen to adult nostalgia. This is absolutely my favorite of the Miyazake films I've seen... no matter what, it always puts me in a good mood... and who wouldn't like the cat-bus?

    --

    ---- I'm going to lead you kicking and screaming, giggling and laughing into the future.

  42. Miayazaki's Animated Features vs "anime" by ashitaka · · Score: 1

    As expected there are no shortage of posts in this thread that confuse the "anime" of rabid fandom fame with the full-length movie features that Miyazaki's Studio Ghibli produces.

    Simply put, they are two different things.

    Comparing a regular anime with Totoro is like comparing "Superfriends" with The Lion King. One is churned out weekly in sweatshop production lines using repetitive themes and recycled cells. The other is major production where every cell is a piece of art (and usually ends up selling like it later).

    The other thing Ebert neglects to mention is the music. Miyazaki's films have music that uniquely identifies the mood of every scene and which can be listened to endlessly afterwards to re-live the film. Coincidentally I spent part of this afternoon lying on the couch listening to the soundtrack of Kurenai no Buta aka "Porco Rosso". My son asked me why just listen to the music and not watch the movie? My answer was simple: Listening to the music, I don't have to watch the movie. It's that good.

    North Americans have only seen two of Miyazaki's films: Totoro and Kiki. However, even better (in my opinion) films have yet to be released:

    Kurenai no Buta ("Porco Ross")
    Tenku no Shiro Laputa ("Laputa, Castle in the Sky")

    If Disney is serious about not releasing any more Miyazaki films it will just prove what many suspected; Buy the rights to a vastly superior product, carry out a half-hearted promotion campaign emphasizing the wrong things ("A-List Voice Talent!" my ass), then bury the rest citing the "poor reception" to the first couple of releases.

    The definitive resource for all Miyazaki/Ghibli films remains nausicaa.net.

    --
    If you don't want to repeat the past, stop living in it.
    1. Re:Miayazaki's Animated Features vs "anime" by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 2

      Well, I got to see a large chunk of Miyazaki's work in 1999. I saw Totoro, Laputa, and Porco Rosso. They showed Nausicaa and Lapin aka Castle of Cagliostro. IIRC, they also showed Mononoke a week before Disney's release.

      The thing about Totoro that most people don't understand is it is, like most of Miyazaki's work, heavy on the relationships of its characters. In Totoro's case this manifests itself in how the children are able to cope with their mother's hospitalization. Of course, the theme of nature and man's role in interacting with it also appears in Totoro and is one of the main themes throughout Miyazaki's work, especially Monoke, Laputa and Nausicaa.

      Unlike a lot of anime, Miyazaki films almosy always have the following characteristics:

      1. themes of man vs nature
      2. strong characterization
      3. a female protagonist that is not simply a man with curves
      4. some kind of awesome planes (miyazaki loves planes and flight)

      I'll gladly watch some Miyazaki work, but most anime does blow, either being mindless drivel as an excuse for combat, or highly abstract crap trying to be philosophical (the highly acclaimed Neon Genesis Evangelion was a pain to watch for me) while justbeing boring.

      Miyazaki manages to write stories that successfully entertain kids and adults alike. He is a perfectionist that actually allows that to work for him and not agianst him.

      It is too bad that Disney won't release a lot of their films to the home video market. But they do the same thing with Chinese films as well.

    2. Re:Miayazaki's Animated Features vs "anime" by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      thats what imports are for. go to www.hivizone.com for region 2,3 and zero imports.

      hivizone has great service and excellent prices and does NOT sell bootlegs.

      --
      Bring back the old version of slashdot.
    3. Re:Miayazaki's Animated Features vs "anime" by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 2

      I've shopped there and a few other places. Nevertheless, it irratates me to no end that a lot of movies won't/can't be shown here because some MNC just sits on them.

      Unfortunately, you can't screen a DVD or VHS format. I volunteer for a group that shows actual Chinese *films* and is in danger of going under like so many Chinese theaters because there's so little content that can be screened now.

    4. Re:Miayazaki's Animated Features vs "anime" by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      Believe me, I feel for you. I watch a decent amount of chinese cinema(not just the HK action stuff) and a lot of korean movies as well(korean cinema is on the rise).

      I got in to it as an alternative to Hollywood cookie cutter movies. More original plots, not the same predictable happy endings of american movies, and far better use of CG. If it wasn't for friends who were in to this stuff themselves(or are chinese) I would have never seen many chinese movies. Granted there isn't a large market for them in the US, but I can't understand why many of them aren't released in the US but are licensed by companies here. The only thing I can think of (which is way out there) is competition with the american film industry since it is a refreshing alternative. Thats not to say that all chinese/asian cinema is good(there is a lot of bad stuff like american cinema) its just refreshingly different.

      --
      Bring back the old version of slashdot.
  43. Otaku == Geek by alexburke · · Score: 2

    Well known film critic and closet otaku, Roger Ebert

    AFAIK, otaku is Japanese for geek.

  44. One more thing!!! by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Always watch Anime in Japanese with subtitles instead of listening to dubs into English. This isn't snobbery, it's just that the American voice actors just read the script placed in front of the them and never, never, never bother to understand the meaning that script. Even when the script they're given is good, the actors do everything wrong.

    Part of the problem is that Japan, like much of the world, has years of experience dubing English shows into Japanese and so they have wonderful voice actors, while we, in our English-only isolation, have no need for good voice actors. Another problem is that the dubbing is usually done by very small companies on the cheap. They just shovel stuff onto a DVD and release it.

    I've also noticed that learning a little bit of a language can add a lot to watching a foriegn movie, because there are lots of words that don't really translate at all. If you enjoy Anime it's worth while getting a Japanese dictionary.

    Rocky J. Squirrel

    1. Re:One more thing!!! by zangdesign · · Score: 1

      The voice-overs for American-released anime are done by professional actors from a "gist" script sent by the producers. The original script is translated into English in such a way that the English-language script writers know what the character is trying to say, but without knowing the actual wording. The scriptwriters then create an English-language version of the script that matches the meaning, but also has to match to number of syllables that the character appears to be saying on-screen (mouth-flaps). So you may only get 15 syllables to say "Your grandmother killed my grandfather twice-removed in a swordfight - prepare to die, you bastard" (23 or so syllables in English). The actors record the dialogue in a booth while watching the movie and it has to match visually.

      I have this on excellent authority, from a friend who is a scriptwriter for ADV Films and another who is a voice actor.

      Watch the subtitles if you like, but don't knock the translation too much - there's very little that can be done to improve it without re-doing the animated sequences to match the syllabization of American language.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    2. Re:One more thing!!! by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

      You missed my point. When I said "Even when the script they're given is good, the actors do everything wrong" and "American voice actors just read the script placed in front of the them and never, never, never bother to understand the meaning that script" I thought I was making it clear that my problem isn't with the what is said but with the way it's said.

      By picking the wrong intonation, an actor can completely miss a character's motivation and misrepresent the meaning of what's being said. I'll say it again, the American actors just read what's in front of them and don't understand the meaning of the dialog.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

    3. Re:One more thing!!! by nomadic · · Score: 2

      I don't think so at all; there are very good dub jobs. Look at Tenchi Muyo for example. And to say that they don't understand the meaning of the dialogue doesn't really make sense. It's not like they're just saying the lines phonetically, they interpret their character and the script in their own way. Just because it doesn't match with your interpretation doesn't mean they're clueless.

    4. Re:One more thing!!! by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen "Tenchi Muyo" but uhm, of couse it make sense to say "they don't understand the meaning of the dialogue."

      There's more to a show than the words in the dialog. The original characters in a film have attitudes toward life, toward each other etc. Films have subtext too, meaning that's implied rather than explicitly stated. I've seen so many films where the American dubbers completely ruined the show by missing everything and trying to depict their characters with shallow American TV/movie stereotypes that had nothing to do with the original show. You know I don't think I've ever seen Anime well dubbed except in the case where the original show was a shallow kids show, so the shallowness of the translation fit the original.

      Rocky J. Squirrel

  45. Other good ones to watch. by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

    The following two schows are aimed at teenage girls but are pretty good too:

    Vision of Escaflowne(not the version shown on Fox) its got great animation, excellent music, very good story, great characters(its even got sir issac newton in it!), sword fights and some mecha battles. Its got romance and action etc. The only annoying thing is that the girl can't decide which guy she likes. 26 episodes from bandai. Oh, btw the mecha are designed by the sameguy as macross.

    Fushigi Yuugi, great story, got comedy, action etc. Again aimed for teenage girls, but AWESOME STORY. 52 episodes.

    I'd watch macross plus to as an intro, good story, characters and music.

    Nausica is good too.

    If you want to see funny stuff, watch the Lupan movies. As my old roomate put it "He is like a crazy inspector gadget that scores."

    If you like cars, Initial D is definatly the one to watch. With each season the animation(both cg and cell) get better and better. Its a fighting anime with car battles, no NOS here, just down hill action.

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  46. Totoro is a great movie by perrinkog · · Score: 1

    It has been a personal favorite for years.

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  47. Re:spirited away - last animated feature by darkspade · · Score: 1

    I saw somewhere that says "Spirited away" is going to be Miyazaki's last animated feature. Is it true?

  48. Otaku != geek exactly, is not a good word. by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

    sort of

    if anything it means obsessive fan and was used by a lot of anime fans at the time instead of using the word for "you".The actual meaing of otaku is "house".

    being "otaku" of any type is not considered good. There are car otaku, sports otaku,basicaly otaku for anything.

    The reason it is considered bad is that(according to my japanese professor) there was a guy who killed a number of people in japan and he was "otaku" and was really in to anime and had a ton of tapes. As a result a bad meaning got attached to the word.

    Hence I find it funny when people refer to themselves proudly as otaku without really unterstanding the meaning. I wouldn't go to japan and refer to yourself as one(I saw people who did while I was at school there, it was funny).

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    1. Re:Otaku != geek exactly, is not a good word. by haruharaharu · · Score: 2

      The reason it is considered bad is that(according to my japanese professor) there was a guy who killed a number of people in japan and he was "otaku" and was really in to anime and had a ton of tapes. As a result a bad meaning got attached to the word.

      There is that, but the enduring problem with otaku is that they never leave their house, hence the name.

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    2. Re:Otaku != geek exactly, is not a good word. by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      "There is that, but the enduring problem with otaku is that they never leave their house, hence the name."

      The actual definition my japanese professor gave was "Someone who has the computer, TV and VCR setup so they don't need to move at all." The social context was given later.

      Anyways the above definitions were both true of a former roommate of mine, then once he got a girlfriend his Anime interest, and obsessivness of it dramatically decreased.

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  49. Re:spirited away - last animated feature by ll1234 · · Score: 1
    Miyazaki said the same thing after finishing "Princess Mononoke", so take it with a grain of salt.

    He's currently producing Studio Ghibli's next two films. A new Miyazaki-directed film will probably appear in 2004, if he hasn't retired for the third time by then.

    Please check the Nausicaa.net news archives for articles on all of the above.

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  50. Re:spirited away - last animated feature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spirited Away is still running here in Japan (in Japanese its ; sen to chihiro no kamikakushi). I'ts a fantastic movie, I've seen it twice, and read the manga , The story has more depth than Mononokehime , I'm worried that a dubbed version will lose too much in the translation. Even so I'm sure it will be real popular. It's been a blockbuster here.

  51. Geez! How did I forget "Ghost in the shell"? by RockyJSquirel · · Score: 1

    I highly recommend "Ghost in the shell". It's disturbing and thought provoking like a good Philip K. Dick novel. For those of you who don't know Philip K, think "Blade Runner", that movie started out as one of his novels, although it wasn't quite as strange or as distubing as most of Philip's writing.

    I realize that anything I say about "Ghost in the shell" will ruin something. The first 15 minutes hold some mind-fucking surprises that have scarred me for life:)

    Anyway, don't show this movie to anyone who doesn't have a philisophical bent. I've read reviews by people who just didn't get this one.

    If you like having your mind blown or have a taste for existencial tragedy, you'll love this one.

    I don't have to add that young children won't get this, right?

    Rocky J. Squirrel

  52. Otaku by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hmm, ok, in this case asking your Japanese professor about the word otaku is akin to asking an American professor what he think of people who play Dungeons and Dragons (the tabletop version). You might get a good answer, or you might get, "oh, that devil worship game. Did you here about those kids who killed there parents after playing it?"

    Anyway, to truly understand otaku from within the subculture of Japanese anime fans, and not the people who think that healthy adults ought to be playing tennis or something. Watch, "Otaku no Video," about a normal Japanese college student who becomes an anime fan and loses all of his "cool" friends (but makes new otaku friends).

    At one point he sums up the problem of the comic book fan in Japanese society with a lament, "People who play tennis are fine and dandy, but people who watch animation are no good, why?!?"

    Not that this has anything to do with anime in American culture, where it is an exotic foriegn import that was briefly chic, and may still be in vogue as far as I know.

    By the way, geek and nerd, those are insults. Those are what muscular social rejects in High School call you before they start to wail on you. Otaku is an equivalent Japanese insult.

    1. Re:Otaku by ProfBooty · · Score: 1

      My professor was japanese and I was living in japan at the time attending college for a semester. (I studied Japanese not because of an interest in anime, but for interests in martial arts. I later had an engineering job offer in japan but didnt take it due to the lower starting salaries for engineers in japan who are working for japanese companies.)

      There were a number of Otaku at the college I attended, from both america and japan. My point is that the word otaku applies to more than just anime liking people.

      I have seen otaku no video by the way.

      I'm making a judgement on all types of Otaku wether its anime, car or sports, being too obsessive about anything to the point where its your whole existance in life is unhealthy(my roomate almost failed out of college for an anime obsession.) Its also that people don't understand the negative connotation of the word.

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  53. Totoro is a unique film by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought it for my daughter when she was about three. She's now 10 and my son is 7 and they still watch it every month or so. It is unique in that there is no external conflict, no good guys/bad guys, and no heavy handed morality lessons. What it has is pure beauty, a view into another culture, and magic. I've seen it a dozen times or more (since the kids watch it so much) and I still enjoy it. They also like Kiki's Delivery Service. I'm really dissapointed that Disney won't release Laputa or relinquish the rights. I thought the Mononoke DVD was well done and I liked the audio options (original Japanese, English dub, Neil Gaiman subtitles, or transliteral subtitles).

  54. Re:Geez! How did I forget "Ghost in the shell"? by gpinzone · · Score: 1

    I realize that anything I say about "Ghost in the shell" will ruin something. The first 15 minutes hold some mind-fucking surprises that have scarred me for life:)

    I think you are confusing Ghost in the Shell with Urotsukidoji. :)

  55. Nuku Nuku!!! by MsGeek · · Score: 1
    Sazan Eyes (or 3x3 Eyes): There were two series made, the first one "Imortals" is wonderful, though it looks like the producers ran out of money after four episodes and stopped the series right before the climax. The second series "Legend of the Divine Demon" isn't very good. I have a double DVD set with both series.

    The guy who wrote 3x3 Eyes later went on to create perhaps one of the best satirical Anime series, All-purpose Cultural Catgirl Nuku Nuku. The satirical angle isn't as obvious in the original OAV as it is in the Nuku Nuku TV series, but both are funny as hell and are ripping fun.

    The trouble with Nuku Nuku is that it's getting very hard to find. AD Vision, the company that subbed and released the OAV in the US, has dropped their version and have no plans to bring it to DVD. Nuku Nuku TV was never picked up by any of the major Anime distributors here and seems to only be partially fansubbed. Nuku Nuku Dash! the second NN OAV, is pretty lame...it turns the series into a stupid shoujo story about the main character falling in love with the boy she was designed to protect.

    NN OAV and NNTV are to Anime what Police Squad! was to Cop shows. Nuku Nuku rips through Anime cliches like so much kitty litter. If you know anything about Anime you'll love it. Oh yeah, and there's plenty of fanservice there for the drooling otaku boy contingent.

    Please! Someone get in touch with Star Child Ltd. and King Records and get the rights to this series! Families of America! It is not too late for Nuku Nuku! ~_^

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  56. Re:My thoughts on Anime lusers^Wfans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And they say slashdot elitism is dead. Pish posh.

    And this rant coming from someone who is passionate about SHIT. Slashdot hypocrisy lives on and lives well. Don't you ever get tired of posting more or less the same thing day in and day out?

    I HAD A TURD TODAY. IT WAS SMELLY AND COOL AND TOOK SOME PUSHING. HEH HEH HEH. I GIVE IT A 7.

    Moron.

  57. Re:spirited away - last animated feature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But Lawrence, if Kondo had not died, I think Miyazaki would have done much less on "Sen".

    IMO of course, although maybe his workaholic nature would have still emerged :)

  58. Amen! by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 2

    I suspect the reason that distributors (seems to be mostly Sony/Columbia and Disney/Miramax) are holding the rights to the film for US release is they see a potential profit. The fact that some of these films *could* generate a large amount of profit (such as Crouching Tiger...) yet most don't (such as most Jackie Chan or Iron Monkey) makes them even more nervous and uncertain.

    I know of very few commercials for Crouching Tiger here in the US when it was released and yet it did great business despite being subtitled. At the same time, Disney released Mononoke using the same lack of advertising and yet dubbed it. They made no money.

    I suspect the real issue is like you said, quality. There are some great films outside the US and a lot of crap. Doesn't mean I wouldn't enjoy it. And if I was Asian or a college student I certainly would like to have a venue for seeing cinema from another country. But Hollywood is locking it all away for their Region 1, dubbed and re-editted DVDs.

    Best of luck to you. If you are in the Twin Cities area be sure to check out Cinema with Passion before it goes away. (http://www.amamedia.org/movies/)

  59. toys!!! by ryusen · · Score: 1

    perhaps disney should consider licencing the toys??
    i know lots of girls of all ages who are crazy for totoro anything.. if they were to sell stuffed totoros and squirl-foxes alone i think it'd be a boost to their coffers and then people will want to see the movies... hey it worked for transformers and gi-joe... not to mention bandai's gundam lines

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  60. Good timing... by sunhou · · Score: 1

    My Neighbor Totoro is one of the very few movies I saw where I immediately though "I need to get this on video when it come out". So I got it on video a few years ago. Just a couple of days ago, I suddenly wondered if it was out on DVD now, because if it were I'd buy that, and give my sister my VHS copy for her kid.

    This is a very sweet movie, and I think it does a great job at portraying the innocence of childhood, and it's just so darn cute and funny at times. Definitely one of my favorites.

  61. oh you have got to be kidding... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I hadn't ever downloaded anime for free I would have never gotten interested in it. Yeah, sure you're willing to pay for it now but before I ever watched any anime I couldn't understand why this was worth so much money.

    So if you've never watched anime before, then go on IRC to the anime channels and message some offer bots to get stuff.

  62. Re:Cheers to that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As each Ghibli film is released in Japan the legit DVD's so far have all had english subtitles.