Shanghai Daily

Son of animation master breaks new ground in 3D

- Francois Becker

STUDIO Ghibli, home of the masters of Japanese animated film, has decided to take a plunge into 3D under the direction of founder Hayao Miyazaki’s son Goro — though he is far from ready to put away his colored pencils. With the same smiling round face and the same taste for the fantastica­l as his father, the 54-year-old is emerging from the shadows with “Earwig and the Witch,” due to go online as part of the Gerardmer Fantasy Film Festival kicking off recently. The film, originally scheduled to premiere at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival, was launched at the Lumiere event in Lyon. It follows the story of an impish orphan girl adopted by a witch and befriended by a black cat.

It has an unmistakab­le Miyazaki imprint, but fans of Hayao Miyazaki standouts like “My Neighbor Totoro” and “Howl’s Moving Castle” may be thrown off balance by the colder effect of 3D. For a studio acclaimed for the visual harmony of its creations, the leap is a gamble, Goro admits, aware of the risk of disappoint­ing a fan base going back more than 30 years. Even so, he says his perfection­ist 80-year-old father, sometimes called the Japanese Walt Disney for the power of his imaginatio­n, has given him “free rein.”

“He hardly commented at all during the production,” Goro said. “He stopped by regularly to check on it (but) given the technologi­cal difference­s with traditiona­l animation, he had no frame of reference. It’s not his medium.”

‘Neighborho­od workshop’

The move into 3D is by no means “entering into some kind of competitio­n” with the American animated film giants with their vast technical and financial resources, Goro said.

“You could liken big American production­s to Tesla electric cars, while what we are trying to do is create an electrical­ly assisted bike for getting around town,” he said. “There are landscapes that you can see only thanks to the slower pace of a bicycle.”

Despite Studio Ghibli’s internatio­nal fame, “we are neither a big studio nor a big company, more like a neighborho­od workshop, a little creative place,” he said. “I don’t think we can plan on a generation­al change as people expect.”

While computer graphics offer “a new possibilit­y for the future,” traditiona­lists can rest assured that “drawing on paper, the traditiona­l animation like my father, will continue at the studio,” said the creator of “Tales from Earthsea” (2006) and “From up on Poppy Hill” (2011).

The question of succeeding the master, who founded Studio Ghibli in 1985 and won the 2003 Oscar for best animated film with “Spirited Away,” has not been settled.

Some talented creators have died, while others have founded their own studios. Goro marvels at his father’s “still intact capacity for imaginatio­n” and predicts he could still be at work for another decade.

Eight years after his last work “The Wind Rises,” the older Miyazaki is still working on a “pretty touching project,” Goro said, without elaboratin­g.

Hayao Miyazaki “has got into the habit of retiring only to change his mind a fair number of times in the past,” Goro said.

“I may retire before him!”

 ??  ?? Japanese director Goro Miyazaki poses at the Studio Ghibli headquarte­rs in Koganei. — AFP
Japanese director Goro Miyazaki poses at the Studio Ghibli headquarte­rs in Koganei. — AFP

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