Animation Magazine

All Eyes on Ghibli’s First CG Heroine

Director Gorō Miyazaki discusses his buzzy new movie Earwig and the Witch and the reasons he opted for a 3D CG look.

- By Charles Solomon

Director Gorō Miyazaki discusses his buzzy new movie Earwig and the Witch and the reasons he opted for a 3D CG look.

One of the most-anticipate­d animated films of 2021 is Gorō Miyazaki’s Earwig and the Witch, based on the juvenile novel by Diana Wynne Jones (the author of Howl’s Moving Castle), which debuts February 5 on HBO Max. It’s Studio Ghibli’s first 3D CG feature and Miyazaki’s first theatrical film since the hit From Up on Poppy Hill in 2011.

Miyazaki recently talked to Animation Magazine about the film in an interview via Zoom from Studio Ghibli(with Yuriko Banno translatin­g). Early on in our conversati­on, he noted that Earwig had a very different genesis from Poppy Hill.

“Hayao Miyazaki and Keiko Niwa wrote the script for From Up Poppy Hill, handed it to me and said I should make a film of it,” he recalled. “Although I changed a few things along the way, the script was already there before I started the film. This time, Hayao Miyazaki read the original novel and said, ‘This is a very interestin­g story, why don’t you make a film out of it?’ So I worked with Keiko Niwa and Emi Gunji to create the script.”

His decision to make the film in 3D CG instead

‘I hope that people won’t stay away from the film just because it’s the first 3D CG film from Studio Ghibli and doesn’t have our traditiona­l cel look. I just want people to give it a chance.’ — Director Gorō Miyazaki

of Ghibli’s signature hand-drawn animation has already sparked widespread discussion online. “Studio Ghibli will continue to create handdrawn 2D animation, but I felt we needed to take on new challenges as a studio,” Miyazaki said. “It’s important for us to be able to do both traditiona­l hand-drawn animation and 3D CG. After doing the TV series Ronja, the Robber’s Daughter (2014), I really felt the potential of 3D CG animation, so I wanted to take on that challenge.”

“If I had made Earwig and the Witch in 2D, it would probably have been a completely different film,” he continued. “There are beautiful things about hand-drawn animation and great things about 3D CG: you have to make the most of the strengths of each method. It’s not a matter of good or bad; they each have their strengths. For example, in very short sequences, with CG, you have to create the whole set and the props, which is a lot of work. In 2D, you just draw that stuff. Conversely, I found CG is able to capture the nuances of the facial expression­s of the characters.”

Making a More Likeable Heroine

In contrast to Umi, the modest, industriou­s protagonis­t of Poppy Hill, Earwig is a willful, self-possessed girl from a British orphanage who delights in getting other people to carry out her wishes. Her resolve is challenged when she’s adopted into the home of the witch Bella Yaga and a mysterious, powerful figure known only as The Mandrake. One of the challenges Miyazaki faced was making Earwig a more sympatheti­c character than she was in the book.

“Umi perseveres and doesn’t show her true feelings: A lot of Japanese can see themselves in her,” he explains. “Earwig is very headstrong. She knows what she wants and works hard for it. I wanted her to be an inspiratio­n for younger people to go about their lives in that way. But we wanted to avoid her coming across as manipulati­ve. It was definitely a challenge.”

Jones’ Howl’s Moving Castle is a long, complicate­d novel. However, Earwig and the Witch is brief — only 117 pages in large type with numerous illustrati­ons — and more limited in scope. Miyazaki and the screenwrit­ers added a backstory to explain why Earwig was left at St. Morwald’s Home for Children with a note that read, “Got the other 12 witches all chasing me. I’ll be back for her when I’ve shook them off. It may take years.”

“We wanted to tell the story of where Earwig came from, so we tried to come up with an interestin­g backstory,” Miyazaki said. “I ended up with rock music and that her mother had been in a band. The film is set some time in the ‘90s, so if you do the math, her mother was probably young in the ‘70s, when there was so much rock music I like. We’re using 3D CG animation for the first time in a Studio Ghibli film, so why not use rock music for the first time, too?”

The designs for the characters in Earwig and the Witch were partially influenced by Miho Satake’s illustrati­ons for the Japanese edition of the novel, which in turn reveal the influence of Paul O. Zelinsky’s original drawings. Rather than rendering every hair on the characters’ heads and every stitch in their sweaters, as many American films do, the designs are more stylized. Earwig’s brown ponytails and Bella Yaga’s tangled blue curls look like they’ve been piped out of a pastry tube. Thomas, the black cat who shifts from serving as Bella Yaga’s familiar to Earwig’s ally, is as stylized as Jiji in Kiki’s Delivery Service, but in very different ways. This new look is partially the result of the ongoing cross-Pacific cross-pollinatio­n in animation.

“When we were starting Earwig and thinking about the look we wanted, some people from the Laika Studio came over to our studio and showed us puppets from Kubo and the Two Strings,” Miyazaki recalled. “I wanted Earwig to have a more cartoonish look: not too photoreali­stic, but I didn’t want to go too stop-motion puppet-y. The puppets the Laika people brought were a big inspiratio­n for character designs. Not just Kubo himself — even the monkey’s hair looked like scales, rather than individual strands, which was kind of interestin­g. Instead of rendering each strand of hair, we have masses of hair in bunches.”

Although Earwig was an official selection at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival and has received an Oscar-qualifying run through GKIDS, Miyazaki worries that American fans may not accept the idea of a Studio Ghibli CG film. He concluded, “I hope that people won’t stay away from the film just because it’s the first 3D CG film from Studio Ghibli and doesn’t have our traditiona­l cel look. I just want people to give it a chance.” ◆

Studio Ghibli’s Earwig and the Witch premieres on HBO Max on February 5.

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Gorō Miyazaki
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Although some critics have noted that its CG animation might not be everyone’s cup of tea, Gorō Miyazaki’s Earwig and the Witch features charming characters, a cozy British world and a memorable talking cat.
Spellbound: Although some critics have noted that its CG animation might not be everyone’s cup of tea, Gorō Miyazaki’s Earwig and the Witch features charming characters, a cozy British world and a memorable talking cat.

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