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“That’s not a house. That’s termites holding hands,” protests the taxi driver, when he drops MK off at her father’s house. MK also looks at the house with trepidation, although not for the same reason: she hasn’t seen her father in ages, ever since her father wrecked his career and his marriage because of his belief that tiny people live hidden in the forest fighting an epic battle and good and evil.

Naturally he turns out to be completely right: the premise of the movie demands it. MKe’s ability to enter completely into his obsessions - by accidentally becoming a tiny forest person herself, in fact - reconciles father and daughter and apparently makes up for his years as an absentee father.

I must confess I have a pet peeve about this sort of plot. He turned out to be right about the tiny people, but that doesn’t erase the fact that researching the tiny people - research that will benefit no one, research that the tiny people themselves oppose - was more important to him than his own wife and child. I wish he had to meet MK at least halfway, rather than having her do all the work.

For all that, however - and for all that the plot is made of tissue paper and the characterization serviceable, but predictable - it’s a charming movie, particularly if you love tiny person stories. The animators clearly had great fun turning flowers, sticks, mushrooms, and sundry other things into tiny people, as well as choreographing the hummingbird-back flights.

***

Whisper of the Heart is a very different beast. I wish I had reviewed it alongside From Up On Poppy Hill, because they’re very similar movies: gentle, peaceful love stories with lovingly detailed backgrounds and no fantastical elements.

Or at least, Whisper of the Heart has no obviously, incontrovertibly fantastical elements. The DVD packaging on Whisper of the Heart is misleading: it suggests that the film dives into a fantasy world, when in fact the closest it gets are sequences from the story that Shizuku writes.

The film is nonetheless enchanting: there’s a sort of magical thinking logic behind it, so although nothing technically magical happens, it still has a fairy-tale feel. The story proper kicks off when bookworm Shizuku, on her way to the library, sees a cat riding the train with her. The cat seems so much like something out of a story that Shizuku follows it up a hill to a strange store full of rare and beautiful things - like a cat figurine with eyes that seem to wink at her in the light.

And a boy: a boy who makes violins. There is a really magical scene where Shizuku, accompanied by the boy, sings her own translation of “Country Road,” and the boy’s grandfather with two friends come in, quietly fetch their own instruments, and play an accompaniment.

Date: 2014-01-23 06:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kikainausagi.livejournal.com
I saw Epic on an airplane, and since I didn't feel like paying for headphones, I saw it with the sound off. I felt it said something that I could follow the plot without any of the dialogue. ;) It was pretty, but as an avowed bat-over (they're SO CUTE) it annoyed me that the evil dudes rode bats. Poor bats, always getting the bad rap.

Whisper of the Heart, on the other hand, I really like. I'm not always a fan of the young love stories that Studio Ghibli is so fond of - they're sweet! And I like watching them, but my inner cynic/pragmatism points out that people change as they grow, etc etc. One of the things that sold me on Whisper of the Heart was the scene where they're riding the bicycle up the hill, and Shizuku insists on helping push the bicycle. It was a good metaphor for relationships, in which all parties must be willing to work for it when the going gets hard.

Date: 2014-01-23 09:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I like what you say about the bicycle pushing being a good metaphor ♥

Date: 2014-01-24 02:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
It is fairly predictable, although I think the fact that it makes sense without sound also shows that they got the body language right: you don't have to hear what they're saying to know that MK is disappointed with her Dad or the queen is flirting with the grumpy warrior or whatever.

I did go a little O.o when Shizuku and Seiji plighted their troth to each other, at the age of thirteen, after knowing each other for like two weeks...but middle schoolers aren't middle schoolers without dramatic gestures, I suppose.

Date: 2014-01-23 09:54 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
[livejournal.com profile] amanen and the ninja girl can sing the Japanese version of "Country Road."** In a probably impossible hypothetical future when we all meet up, maybe I could persuade them to do it.

**It's also hugely sad--it has the words 帰りたい、帰れない (kaeritai… kaerenai) "I want to go home … I can't go home...

Date: 2014-01-24 02:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
Someday I will be in Massachusetts! Someday. At some point.

Date: 2014-01-24 02:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
--At which point *they* will probably be in Japan, one or the other of them. Amanen comes back here in September, but the ninja girl leaves in April and won't be back for at least a year.

Still! You and some combination of them would be great :-)

Date: 2014-01-24 08:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
Aw, that is too bad. But I might be in Boston in May of this year, so I might at least be able to see you. :)

Date: 2014-01-24 08:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com
I would love that!

Date: 2014-01-24 09:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] egelantier.livejournal.com
hah, i was SO ANNOYED by the whole thing with mk and her father in this movie. what does it matter that his tiny people were real? he abandoned her and her mother! he left her to grieve for her dead mother alone because rawr his manly scientific (looking to be utterly useless) pursuits were of course so much more important.

the cutest part of this movie were the queen and the grumpy older warrior; i wish there was more of them.

Date: 2014-01-24 02:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com
I know, right? He's so bad at being a parent. There's a moment in the middle of the movie where he almost seems to be realizing this and starts destroying his stuff, but then he realizes the tiny people are real and he never considers his very real issues ever again.

The queen and the grumpy warrior were adorbs, though.

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