- Princess Mononoke
-
Princess Mononoke
Japanese theatrical release posterDirected by Hayao Miyazaki Produced by Toshio Suzuki Written by Hayao Miyazaki Starring Yōji Matsuda
Yuriko Ishida
Yūko Tanaka
Kaoru KobayashiMusic by Joe Hisaishi Cinematography Atsushi Okui Editing by Takeshi Seyama Studio Studio Ghibli Distributed by Japan:
Toho
International:
Miramax FilmsRelease date(s) July 12, 1997 Running time 134 minutes Country Japan Language Japanese Budget ¥2,135,666,804.93
($23.5 million)Box office ¥14,487,325,138.75
($159,375,308)Princess Mononoke (もののけ姫 Mononoke-hime ) is a 1997 epic Japanese animated historical fantasy feature film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki of Studio Ghibli. "Mononoke" (物の怪 ) is not a name, but a general term in the Japanese language for a spirit or monster. The film was first released in Japan on July 12, 1997, and in the United States on October 29, 1999.
Princess Mononoke is a period drama set specifically in the late Muromachi period of Japan but with numerous fantastical elements. The story concentrates on involvement of the outsider Ashitaka in the struggle between the supernatural guardians of a forest and the humans of the Iron Town who consume its resources. There can be no clear victory, and the hope is that relationship between humans and nature can be cyclical.[1]
Roger Ebert placed the movie sixth on his top ten movies of 1999.[2] Mononoke also became the highest grossing movie in Japan until Titanic took over the spot several months later.[3]
Contents
Plot
A giant boar-demon attacks an Emishi village and the protagonist, Ashitaka (Yōji Matsuda), is forced to fight and kill him. In the struggle, Ashitaka receives a curse[4] which grants him superhuman strength but will eventually kill him. Under the advice of the village wisewoman (Mitsuko Mori), he leaves to travel to the west in search of a cure. After some traveling, he meets Jigo (Kaoru Kobayashi), a wandering monk who tells Ashitaka that he might find help from the forest spirit of a mountain range populated by giant animal-gods. Iron Town, located in that range, continually clears the nearby forests to make charcoal to smelt ironsand and produces advanced firearms, leading to battles with the giant forest beasts. Among these animals are giant wolves, who are accompanied by San (Yuriko Ishida), a human girl adopted by the wolves, whom the villagers of Iron Town call "Princess Mononoke." Ashitaka finds two villagers injured by the wolves near a river, whom he returns to Iron Town, passing through the forest, where he catches a glimpse of the forest spirit, a kirin-like creature by day and a towering "night-walker" by night.
In Iron Town, Ashitaka learns from Lady Eboshi (Yūko Tanaka), the manager of the settlement, that she created the boar-demon by shooting it. Though upset, Ashitaka also finds out that Iron Town is also a refuge for ancient Japan's social outcasts, including prostitutes and lepers, and thus finds himself unable to condemn Eboshi. That night, San infiltrates Iron Town to kill Eboshi. Ashitaka intervenes, using his curse's power to stop the fighting between Eboshi and San. While leaving the town with San, he is shot through the chest and later dies of his injuries. San takes Ashitaka to the Forest Spirit, who revives him, but does not remove the curse. Boars, led by the boar god Okkoto (Hisaya Morishige), arrive to attack Iron Town, and San joins them. Eboshi prepares for the assault and sets out to destroy the Forest Spirit. Jigo, now revealed to be a mercenary-hunter, intends to give the head to the emperor, who in turn promises to give Iron Town legal protection from local daimyos.
The Imperial hunters devastate the boars, and Okkoto is corrupted by a gunshot wound. The Forest Spirit comes and kills Okkoto, but Eboshi appears and shoots off the Forest Spirit's head. Jigo collects the head as the Forest Spirit's body transforms into a "mindless god of death" that begins destroying everything in its vicinity in search of its head. Ashitaka and San chase down and take back the head from Jigo, returning it to the Forest Spirit. It collapses into the lake, turning the land green and healing all the lepers and accursed, including Ashitaka and San. Ashitaka and San part to resume the lives they are used to, but promise to meet again; Ashitaka decides to stay and help rebuild Iron Town, which a reformed Eboshi vows to remake as "a better" village. The film ends with a Kodama appearing in the rejuvenated forest.
Cast
- Ashitaka - Voiced by: Yōji Matsuda (Japanese), Billy Crudup (English)
- San - Voiced by: Yuriko Ishida (Japanese), Claire Danes (English)
- Moro - Voiced by: Akihiro Miwa (Japanese), Gillian Anderson (English)
- Lady Eboshi - Voiced by: Yūko Tanaka (Japanese), Minnie Driver (English)
- Jigo/Jiko Bou - Voiced by: Kaoru Kobayashi (Japanese), Billy Bob Thornton (English)
- Toki - Voiced by: Sumi Shimamoto (Japanese), Jada Pinkett Smith (English)
- Okkoto/Okkotonushi - Voiced by: Hisaya Morishige (Japanese), Keith David (English)
- Gonza - Voiced by: Tsunehiko Kamijō (Japanese), John DiMaggio (English)
- Kohroku - Voiced by: Masahiko Nishimura (Japanese), John DeMita (English)
- Kaya - Voiced by: Yuriko Ishida (Japanese), Tara Strong (English)
- Hii-Sama - Voiced by: Mitsuko Mori (Japanese), Debi Derryberry (English)
- Iron Town Women - Voiced by: Takako Fuji and Ikuko Yamamoto (Japanese), Sherry Lynn and Tress MacNeille (English)
- Tatara's Women Song - Jennifer Cihi, Leslie Ishii, and Mary Elizabeth McGlynn (English)
Production
It took Miyazaki 16 years to fully develop the story and characters of Princess Mononoke. Familiar themes and visuals can be found in his 1983 manga, The Journey of Shuna. The story and characters changed drastically several times during the planning stage. Princess Mononoke finally came together after Miyazaki visited the ancient forests of Yakushima island, but he didn't fully complete it until well into production. The final storyboards of the film's ending were finished only months before the Japanese premiere date.[5]
Princess Mononoke is mostly hand-drawn, but incorporates some use of computer animation during five minutes of footage throughout the film.[6] The computer animated parts are designed to blend in and support the traditional cel animation, and are mainly used in images consisting of a mixture of computer generated graphics and traditional drawing. A further 10 minutes uses digital paint, a technique used in all subsequent Studio Ghibli films. Most of the film is colored with traditional paint. However, producers agreed on the installation of computers in order to successfully complete the film prior to the Japanese premiere date.[5]
Miyazaki personally checked each of the 144,000 cels in the film,[7] and is estimated to have redrawn parts of 80,000 of them.[8][9] This is one of few films directed by him that does not feature a flying sequence, his well-known trademark.
When released, Mononoke was the most expensive anime film ever made,[citation needed] with production of the film costing ¥2.35 billion (approximately US$23.5 million).[9][10][11]
Miyazaki did not want Ashitaka to be a typical hero:[12]
"Ashitaka is not a cheerful, worry-free boy. He is a melancholic boy who has a fate. I feel that I am that way myself, but until now, I have not made a film with such a character. Ashitaka was cursed for a very absurd reason. Sure, Ashitaka did something he should not have done - killing Tatari Gami. But there was enough reason to do so from the humans' viewpoint. Nevertheless, he received a deadly curse. I think that is similar to the lives of people today. I think this is a very absurd thing that is part of life itself."—Hayao MiyazakiHe stated that Lady Eboshi was supposed to have a traumatic past, although it is not specifically mentioned in the film. She had a strong and secure personality, evident in the fact that she let Ashitaka move freely through the settlement unescorted, despite his unclear motives. She also almost never acknowledged the Emperor's authority in Irontown, a revolutionary view for the time, and displayed an atypical attitude for a woman of that era in that she wouldn't hesitate to sacrifice herself or those around her for her dreams.[12] Miyazaki has said that Lady Eboshi "looks like a shirabyōshi".[13]
When director Miyazaki was creating the Jigo character, he was unsure whether to make him a government spy, a ninja, a member of a religious group or "a very good guy." In the end he decided to give Jigo elements of all of the above groups.[12]
The landscapes which appear in Princess Mononoke have been inspired by the ancient forests of Yakushima, of Kyūshū, and the mountains of Shirakami-Sanchi in northern Honshū.[14] However, the time period is a neverwhen, meaning that it had no specific time period.[4]
Release
The film was extremely successful in Japan and with both anime fans and arthouse moviegoers in English-speaking countries. In those countries, it was widely interpreted as a film about the environment told in the form of Japanese mythology. Disney's Miramax subsidiary purchased U.S. distribution rights, but wanted to cut the film for American audiences (and for a PG-rating). However, Miyazaki balked at this, and the film was instead released uncut with a rating of PG-13. Miramax also chose to put a lot of money into creating the English dub of Princess Mononoke with famous actors and actresses, yet when they released it in theatres there was little or no advertising and it was given a very limited run, showing in only a few theatres and for a very short time. Disney later complained about the fact that the movie did not do well at the box office. In September 2000, the film was announced for release on DVD in North America exclusively with the English dub. In response to fans' requests to add the Japanese track as well as threats of poor sales, Miramax hired translators for the Japanese version. This plan delayed the DVD release back by almost three months and sold well when it was finally released.
Localization
The US and UK DVD releases have both the English and Japanese soundtracks, together with subtitles for both the English dub and a more literal translation.
At Miyazaki's insistence, the film was uncut for the English release,[15] so that only the soundtrack was altered. The English dub of Princess Mononoke is a translation with some adaptation by Neil Gaiman, author of The Sandman. The main changes from the Japanese version are to provide a cultural context for phrases and actions which those outside of Asia may not be familiar with. Such alterations include references to mythology and specific names for groups, such as Jibashiri and Shishigami, that appear in the Japanese version, which are changed to more general terms, such as Mercenary and Forest Spirit, in the English version. The rationale for such changes is that the majority of non-Japanese viewers would not understand the mythological references (compare Fenrir, Herne the Hunter or Yeehaw) and that the English language simply has no words for the Jibashiri, Shishigami and other terms. However, some critics (Michael Atkinson, Mr. Showbiz) have said that the translation from Japanese to English and the alterations in which it has resulted have weakened the film somewhat.
The film has also been dubbed in Mandarin, Cantonese, Czech, French, German, Italian, Korean, Norwegian, Danish, Farsi and Spanish.[16]
Reception
Princess Mononoke was the number one film on the Japanese market in 1997, earning ¥11.3 billion in distribution receipts.[17] It was chosen as the Japanese submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film for that year. Princess Mononoke also received critical acclaim. Leonard Klady of Variety wrote a positive review of an early release of the picture.[18] On Roger Ebert & The Movies, the film received two thumbs up from Harry Knowles and Roger Ebert.[19] Ebert also gave the film four out of four stars in his print review and has added it to his 10 best movies of the year list.[20] While most of the critical response to the film's dub was positive, others criticized the dub for most of its casting choices,[21] notably Billy Bob Thornton as Jigo and Claire Danes as San, claiming that they detracted from the experience. Despite this love-hate atmosphere, the dub has been hailed as one of the best ever done[22] alongside Spirited Away, which has been met with the same criticism.[23] As of June 2011, review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports that 93% of critics have given the film a positive review, based on 83 reviews, with an average rating of 7.7/10 and the consensus: "With its epic story and breathtaking visuals, Princess Mononoke is a landmark in the world of animation".[24]
Princess Mononoke ranks 488th on Empire magazine's 2008 list of the 500 greatest movies of all time.[25]
It's also on Terry Gilliam's top 50 animated movie list[26]
In January 2001, it was the top-selling anime in America, but despite this the film did not fare well financially in the United States. It grossed $2,298,191 the first eight weeks.[27]
Awards
- Best Picture; The 21st Japanese Academy Awards
- Best Japanese Movie, Best Animation, and Japanese Movie Fans' Choice; The 52nd Mainichi Film Award
- Best Japanese Movie and Readers' Choice; Asahi Best Ten Film Festival
- Excellent Movie Award; The Agency for Cultural Affairs
- Grand Prize in Animation Division; 1st Japan Media Arts Festival (by the Agency for Cultural Affairs of the Ministry of Education)
- Best Director; Takasaki Film Festival
- Best Japanese Movie; The Association of Movie Viewing Groups
- Movie Award; The 39th Mainichi Art Award
- Best Director; Tokyo Sports Movie Award
- Nihon Keizai Shinbun Award for Excellency; Nikkei Awards for Excellent Products/Service (details)
- Theater Division Award; Asahi Digital Entertainment Award
- MMCA Special Award; Multimedia Grand Prix 1997
- Best Director and Yujiro Ishihara Award; Nikkan Sports Film Award
- Special Achievement Award; The Movie's Day
- Special Award; Hochi Film Award
- Special Award; Blue Ribbon Awards
- Special Award; Osaka Film Festival
- Special Award; Elandore Award
- Cultural Award; Fumiko Yamaji Award
- Grand Prize and Special Achievement Award; Golden Gross Award
- First Place, best films of the year; The 26th "Pia Ten"
- First Place; Japan Movie Pen Club, 1997 Best 5 Japanese Movies
- First Place; 1997 Kinema Junpo Japanese Movies Best 10 (Readers' Choice)
- Second Place; 1997 Kinema Junpo Japanese Movies Best 10 (Critics' Choice)
- Best Director; 1997 Kinema Junpo Japanese Movies (Readers' Choice)
- First Place; Best Comicker's Award
- First Place; CineFront Readers' Choice
- Nagaharu Yodogawa Award; RoadShow
- Best Composer and Best Album Production; 39th Japan Record Award
- Excellent Award; Yomiuri Award for Film/Theater Advertisement
Soundtrack
Main article: Princess Mononoke: Music from the Motion PictureReferences
- ^ Critics' Picks: 'Princess Mononoke' - NYTimes.com/Video, A. O. Scott reviews 'Princess Mononoke,' Hayao Miyazaki's anime masterpiece.
- ^ Roger Ebert. "Roger Ebert's Top Ten Lists 1967-2006". http://alumnus.caltech.edu/~ejohnson/critics/ebert.html. Retrieved 2007-12-22.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (1999-10-24). "Director Miyazaki draws American attention". Chicago Sun-Times. http://www.industrycentral.net/director_interviews/HM01.HTM. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
- ^ a b Clements, Jonathan; McCarthy, Helen (2006) (in English). The Anime Encyclopedia. California: Stone Bridge Press. ISBN 1-933330-10-4.
- ^ a b Toshio Uratani (2004). Princess Mononoke: Making of a Masterpiece (Documentary). Japan: Buena Vista Home Entertainment.
- ^ "The Animation Process". Official film site. http://www.princess-mononoke.com/html/production/animation/01.html.
- ^ "Transcript on Miyazaki interview". Official film site. http://www.princess-mononoke.com/html/chats/dp_991104_transcript.html.
- ^ "Mononoke DVD Website". Disney. http://disney.go.com/disneyvideos/animatedfilms/studioghibli/princessnews.html.
- ^ a b "Wettbewerb/In Competition". Moving Pictures, Berlinale Extra (Berlin): 32. 11–22 February 1998.
- ^ Movie-Vault.com
- ^ Articles about Mononoke Hime
- ^ a b c "Miyazaki on Mononoke-hime". Nausicaa.net. http://www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/interviews/m_on_mh.html. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ http://www.english.ufl.edu/imagetext/archives/v5_2/leavey/
- ^ "http://loca.ash.jp/info/1997/s1997_mononoke.htm" (in Japanese). http://loca.ash.jp/info/1997/s1997_mononoke.htm.
- ^ Brooks, Xan (September 14, 2005). "A god among animators". London: The Guardian. http://film.guardian.co.uk/interview/interviewpages/0,6737,1569689,00.html. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
- ^ "Video List: Mononoke Hime". nausicaa.net. http://www.nausicaa.net/miyazaki/video/mh/. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
- ^ "Kako haikyū shūnyū jōi sakuhin 1997-nen" (in Japanese). Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan. http://www.eiren.org/toukei/1997.html. Retrieved 16 February 2011.
- ^ Leonard Klady review
- ^ Roger Ebert & The Movies review
- ^ Roger Ebert's print review
- ^ Blackwelder, Rob. "Lost in the Translation". SPLICEDwire. http://splicedwire.com/99reviews/mononoke.html. Retrieved 2006-10-08. "Leaden English dialogue from miscast voice talent diminishes the power of 'Mononoke'"
- ^ Fortier, Marc. "Princess Mononoke (1997)". Reel Review Critics Roundup. Reel.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. http://web.archive.org/web/20070929090215/http://www.reel.com/movie.asp?MID=46143&Tab=reviews&buy=open&CID=13#tabs. Retrieved 2006-10-08. "Thanks to some savvy casting choices, Mononoke's voice crew realizes one of the best English dubs in the history of imported anime."
- ^ Bertschy, Zac (2002-08-22). "Spirited Away: English Language Analysis". Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/feature.php?id=20. Retrieved 2006-10-08. "I personally felt that Miramax’s dub of Princess Mononoke was well-done. Probably the best dub I’ve ever seen. Spirited Away follows in that tradition."
- ^ "Princess Mononoke (Mononoke-hime)". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/princess_mononoke/. Retrieved 2011-06-18.
- ^ "The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time". Empireonline.com. http://www.empireonline.com/500/3.asp. Retrieved 2010-06-14.
- ^ http://www.timeout.com/film/features/show-feature/8838/
- ^ "Anime Radar: News". Animerica (San Francisco, California: Viz Media) 9 (2): 32. March 2001. ISSN 1067-0831. OCLC 27130932.
Further reading
- Napier, Susan J. (2005-11-24) [2001-04-21]. "Princess Mononoke: Fantasy, the Feminine and the Myth of Progress". Anime from Akira to Howl's Moving Castle: Experiencing Contemporary Japanese Animation (2nd ed.). New York, New York: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 231–248. ISBN 978-1403970510.
External links
- Princess Mononoke Production Diary at Studio Ghibli (Japanese)
- Mononoke-hime at the Internet Movie Database
- Mononoke Hime at the Big Cartoon DataBase
- Princess Mononoke at AllRovi
- Princess Mononoke at Box Office Mojo
- Princess Mononoke at Rotten Tomatoes
- Princess Mononoke (anime) at Anime News Network's Encyclopedia
- Neil Gaiman on writing the English-language script
- Animerica review
Japan Academy Prize for Best Film The Yellow Handkerchief (1978) · The Incident (1979) · Vengeance Is Mine (1980) · Zigeunerweisen (1981) · Station (1982) · Fall Guy (1983) · The Ballad of Narayama (1984) · The Funeral (1985) · Gray Sunset (1986) · House on Fire (1987) · A Taxing Woman (1988) · The Silk Road (1989) · Black Rain (1990) · Childhood Days (1991) · My Sons (1992) · Sumo Do, Sumo Don't (1993) · A Class to Remember (1994) · Crest of Betrayal (1995) · A Last Note (1996) · Shall We Dance? (1997) · Princess Mononoke (1998) · Begging for Love (1999) · Poppoya (2000) · After the Rain (2001) · Spirited Away (2002) · The Twilight Samurai (2003) · When the Last Sword Is Drawn (2004) · Half a Confession (2005) · Always Sanchōme no Yūhi (2006) · Hula Girls (2007) · Tokyo Tower: Mom and Me, and Sometimes Dad (2008) · Departures (2009) · Shizumanu Taiyō (2010) · Confessions (2011)
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Kiku to Isamu (1959)1960–1979 Her Brother (1960) · A Soldier's Prayer (1961) · Harakiri (1962) · High and Low (1963) · Woman in the Dunes (1964) · Red Beard (1965) · Shiroi Kyotō (1966) · Samurai Rebellion (1967) · The Profound Desire of the Gods (1968) · Double Suicide (1969) · Kazoku (1970) · Silence (1971) · Shinobu Kawa (1972) · Tsugaru Folk Song (1973) · Castle of Sand (1974) · The Fossil (1975) · Fumō Chitai (1976) · The Yellow Handkerchief (1977) · The Incident (1978) ·
Ah! Nomugi Toge (1979)1980–2009 Kagemusha (1980) · Muddy River (1981) · Fall Guy (1982) · Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence (1983) · W's Tragedy (1984) · Ran (1985) · The Sea and Poison (1986) · A Taxing Woman (1987) · My Neighbor Totoro (1988) · Black Rain (1989) · Childhood Days (1990) · My Sons (1991) · Sumo Do, Sumo Don't (1992) · All Under the Moon (1993) · A Dedicated Life (1994) · A Last Note (1995) · Shall We Dance? (1996) · Princess Mononoke (1997) · Begging for Love (1998) · Poppoya (1999) · Face (2000) · Spirited Away (2001) · The Twilight Samurai (2002) · Akame 48 Waterfalls (2003) · Blood and Bones (2004) · Break Through! (2005) · Sway (2006) · I Just Didn't Do It (2007) · Departures (2008) · Shizumanu Taiyō (2009) · Villain (2010)
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Hayao Miyazaki Styles and themes Films directed Feature The Castle of Cagliostro · Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind · Castle in the Sky · My Neighbor Totoro · Kiki's Delivery Service · Porco Rosso · Princess Mononoke · Spirited Away · Howl's Moving Castle · PonyoShort On Your Mark · Kujiratori · Koro no Daisanpo · Kūsō no Sora Tobu Kikaitachi · Looking for a Home · Hoshi o Katta Hi · Mizugumo Monmon · Pandane to tamago himeFilms written TV and OVA directed Comics written Studio Ghibli Feature films Castle in the Sky · My Neighbor Totoro · Grave of the Fireflies · Kiki's Delivery Service · Only Yesterday · Porco Rosso · Pom Poko · Whisper of the Heart · Princess Mononoke · My Neighbors the Yamadas · Spirited Away · The Cat Returns · Howl's Moving Castle · Tales from Earthsea · Ponyo · The Secret World of Arrietty · From up on Poppy HillShort films Nandarō · On Your Mark · Ghiblies · Ghiblies Episode 2 · Imaginary Flying Machines · Mei and the Kittenbus · The Whale Hunt · Looking for a Home · The Day I Harvested a Planet · The Night of Taneyamagahara · Water Spider Monmon · Iblard Jikan · Mr. Dough and the Egg PrincessOther productions Ocean Waves · Shiki-Jitsu · Satorare (Tribute to a Sad Genius) · Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence · Ni no KuniPeople Related articles Cinema of Japan Actors · Awards · Directors (list) · Cinematographers · Composers · Editors · Festivals · Producers · Screenwriters Genres Gendai-geki · Jidaigeki · Pink film · Samurai cinema · Shomin-geki · Tendency film · Yakuza film (Gokudō)Films
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