The great
Hayao Miyazaki has announced his retirement from directing animated films with
his Studio Ghibli a number of times, though he has often brought himself back
to make just one more film. But now, it is not just the great man himself that
is announcing closing for business, it is the Studio as a whole.
Directed by
one of the younger of six directors to have worked under the Studio Ghibli
name, Hiromasa Yonebayashi, 'When Marnie was there' brings an end to three
decades worth of anime, starting with 'Laputa: Castle in the Sky'. This film
already, therefore, has a lot resting on its shoulders.
Yonebayashi
has worked on numerous Ghibli films in various animation roles, though his only
previous film as a director with the Studio was 'Arrietty': not perhaps their
strongest work. Like 'Arrietty' before it - and indeed other Ghibli films -
'When Marnie was there' is based on a British children's novel. The flat,
isolated land of Norfolk has been replaced for the mountainous, isolated land
of Hokkaido, with young, moody Anna, suffering from asthma, leaves her foster
mother in Sapporo to stay with relatives in a small village from some much
needed R and R.
Troubled at
home, Anna's troubles don't particularly ease, failing to fit in, lost in her
imagination and sketch pad. Quickly she becomes fascinated by the 'Marsh House',
an old mansion left in a state of disrepair. Becoming an obsession, she begins
to imagine Marnie, the former daughter of the house many moons ago. Forming a
bond with her imaginary companion, Anna begins to come to terms with her own
situation at home.
The film can
be divided into three distinct sections for me: To start, as ever with a Ghibli
film, the attention to detail is impeccable, with every pixel of the screen
thoughtfully considered, making the animation as true to life as possible. It's
once we move toward the film's middle that the level of visual detail starts to
decrease a little as the storyline develops. This is where we hit the film's
weakest point. As it's a Ghibli film, many might see this as magical and moving
in a coming-of-age tale, though for me 'When Marnie was there' gets far too
soppy, borderline lesbian and a little bit of a bore. Luckily, as the film
draws to a conclusion, it is rescued somewhat as the storyline is rounded off.
Up until the
new millennium and 'Spirited Away', the direction of Ghibli films was tackled
by-and-large by founders Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata. Since then, however,
younger directors have, at times, taken the reigns, leaving the films, while on
the whole satisfying, a little more bumpy and inconsistent.
But with the
two founders now both old men, well deserving of the title 'retired', rather
than letting the Studio slip into the hands of others, perhaps calling it a day
is called for.
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