{"id":6917,"date":"2011-08-18T09:00:43","date_gmt":"2011-08-18T08:00:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6917"},"modified":"2013-05-31T16:22:19","modified_gmt":"2013-05-31T15:22:19","slug":"at-the-movies-arrietty-or-markgraf-loves-studio-ghibli-forever-what-a-surprise","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/08\/18\/at-the-movies-arrietty-or-markgraf-loves-studio-ghibli-forever-what-a-surprise\/","title":{"rendered":"At The Movies: Arrietty, or Markgraf Loves Studio Ghibli Forever What A Surprise"},"content":{"rendered":"
I’ve just been to see Arrietty<\/strong><\/a>, people. Like, literally just this minute got back
in after the 2.3 mile (I checked on Google maps) schlep from my favourite
cinema. I’m hot and I’m sweaty and I’m tired. Better make
this review a bloody good one.<\/p>\n
<\/a>So,
Arrietty<\/strong> is an adaptation of
Mary Norton’s<\/strong> childhood-favourite series (and
don’t forget the films<\/a>!)
The Borrowers<\/strong><\/a>, which is about an ecologically
invalid subspecies of human beings that are inexplicably about five
inches tall or less and basically subsist off stolen goods and
services. This adaptation is by
Studio Fucking Ghibli<\/strong>, who also did my favourites Howl’s Moving Castle<\/strong><\/a> and Princess Mononoke<\/strong><\/a>. Oh, and not forgetting the
godlike Spirited Away<\/strong><\/a> and My Neighbour Totoro<\/strong><\/a>.<\/p>\n
I literally couldn’t love
Studio Ghibli<\/strong> films more if I tried. They
are a
tour de force<\/em> in animation, steadfastly
championing the 2D cel-shaded animation genre like
the 24-carat geniuses they are.
Pixar<\/strong> and
Disneamworks<\/strong> can’t touch them.
People are leaping frogs about Pixar producing
its first female protagonist!!<\/em> with the
(and rightly so) hugely anticipated Brave<\/strong><\/a> – but Studio
Ghibli have been writing fantastic,
inspirational female protagonists since they
first began with Sheeta in 1986’s Laputa: Castle in the Sky<\/strong><\/a>.
I mean, come on. While we’re
fannying about here in the West with
bloody
Sucker<\/a>
Punch<\/a><\/strong>
apparently making history with having so
many female protagonists, they’ve
made things like
Princess Mononoke<\/strong>, where not
only is the title girl a complete
badass, she’s also actually not
by-the-book squeaky blameless
sacrificial-lamb benevolent. She has
power and flaws and rage and potency
and – wait, this is a review of
Arrietty<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
Arrietty<\/strong> is the first
film to be directed by the
Studio’s newest induction
to directing,
Hiromasa
Yonebayashi<\/strong>, and
it’s absolutely
magnificent. I am slightly
ashamed to admit that, while I
read the first
Borrowers<\/strong> book
when I was a kid, I
can’t remember much
about it, other than
Arrietty being great fun and
very empathic as a main
character, and that I wanted
to know exactly how they
made their clothes. The film
does an awful lot for scale
fetishists like me (SMALL
VERSIONS OF BIG THINGS THAT
ARE JUST THE SAME!!!) and
explores in quite some
visual detail the things
that will change at that
level of minutiae – in
particular, surface tension
and the behaviour of
liquids. How they pour tea!
Is amazing! I squealed in
the cinema!<\/p>\n