You are welcome to look at the talkback but please consider that this article is over 11 years old before posting.
Forum - View topicNEWS: Miyazaki's The Wind Rises to Open in U.S. in February With Dub & Subs
Goto page 1, 2, 3, 4 Next Note: this is the discussion thread for this article |
Author | Message | ||
---|---|---|---|
Kougeru
Posts: 5588 |
|
||
Great news! I'll probably watch it dubbed so I can watch it with some less-otaku friends
|
|||
GATSU
Posts: 15572 |
|
||
I'll try to catch the L.A. November screening, even though I'm not fond of driving to the Landmark, and it's possible most of the shows could be sold out.
|
|||
firedragon54738
Posts: 3113 Location: wisconsin |
|
||
I would like to watch this subbed
|
|||
kazenoyume
Posts: 425 |
|
||
Last time a Miyazaki film came out over here (Ponyo) Disney didn't really do much to get it in the running for the Oscars. It wasn't even nominated, which I did consider a shame. It would not have had a chance even with a strong marketing push though, with Up being an absolute LOCK on the award (and deservedly so) and with the fact that it's considered by many to be one of Miyazaki's weaker films.
But this year I think Disney can really push for a nomination and very possibly win. It's Miyazaki's swan song, and Disney doesn't have any of their own massive critical darlings in the running like they have before (Monsters University was great, but it's far, far from a lock, and although Frozen sounds fun I don't anticipate it being one either), so I think they might be more willing to really gun for it. Anyway, I'm super excited to see it! |
|||
mdo7
Posts: 6397 Location: Katy, Texas, USA |
|
||
Interesting, can't wait to hear the announcement for the dub cast.
|
|||
GATSU
Posts: 15572 |
|
||
kaze: I liked Ponyo, but Miyazaki's already got his with Spirited Away. The only thing left is to give him one of those honorary Oscars. Otherwise, having him go at it again is unfair to the competition. It's like when Di$ney, Suxar and Derativeworks rig the Best Animated Film awards in their favor with sequels, and then shut out indie animators in the shorts categories. So, I'm rooting for Momo, because it's better than Wolf Children. And I'm hoping Kick-Heart being handled by someone who isn't clueless at promoting anime at awards shows will help.
|
|||
Splitter
Posts: 1276 Location: Knockin' on Heaven's Door |
|
||
Except they have never done this in the history of the Best Animated Feature award. That said, Miyazaki would stand a great chance this year because most of the animated films this year have been mediocre IP continuations or just not very good in general. When the best animated movie of the year is "Monsters University", that's the kind of year animation is having overall >_> |
|||
Juno016
Posts: 2428 |
|
||
Having seen it myself, it's not the kind of film that would appeal to a wide audience. I absolutely loved it, but the film itself doesn't have a real direction or complete message behind it like his other films. That makes its finer moments stand out to me, but I don't see this being award-winning material. Especially in Japanese, with Anno's atrocious voice acting. Still, having it at least nominated would be nice. |
|||
GATSU
Posts: 15572 |
|
||
Splitter:
So how many years did we not get a Disney, Pixar or DWA pic in the nominee slot, again? And while you could argue Wallace and Gromitt: Curse of the Were-Rabbit is an Aardman pic, guess who distributed it? I'll concede that the shorts category was a little more egalitarian to small-timers; but did Di$ney really need both Brave and Paperman to win that year? |
|||
walw6pK4Alo
Posts: 9322 |
|
||
No, and Brave shouldn't have won regardless. Frankenweenie and ParaNorman were both stronger films, and both stop motion puppetry to boot.
|
|||
GATSU
Posts: 15572 |
|
||
walw: Not to mention that Otomo's Combustible was robbed of a Best Animated Short nom.
|
|||
musashi1600
Posts: 198 Location: Hawaii |
|
||
And if you don't want to wait until November, you could buy a plane ticket to Honolulu and watch it in about a month. |
|||
kazenoyume
Posts: 425 |
|
||
Brave did deserve its win, but that's a discussion for another day. Perception by many of that specific film is... problematic, to say the least.
That being said Gatsu sounds like one of those weeaboos that refuses to acknowledge that anyone but Wonderland Japan can make quality animated films. You accused those three companies of pushing sequels into victory but only one sequel has ever even won the best animated feature Oscar, and that was Toy Story 3. On to short films, Pixar has won three times (but the first time was in 1988 when they were an indie company), Dreamworks has never won, and Disney won last year yes, but after a drought of no wins spanning back to 1969. Small company and independent shorts win almost every year. |
|||
Gilles Poitras
Posts: 480 Location: Oakland California |
|
||
If it gets past the nomination committee it will be a first. A large number of anime that were not kids' films have been submitted in the past and none have made it on the ballot. Miyazaki just may, hopefully it helps expand the diversity on what has been kids' feature dominated. |
|||
bravetailor
Posts: 817 |
|
||
Regarding last year's mainstream animated films, Wreck It Ralph has gained in stature since its theatrical release and Brave's has diminished considerably. I personally think Brave was just mediocre, but then again, Pixar's been kind of stale since Toy Story 3. And even Toy Story 3 reused a lot of tired Pixar elements, enjoyable still as it was.
Time usually tells how much a film really deserved its win. A lot of people thought Dances With Wolves really was the best picture back in 1991. Who talks about that film with the same esteem now? Very few. Certainly not on the same level as Goodfellas, which is referenced positively very frequently today. Still, opinions are opinions. I happen to think Ponyo is a top 3 Miyazaki film (SHOCK) but I have to settle for the fact that a film's stature and reputation is decided largely democratically and I'm simply in the minority. With this in mind, I would say that Brave did not deserve to win, no matter how much a few people today still think it did. If The Wind Rises is considered a good enough film, it may be able to beat the weak competition. If it gets less than 80% positive reviews, it could muddy the waters a bit. I don't think sentimentality will play a role. Many great directors and actors/actresses did not get awards for their swan songs. |
|||
All times are GMT - 5 Hours |
||
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2005 phpBB Group