With all the expected focus on personal drama next
Mr. Miyazaki film probably will have, could we say in the future that he has abandoned himself to his own pessimistic vision (
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2L0YgdIpXas&feature=player_detailpage#t=335s)? Will he freed himself from his own restraints and express something else now? Or will this movie end on a high (and full of hope) note?
You know, I was thinking about that and... maybe the
nostalgia itself plays a more important role on this than anything else. From what people have commented about
The Wind Rises graphic novel, it is a quite a light work more chronicle of
Jirō Horikoshi's inventive processess and focused on the actual historical records of his labors. The way a
Mr. Caproni insert makes occasional technical clarifications, the critical reviews of other related advancements in the same era that are featured here simultaneously to educate the reader... all of these make the work closer to his other 'one-shots' and serializations with anthropomorphized pig impersonations, made when he was mainly interested in being educational on historic events related to a hobby present on
Model Graphix magazine, particularly.
What we have seen about his vision of that time period he lived so close in (I would consider
Porco Rosso and
My Neighbor Totoro examples of this) has been above all the work of an optimist fantasista, in spite of his mentioned pessimism, but the newly introduced component that is
Tatsuo Hori's novel on the setting (and other ideas
Mr. Miyazaki could have had about the adaptation of his own graphic novel) can change everything about this new project. However, given the original nature of the work this is based in, I am more inclined to believe in a not too heavy load of dramatism on the new film.
Anyway, leaving unimportant speculation aside, have some real news not posted here yet:
Latest News - GhibliWiki
http://www.nausicaa.net/wiki/Latest_News#Kaze_Tachinu_Details_Extravaganza
Quite interesting information, collected with the help of omnipresent
T. Ishikawa, specially the info from the announcement conference:
Latest News - GhibliWiki --LLin 03:48 said:
Twelve notes from the press conference:
1. Both films will be released on the same day, and same scale, but separately. No double-feature like with Totoro and Grave of the Fireflies.
2. Studio Ghibli was going to release Kaguya-hime earlier then Kaze Tachinu at first, but it will be released on the same day due to production delays.
3. Both films run times will be about 125 minutes
4. Toshio Suzuki revealed that Miyazaki "quivered with excitement" when he heard about the simultaneous release.
5. Kaze Tachinu shows a love story that adopted Tatsuo Hori's Kaze Tachinu and the life of Horikoshi as an engineer.
6. Kaze Tachinu begins with a 10 year old Jiro Horiko and runs through when the 42 years old sees his Zero fighter fly.
7. Miyazaki has a profound knowledge about war. He thought what happened if he let Tatsuo Hori's love story dock with the story of the life of the person who designed the Zero fighter.
8. Miyazaki was born in Showa 16 (1941) so he cannot avoid the war. His generation likes fighters and tanks but Japan lost the war and his youth was a time of pacifism. Miyazaki has lived in the contradiction. Weapons and pacifism. Miyazaki told Suzuki that he would like to clarify why a human being like him was born in the film.
9. Kaguya-hime was elaborated in a plan in 2005, it was a 30 minutes short film at first.
10. Toshio Suzuki expressed about the script of Kaguya-hime, "if Alpine Girl Heidi was set in Japan and made, it would be like this."
11. Voice recording work of Kahiya-hime is already finished. Kaguya-hime adopts the pre-recording/post-animating style not common at Studio Ghibli. Takahata told Suzuki, "this may possibly become my best film."
12. Studio Ghibli formally decided to make "Hikouki-Gumo" as the theme song for Kaze Tachinu.
http://www.nausicaa.net/wiki/Latest_News#Kaze_Tachinu_Details_Extravaganza