What is it about Miyazaki's films that make them so magical?
>>153241727
The magic
Definitely the magic.
Well that would have to be the magic
>>153241727
The way it's narrated and presented is very traditional, like someone talking to their grandkids and telling a story that's been passed on since forever.
Lack of Jewish influence.
>>153241727
budget
Actually having a story.
Having no standards
>>153241727
They are relatable while being filled with fantastical things.
Cute lolis and magic.
>>153241727
Because it's actually a piece of work that's based on humanity itself, not what we desire.
>>153241727
It's just really imaginative, but once you look past that there's not too much to it. Most of his stories have a neutral character stumbling into a conflict between black and white or two grey entities. if its between good and evil good always wins, but if its grey then no one really wins and it's not really too clear what will happen next.
I personally prefer Takahata's work more now despite most of it being more mundane. He just has a much stronger focus on the characters, but that's really all he focuses on most of the time with story kind of taking a backseat.
>>153241727
Being told that they're magical long enough that you get gaslighted into believing it.
>>153241727
Haku!!!!
>>153245772
>gaslighted
gaslit
>>153245827
haku seems so out of place in this movie. his character design, the way he talks, everything about him feels like they shuffled in the script to an episode of naruto and just went with it
He doesn't only concentrate on backgrounds and he doesn't do the same romance story over and over again across multiple films.
>>153242375
He won an Oscar tho. Definitely in it with Jewish Hollywood.
>>153245481
sounds about right
>>153241727
>What is it about Miyazaki's films that make them so magical?
Parents are terrible people stuck in his/her burble ("Totoro dont exist!" "we should eat this because is free ! ")
Miyazaki's films are how children are slaves of fix parent mistakes