And the "style" of Mononoke or Tomoro carries over, pleasantly. Except for the bits of "nice" landscape, which tend to be a bit garish and sickly. The "henchmen" are good, and the bombers, and the castle. Visually I mean.
The story is only semi-coherent; treat it as mood-music rather than a structured narrative (where does Markl come from? Why did the Witch show up in a hat shop? Why does Howl want a moving castle in the first place? And so on).
Apparently it is anti-war, but that's a pretty cheap sentiment.
I did find resonance in the bit where the young girl, having become old, finds that what she really wants to do is sit quietly by the side of the lake.
No comments:
Post a Comment