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204 pages, Paperback
First published April 30, 2015
Hayao Miyazaki has gained worldwide recognition as a leading figure in the history of animation, alongside Walt Disney, Milt Kahl, Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, Yuri Norstein, and John Lasseter. In both his films and writings, Miyazaki invites us to reflect on the unexamined beliefs that govern our lives. His eclectic body of work addresses compelling philosophical and political questions and demands critical attention. This study examines his views on contemporary culture and economics from a broad spectrum of perspectives, from Zen and classical philosophy and Romanticism, to existentialism, critical theory, poststructuralism and psychoanalytic theory.
The key words in the chapter headings used in this study—time, space, vision, the courage to smile—are necessary demarcators of specific aspects of Miyazaki's thought. However, their relative arbitrariness cannot be denied. Indeed, the director's world picture is distinguished throughout by such fluidity, and such a passion of unrelenting metamorphosis, as to be by and large unsympathetic to demarcations. In Miyazaki's cosmos, time and space coalesce in a continuum of Einsteinian resonance.
"...the idea that Marco's (Porco's) hybrid configuration could ever inspire protective instincts in the viewer is just risible. If anything, Miyazaki seems to have deliberately aimed to make the character's appearance somewhat offputting.... Porco Rosso's (anti)hero is rendered disturbing by his sheer alterity. His perturbing difference - and attendant repellence - is that of the grotesque figures displayed upon the floats that are paraded through many towns at festival or carnival time."
While Cavallaro made good points about Marco's curse originating from his war-time survivor's guilt and feeling undeserving of happiness, the analysis of his repellency misses the mark both in the audience's perception of Porco's cursed form and its effects on other characters.
"Porco Rosso stages Miyazaki's work ethics at some length in the sequences devoted to the repair of the protagonist's plane. All of the workers are shown to savor their input regardless of how humble their tasks may seem. Even the women who do not participate in a direct way in the restoration project appear to take pleasure and pride from the preparation and dispensing of meals for the building team, in the knowledge that they are contributing their natural skills to the venture, and performing their time-honored art to the best of their ability."