Hayao Miyazaki: Laymen only cry when they watch "Kaguya-hime".

Ghibli's Toshio Suzuki said at the "Princess Mononoke" BD release commemorative party that Miyazaki would draw manga after his retirement, and about "The Tale of Kaguyahime", Miyazaki said that "only laymen cry when they see it", but he actually likes it after watching it......

At the commemorative event for the release of Princess Mononoke BD held on December 2, Toshio Suzuki, a Ghibli producer, said, "Hayao Miyazaki is drawing a manga for a model magazine that feels like a period drama after retiring, and he will draw it in more detail than before." ”

The reporter asked Miyazaki if he had watched "The Tale of Kaguyahime", and Suzuki said: "After watching "The Tale of Kaguyahime", many people were moved to tears, and many people in Ghibli were also moved to tears. Miyazaki's expression was complicated. ”

Allegedly, after leaving the screening room, Hayao Miyazaki angrily said to Seiji Okuda of Nippon TV who was crying, "Okuda, what are you crying about." Only the layman who cries when he watches this movie! ”

"I've known him for a long time, but I don't know what he means, so what exactly is a professional? I've seen Miya-san every day since then, but he hasn't said anything about Kaguya-hime ever since. ”

But "the staff knows who is most moved after watching "The Tale of Kaguyahime", and this person is alluding to Hayao Miyazaki himself.

Another interesting fact about "The Tale of Kaguyahime" is that animator Taiki Nishimura received an extra-long email saying that "Madoka Magi" is a mature work that has reached the apex of animation, and "The Tale of Kaguyahime" is too badly drawn compared to it, and Ghibli actually made such a casual thing public, and it should be made out of business. Nishimura Taiki said that he didn't know how to look at it to feel that "The Tale of Kaguyahime" was very casual and badly drawn, and it may be that he didn't go to the movie at all.

The animated film "The Tale of Kaguyahime" is the first work directed by director Isao Takahata after 14 years after "My Neighbor Yamada-kun" in 1999, which took 8 years and cost 5 billion yen (about 300 million yuan) to produce Zuò, which is a super masterpiece of about 2 hours and 17 minutes. Based on the most familiar Japanese "Kaguyahime", the work depicts the "heart" of the characters, and uses "The Tale of Taketori" as a model to show the world the "hidden truth" side of Kaguya's story. In an interview with Toshio Suzuki, a Ghibli maker, Toshio Suzuki said that the watercolor style of "The Tale of Kaguyahime" is very special, and that it is not only the desire of Takahata's supervisor to adopt this style, but even Miyazaki himself has expressed his desire to try this "sketch style" form, and this style is not made by Ghibli staff, but is presented by other studios, and he also points out that "this work is the future of animation".