Blank Check with Griffin & David - The Boy and the Heron with J.D. Amato
Episode Date: December 10, 2023It took seven years for Hayao Miyazaki and the artists at Studio Ghibli to make THE BOY AND THE HERON. What better way to honor that lengthy process than to invite JD Amato back for another clockbusti...ng, context-loaded episode?! For a rather bit-free THREE-AND-A-HALF HOURS, we are diving into Miyazaki’s personal history, his creative process, the differing animation styles between the Ghibli greats, and the thematic implications of this beautiful new film. Because this is Blank Check, we’ve also got lots of thoughts on Robert Pattinson’s vocal performance, and a lot to say about some other, less-successful animated films released this year. This episode is sponsored by: Stamps.com (CODE: CHECK) Mubi (mubi.com/blankcheck) Masterclass (masterclass.com/check) Join our Patreon at patreon.com/blankcheck Follow us @blankcheckpod on Twitter and Instagram! Buy some real nerdy merch at shopblankcheckpod.myshopify.com or at teepublic.com/stores/blank-check
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Your podcast.
She's awaiting your rescue.
I'll be your guide.
Perfect.
That was never in doubt.
And what I think is really great is how they cast Watto to do the English dub.
Thank you.
Do you know who they actually cast?
You know who does the voice?
You were just listening to the trailer.
Do you know who that was doing the voice?
Well, that's what's so funny is I was watching the trailer and all these celebrity names come up and I'm like...
Which one?
I have no idea.
I saw the movie before they cast the dub.
And I was like, DeVito's just sitting by the phone, I assume.
Right?
Sure.
Who played the heron?
Take a guess from that cast list.
I saw it go by and I was like...
Just guess.
A celebrity?
Yeah.
A huge celebrity.
A-list Charlie Day. That would
make more sense. That would make more sense. Probably just because
he had to view it. Glenn Howard. Any name
you say is going to make more sense.
Someone who's got a real
froggy voice. Let's make it clear.
From listening to the dub trailer, he nails the voice,
right? He does a great job. The guy nails the voice.
It's the last guy you would think is
capable of doing that voice. I haven't seen the dub, but from the trailer it sounds like he did a great job nails the voice i mean the last guy you would think is capable of doing that i haven't seen the dub but from the trailer from the trailer sounds like okay i got it chris
pratt oh you don't know either no it's gonna blow your mind because on paper you're like it's kind
of a chris pratt where they're like why did you cast that guy but then of course the guy actually
he's not gonna do the voice professional gvitt. That would make more sense.
Until the wind rises.
Yeah.
That would make more sense.
Can we tell you?
Who?
Robert Pattinson.
No way.
That's Pattinson.
And he does it.
Bob?
Yeah, Bob.
Bobby.
Bobby P.
Wow.
Now, he did suck on like 10 vapes at once before every line reading.
Well, that makes sense.
You can hear it in the performance.
Wait, that honestly
makes me really like
Robert Pattinson.
Of course.
As it should.
As should most of his
career decisions
for the last 10 years.
But I'm just saying,
like, that's cool.
But they announce him
and everyone's like,
here's another fucking
Chris Pratt situation.
He's going to show up
and be like,
I'm the heron.
Or he'll do a weird voice,
but it won't be
the right weird voice.
And he clearly was like,
no, I'm going to copy
the voice,
the original voice.
Yeah, I'll do what
this guy's doing. I'll do that in English the uh real guy being masaki cool i love this movie i love this movie
this movie has no quotes page no and it has no tagline so the the tagline was like the new film
from hayo miyazaki the excitement when i did the waddle Voice opening was just because David had been verging on a breakdown as JD and I scrubbed through the trailer with captions on trying to find any line to work.
Well, because we, me, Griffin and Ben.
Yes.
We, Griffin, Ben and I.
Well said.
We saw the movie yesterday together.
We saw it together.
Obviously, we went
subs not dubs
and it's such
I don't even know
if you can see it
with dubs right now
you can
can you?
you can
Angelica has like
two
one or two show times
a day are dubs
the rest are subs
right
but the dubs are just
like a guy just comes
to the front of the screen
and just sort of
yells every line
it's Pattinson
he's there
Pattinson shows up
and does all the voices
yeah you all saw it together we saw it together and I think it's an overwhelming movie experience sort of yells every line. He's there. Patterson shows up and does all the voices. Yeah.
You all saw it together.
We saw it together.
And I think it's an overwhelming
movie experience,
personally.
And so,
there's lines that stick out,
but we could not be sure
that we had them verbatim.
No, of course not.
But JD and I were scrubbing
through on our phones
the trailer playing
at like five seconds apart
in a cycle.
And David truly,
JD said,
is this the moment
the podcast breaks up?
You got a lot to do today.
Yeah.
I don't want to talk about this.
This is easy, light.
This is always the latest
podcasting day of the year
for us,
a JD doubleheader.
If you're looking
at the cast list
and you're ranking it
by the American cast list.
Sure, by fit?
By, right,
fit for Heron.
Hamill is top.
Yeah. For like, who's doing the Heron voice. Hamill plays Grand Uncle. Sure. By fit? By, right, fit for Heron. Hamill is top. Yeah.
For like,
who's doing the Heron voice.
Hamill plays Grand Uncle.
Correct.
Which makes a ton of sense.
Willem Dafoe is second.
He plays the Pelican.
I would say Dafoe
actually makes
number one most sense.
But those two are at the top, right?
Then I would say
Bautista.
Right.
Who plays the Parrot King.
Which is perfect casting.
That makes total sense.
Great casting.
But, you know,
you could see him
busting out a Heron. Yeah. And he was the visual inspiration for the guy king. Which is perfect casting. That makes total sense. Great casting. But, you know, you could see him busting out a heron.
Yeah.
And he was the visual inspiration
for the guy inside.
Then Bale.
Yeah, Bale.
More known for her voices.
Now I'm going to
throw something at you.
I think Florence Pugh
is more
of a read for the heron
than Robert Pattinson.
The woman sounds like
she smoked a thousand cigarettes.
I love Pattinson
and Pattinson obviously has
tremendous range, but I've also
never heard him do a voice that in
any way approximates this.
Whereas Pugh makes vocal choices.
Pugh basically played the Heron in
Oppenheimer. She did. But I think that's
something that's interesting. What a hot fucking Heron.
I think, number one,
a thing that I've constantly
been reminded of in my career
is that people who love acting
love to do interesting things, right?
Yes.
And then also,
there is a,
this is something that I really want to get into
in talking about this movie,
is that there is a certain,
the Miyazaki bell rings
and people show up.
Yes.
Oh, yeah.
It's like hard to say no.
And this is final film.
It's almost rude to say no. You have big final film. It's almost rude to say no.
You have big names.
I mean, I was just looking the...
What was it?
They're big names in like one line parts in this dub
because people are like last chance.
Yes.
Dan Stevens and Tony Revolari and Mamadou Afi,
I think, play the like random other parakeets.
The chorus of the parakeets.
Right, right, right.
Like these are real actors.
Yes.
I can talk a little bit more about this
when we sort of get into things,
but I did a lot of subtextual work
to watch this movie.
I wanted this to be the full experience.
So I put in a lot of work.
It was happening sort of just anyways in my life.
It's not really something you do
for this podcast normally.
But you should show up
sunglasses on and go, what movie are we talking
about today? What is this?
Are we talking about what billionaires?
I don't watch movies. That's for
nerds. What are we
rewatchable-ing today? I can't believe
they let you ride the motorcycle
into the building. Into the studio.
What if I told you they didn't?
Wow, you're such a rebel.
I don't follow rules.
This guy's such a heron.
The heron voice,
you've nailed it,
is closest to
Dafoe as Green Goblin.
Yeah, sure.
In the realm of voices
that exist.
True.
Spider-Man!
I think Hamill has to be top
because he's actually
the master of a thousand voices.
But to get what I was going to say is I did an entire
Miyazaki rewatch before this film.
And read several books.
Yeah, that was happening before
you guys asked me to do this.
You read Starting Point and
Turning Point, which are books I
cite a lot on those episodes.
I also read Miyazaki World.
I don't know that one.
It's about a kid who gets sucked into a weird other dimension.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, I've seen this cover.
Yeah.
It's fine.
I mostly read it for the first part, which is more biographical.
I was more interested in that.
A lot of it is like thematic breakdowns of the films, which is interesting.
But I was more interested in sort of primary sourced biography stuff.
And then I was reading already stuff about Japanese cinema
and the history of Japanese cinema
and story stuff related to that
that I also want to talk about today.
But that is all to say,
this is the first time that I, in this rewatch,
I did all dubs.
Oh, interesting.
I'd never seen any of the dubs.
And so I did all of the dubs in chronological order.
Which do you think is the best dub?
You know, it's so interesting
because they have a lot of recurring cast.
The dub that I didn't like was Porco Rosso.
Oh, see, I mean, I just think Keaton's unbelievable.
I think it's such a weird...
I think it's so...
I've definitely heard that dub.
The movie has such a expressiveness
and such a fancy,
and Keaton's playing it so low
that it creates a weird friction to me.
Yeah.
I will say,
I think Howl's Moving Castle
actually is a really good dub.
Howl's dub is surprisingly good.
And the crystal casting.
Because Bale is Howl.
Bale is great, but also the crystal casting, you're like, oh, shit. And then Crystal Howl's dub is surprisingly good. And the Crystal Castinger. Bale is great,
but also the Crystal Castinger,
like, oh, shit.
And then Crystal nails it.
Crystal is so good.
You're so ready for that to get cloying,
and then it works.
I think all the dubs are very impressive.
Yes.
Like, I think they are very,
they do a good job with those.
Yeah, they really care.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, obviously,
excluding the now forgotten early dubs.
Right, yeah. I mean, I, excluding the now-forgotten early dubs.
Right, yeah.
I mean, I've listened to the Ponyo dub a million times
because I watch it almost every day.
But you're talking the Disney-era G-Kids
now acquired, right,
the second wave dubs.
They did them right.
I mean, here's the other thing
I like about the Pattinson thing.
It does kind of feel like,
and G-Kids wants to get the best cast they can yeah
I'm sure everyone's throwing themselves at this because it's the last chance to do a Miyazaki dub
what have you it does feel a little like Pattinson being like I'm a big enough star that they'll let
me do this and if I do it I ensure that it sounds like the character rather than anyone else coming
in and trying to put their own spin on it.
I like that idea. I hope that
that's where it came from. I like
the idea that he's in there protecting it.
I also could see a version of it where he's just like,
yeah, I want to just like,
I want to go, I want to do it. I've always
wanted to play a hero. I want to do it, like
for real. Yeah.
But I like the idea
that people are coming to protect this thing.
Totally.
I mean, I was going back and forth between subs and dubs when we were doing those episodes years ago.
Yeah.
And it is interesting to watch.
And I'll do this sometimes, too, with, like, the voiceover stuff I've done.
Now with streaming, you can toggle between different countries.
Yeah. you can toggle between different countries. And it's interesting to see like,
which people go,
my job is to do that characterization in English.
And which people go,
I was cast.
I'm doing my take on this.
Well, it's interesting.
I was watching the Wind Rises dub.
And there's a wide variance of the type of performance that people are giving.
Yes.
That is the strangest dub to me.
Yeah.
Well, that's also the one I think I...
It's set in Japan.
It's the weirdest one in a way.
Like, these are Japanese characters.
But then the Herzog performance is kind of astonishing.
Yes.
But then there's like,
what's his name from The Office?
Which one?
Krasinski.
Krasinski.
Fuck, I forgot that.
He's doing a lot more of a animation
he's doing like a
DreamWorks voice
yeah where he's like
well it's time for me
to go to work today
and I love
and then he'll be in
scenes with Joseph Gordon-Levitt
who's doing a very
like
realistic
like
you know
empathetic
performance
he's kind of
an actor
yeah
Gordon-Levitt's kind of
doing the Pattinson thing
of like
I place my stardom
in this spot to preserve
the way this character should be played.
That's also the dub where there was an article that
was, I think we talked about this
when we did the Totara episode, but like there
was an article that was about
it was lauding how
wonderful
it was that they were able to adapt
the script into English in a way that...
Actually, they adapted it to make it more appealing to an American audience.
And they were saying it in a positive way.
But then when they gave all the examples, they hurt my heart because it was taking these very
Miyazaki, very interesting lines
and turning them
into like
you know I've always
loved you
and I'm like
no the first thing
like even if it doesn't
culturally translate
like let it be that
so that there's some
mystery of
how this all connects
and what the meanings are
so we can sort of
glean the sort of
cultural reverberations
of it versus being like
nah you know
they're just saying
they love each other
isn't there like a big
90s Disney Renaissance guy
who oversaw all those adaptations for a while?
I don't know.
Not Don Hall, but someone like that.
I can't remember.
David, you seem so excited.
Well, I think we should introduce our podcast.
I'm worried that we're too, you know,
right, locked into this.
Two in the weeds already.
I'm Griffin.
Yeah, I'm David.
It's a podcast about filmography.
It's directors who have
massive success
early on in their careers
and are given a series
of blank checks
to make whatever crazy
passion projects they want.
And sometimes those checks clear
and sometimes they bounce.
Baby,
this is a mini-series
on the films
of Hayao Miyazaki
that was done four years ago
that we are now concluding
with his final film.
He says he's going to make another one.
Does he actually?
Yeah, and everyone says
that he'll continue making films
until he cannot.
Until he dies.
But do we think that is possible?
Anything is possible.
As Kevin Garnett once said,
anything is possible.
Anything is possible.
He's been just kind of up front about,
like, even though I've made this movie
that I know is very much
about a man's legacy
and what he leaves behind
and like saying goodbye.
Yeah, I'm fucking back
in the studio.
I've got lots of ideas.
Like, you know,
I'm Miyazaki.
Yeah, he's already...
What am I supposed to do?
There was another project
that was either going
to be that or this.
Okay.
And I think theoretically
it's like, oh,
now I'm going to start
working on that one.
His Alita battle.
He'll tinker away. Yeah. What was the other project? It's like, I think like the's like, oh, now I'm going to start working on that one. His Alita battle. He'll tinker away. What was the other
project? It's like, I think like
the earwig and the witch or something.
No, that got made. Right. His son
made that. Oh. That was the CGI
one that people did not like.
It's not very good. Because he was debating whether
to do that or this. And then he had his son
do that. That's a full Alita situation.
It's an Alita
situation? Yes. Go ahead. Cameron was developing Alita situation it's an Alita situation?
yes, where Cameron was
developing Alita and Avatar
and was like I don't know which one I'm going to do
it's one or the other and I'll do one and then immediately do the other
and then he did Avatar and he was like actually
Robert Rodriguez is going to do Alita
I'm trying to find the name
I forget what the other title is then, I apologize
it might be that though
maybe he's just in there and he's like I've always wanted to
do a remake of fucking you know night
moves that you know Gene Hackman
how great would that be exactly you know what I mean like
who knows what it is
I've really been looking to get in a live action
I'm done with animation
I've been looking to stream for this
introducing what your podcast I'm gonna do Thor 5
finally I got my foot
in the door
signed on to do fucking
Eternals 2. Yeah. We've heard
your feedback. You want the Thor
movies to be less goofy. Hayao Miyazaki
is making his live action debut.
J.D. Amato is our guest,
returning to the show. Thank you.
I'm very happy to be here. For what's basically
become your annual slots.
Yeah, in December, we try to
get a couple records in.
Yeah.
All at once.
No, I'm really excited.
It was an honor
that you guys asked me
to come back for this movie.
This was pinned
like six months ago,
I want to say.
When we were like,
oh, it's finally coming out.
And I went,
I agree.
Oh, we just,
we should have,
JD should come on a date.
All of this says
Lasseter and Doctor.
Everything I'm finding.
I think you're right
that there was like
a Don Hall type.
I'm trying to remember
who it is. Because it's a big figure in animation who had the attitude of think you're right that there was like a Don Hall type. I'm trying to remember who it is because it's a big figure
in animation who had the attitude
of what you're saying of just like,
I'm really excited and I take this seriously and I want
to do it well, but he put a little
too much of his own spin
on it, arguably.
But I do
love the Ponyo dub. I'm
used to it now. Very used to it.
I've seen the Spirited Away dub several times
I think because that was
yeah right
that might be it though
I'm not very familiar
with the other dubs
have I seen the Kiki dub?
we probably talked about
all of this in the episode
doesn't matter
I would like to see this dub
I'm intrigued
I'm excited to be here
I'm excited to talk Miyazaki
there's a lot to talk about with this movie.
Nah, this movie's fucking an inch deep.
Nothing going on with this one.
Also, I'll say it.
I've heard that the Totoro episode,
maybe people felt like there's too many bits.
I don't think so.
We're going to make this a bit light episode.
You, yesterday, said, perhaps on the record, this is bit free. No bits. I don't think so. We're going to make this a bit light episode. You, yesterday, said,
perhaps on the record,
this is bit free.
No bits.
Packaged as bit free.
No bits.
Stamp the label on it.
Well, maybe,
we'll squeeze maybe
a little bit in the end.
But listen, no, for all,
we're no,
truly, there's so much
that I want to talk about here.
Okay.
We saw this yesterday,
as you said,
in the basement of
Angelica. The Angelica
trains whipping around us on all sides.
Theater shaking.
The Angelica, of course, the downtown
theater in New York that is so
committed to providing a mediocre viewing experience.
They've done everything they can.
They do have good popcorn.
It's also a great way to watch a movie
because it's a very old theater. You descend escalators down and you see all of the they have the little um names of
the movies above the theater number it has that old-fashioned quality that's nice and they keep
the doors open until the film starts sometimes even after it starts yes but you can sort of see
people watching and you're like this is a place of cinema and i will say there was moments during
the film where i was like oh there's this sort of ominous rumble happening in them and you're like this is a place of cinema and I will say there was moments during the film where I was like
ooh there's this sort of ominous rumble
happening in them and I was like I had to remind myself
and you're like and then you hear someone saying like
this train is to Coney Island
sometimes it syncs up perfectly just to be clear the Angelica
a theater in a basement that also
features BDF
and M stops underneath Broadway Lafayette
station yeah but it's
MTA subway it feels like it's sandwiched in between two train tracks.
There'll be 5.1.
JD is right.
Yes.
And Angelica has 5.1.1.
The extra speaker is the train.
5.1.BDFM.
Sometimes you're watching a movie and there is this rumble and you're like, yeah, you know, that's part of the movie.
And then you're like, right, no, it's the subway.
The other thing is sometimes the train passes
and suddenly there's a stillness that feels profound.
Also profound.
Look, this is the kind of stuff Miyazaki probably wants you thinking about.
Absolutely.
The theater will briefly achieve a state of ma
when the train has left the station.
There's two questions I want to start with to open this discussion.
The first is, I would like to know
where everyone is at
with Miyazaki in their life.
And David and Ben and I
were talking about this before,
is that I re-listened
to a couple episodes of...
Which ones?
I don't remember which ones.
Jeez.
I guess they rocked.
What is this energy?
They were so good.
David's energy is unbelievable.
No, what episodes?
You don't remember.
I don't remember.
I think I...
Emily's episode.
Okay, she was on Castle in the Sky.
Castle in the Sky.
And then one or two others.
I forget which one.
Ehrlich, maybe?
Ehrlich was on Mononoke.
Mononoke.
No, Ehrlich was on Hell's Moving Castle.
I sort of have them on the background.
Griffin McElroy was on Mononoke.
I sort of have them on the background, so it's like they on Mononoke. I sort of have them on the background,
so it's like they're sort of ephemeral
in my mind a little bit.
Sure.
But one of the themes I picked up on,
so famously, it's been long since recorded
that David, early in our friendship,
referred to Griffin as I,
as dumb animation nerds.
Of course.
I believe it was the...
No, I did that on this podcast
because you
two were going on about whatever the fuck and i'll tell you what we're going on about
the use of 3d and core line oh my god david no no okay this is what it was wow this is what you're
gonna have to release an apology yep no i won't yes you will no i won't yes no i won't and we
already did this fucking discussion the last time you were on for
carline right because you always feel like you have to defend it i don't have to defend anything
but then on that episode yes who's the california raisins guy i was will vinton where you're like
will vinton i'm like i don't know who that is and the two of you are like will vinton and it's like
it's so hilarious leads into you being animatedream, motherfucker. Leads into you being animated.
A modern man.
So what a disrespectful way to refer to Will Vinton.
Who's the fucking California Raisin guy?
He's doing it again.
Oh, my God.
Anyway.
Oh, my God.
Some fucking guy named Will Vinton.
But it's just so funny.
Some clown with a mustache.
You guys dared call us animation dorks.
Anyway, I'm like, who's Will Vincent?
You guys are like, you're dumb animation nerds.
But then now in 2023, you're like, I don't know, the dumb raisin guy.
I didn't call him dumb.
I called you dumb.
Some dumb plasticity fool.
He's obviously a major talent.
Okay, but an interesting thing about our dumb animation nerd-dom sure griffin's a disney boy yeah
he grew up on the disney pixar yeah that's his meat and potatoes i'm less a miyazaki guy than
the two of you are yeah you're not a miyazaki i don't think you are a miyazaki guy no i'm not
because you're really not really seen hardly any of them before we did the pod before we did the
pod i had only seen Spirited Away
and Totoro. And I don't feel like they
touched your heart in quite the way.
Well, had they touched your heart, you would have gone
to the other ones.
No, I mean, Totoro I still
struggle with, although I owe it another
watch. Which is wild because I think it's like
the greatest animated film of all time. I just rewatched it
with my daughter. I can talk about me.
You talk about you. And then Spirited Away, I didn't like when I saw it of all time. I just rewatched it with my daughter. I can talk about me. You talk about you.
And then Spirited Away,
I didn't like when I saw it the first time because I was dumb,
unintelligent,
not a dumb animation nerd,
which would have helped me.
I wasn't approaching it from the right mind.
And then when we rewatched it for the show,
I loved it.
Right.
But I do think I still struggle with him in certain ways.
And there are films of his I wholeheartedly love.
And there are other films of his I do kind of fight to feel.
I'll also say, I mean, I think I had a big Japanese animation block for a long time.
A lot of it was just sensibility and style.
And I do think doing that series helped break that down a little bit.
think doing that series helped break that down a little bit.
But I also feel
like post that, I have gotten
more into some
other filmmakers than
perhaps Miyazaki speaks to me
specifically. I think that's
a fascinating place to be. And I think that's a really
interesting place to come to this movie with. But I think, I mean,
there is no part of me that questions
him being one of the most important artists in the medium
ever.
I mean,
I love Satoshi Kon.
Sure.
I'm going to butcher his name,
but the Suzume,
your name,
weathering with you
guy,
I love.
I mean,
that's like,
Shinkai.
Shinkai.
It's like a major
run for me.
And I've been watching
more shows and stuff,
but I mean,
it's not like,
I'm not to.
It's not your.
Yeah.
No,
but I think that's a really interesting place to come to because this movie is yeah i think there's a
lot of i think this movie works best when viewed through all of the context around it that built
up to this film well this is why i wanted to say three of us saw it together the two of you were
crying yes right the lights come up and both of you were like, I cried multiple times.
Me AF when I saw it as well.
Yes.
And I immediately was like,
I'm still trying to puzzle this out.
Yeah.
Not like I don't like this,
but I do feel like I struggled
to get my head around this movie,
which I felt with certain Miyazaki films
when we were watching them.
And some of them I've rewatched,
by the way, since the series.
Some of them I've not,
and I owe them rewatches.
That series was also happening
at a bad time in my life
that I think was reflected
somewhat in the episodes.
Well, yeah, I mean...
Well, you as well.
Yes.
Yeah, that's the...
I think I brought this up
on the cursed Talking the Walk last year,
and it didn't make it to the cut,
but I...
I think it did. I think it did make it to the cut. But I... I think it did.
I think it did make it to the cut.
I don't think it did.
I think it's important
because everyone listened to that episode.
That was a scripted episode
and we just read what was on the cut.
That episode was fictional, by the way.
But the Totoro episode was...
When we recorded it,
it was shortly after my sister
had passed away unexpectedly.
Yes.
And that movie means a lot to me
and I think it's such a pure depiction
of family and especially siblinghood yes yeah and so i in retrospect i'm like oh yeah of course
i wanted to engage more in bits and all that because like it was it was hard to it miyazaki
touches me in such a visceral way same and what i think is beautiful about him and i think can be hard especially for this
film in this film he's quoted as saying like i don't even really understand all of it right which
i think is a really beautiful thing is that this a lot of this is just um things that he's pulling
from within himself and if they touch you i think they really can touch you yeah which there were certainly moments that got to me. And I am not looking for like a metaphor codex. You know, it's not like I was sitting there being like, I can't crack this one onto the next. Yeah, right. And I also I've like come to understand the flow of his films being different than so much of what I watch and needing to process them in a different way and open yourself up and engage with them in a different way.
And some of them,
it does work for me and other ones I,
I,
without diminishing them feel like I haven't gotten there yet on that one.
Right.
And this definitely felt like one of those for me.
Uh,
I mean,
two things I kept on thinking about a lot while watching it.
Um,
I,
I think it is weirdly similar
to Wendell and Wilde
in an approach of guys
who were just like,
do I make another movie ever again?
This process takes like seven years
and it keeps on having
these stops and starts.
And Wendell and Wilde,
similar to this,
feels like a buffet line movie
where he just
keeps on putting
stuff on the plate
David your letterbox
log was
to this effect
that like the first
half of the movie
right
while I'm watching
you're like
you don't want to just
like maybe go back
to the table
eat some of this
and then maybe you can
go back for seconds
right
and it's like no
we're putting this on
we're putting this on
we're putting this on
can you resolve all of this
right Wendell Walt
a movie that like
overstimulates most people
and they just tap out
like 30 minutes in
and I think it's
kind of a messy masterpiece
but it does ultimately
work for me
I was watching this
getting overwhelmed
by like
how much it was
loading on
but
I think there's some
really interesting context
to when you understand
how the film was made
yes and what film was made.
Yes.
And what it was made that then answers some of the questions of that.
And I understand, admittedly, a small percentage of that.
And then talking after the movie, you filled in more of it.
And I've been excited to talk about it now today.
Yeah. The other thing I was thinking about just in terms of my struggles with Miyazaki sometimes,
I was thinking about just in terms of my struggles
with Miyazaki sometimes,
I think in a certain way,
philosophically,
the filmmaker,
I don't want to say philosophically,
but in their relationship
to their dialogue
with like humanity
and existence
and the world,
like the biggest concepts.
He is weirdly similar
to Werner Herzog for me.
Sure. Where it's like he's staring straight into the sun. There is like a very sober, like, this is what it is. I'm not mincing words, right?
And then Werner Herzog works on a much more literal level very often, although there are
obviously zags from that. And Miyazaki translates that mostly into feeling then, right? But they are about this, like, we cannot hide from this.
This is the conversation that we are in.
And Herzog, I find him weirdly relaxing,
even when he's directly staring at the things I find most upsetting in the world.
There's something about Miyazaki filtering that through sort of like dream language.
Right.
And obviously his films are very dreamlike,
where I sometimes find them too painful to deal with.
And it's similar to like Wind Rises,
which is an episode where I completely spiraled.
It is a movie I think is great,
but I was like, I cannot handle this.
I cannot handle this.
And this movie at times was like crystal clear to me
on an emotional level.
And I was like, this is hitting me really hard.
Other times I was really locked into just the beauty of what was happening. And other times I was like, I understand
what he's talking about here and I like need to leave this conversation. Right. I can just not
handle it. I'm too weak. It has the feeling of when I wake up in the morning and there's a dream
that doesn't make sense to me, but it was clearly poking at a bruise that is very raw for me.
And I'm like, I will get no resolution on this.
This is now just conjured up feelings
that cannot be resolved in my real life.
I have to poke the bruise.
Griffin, what if I told you
I will be your guy?
Well, this is what I'm waiting for.
Now, David, what is your relationship with Miyazaki?
I love Miyazaki's films very deeply.
I've seen them all many times.
Did you watch, were you exposed to them as a kid?
Or as an adult?
Oh, not at all.
I think it's almost certainly me seeing Spirited Away in theaters
when I'm a 16-year-old cineast.
And being like, this is my jam.
That was your first one?
I can't remember if it was that or...
I think it might have been, I might have seen one
but it, like probably on TV
like on tape or whatever.
And it didn't have quite the impact.
But I just,
as someone who is not an anime fan,
like never, never
got into it, apart from
Pokemon of course.
Gotta catch them all.
I'll just shout out a different Pokemon every week. Great. Every all. Shout out Diglett. Gotta catch them all. I'll just shout out
a different Pokemon
every week.
Great.
Every week that we do
this episode.
Yeah.
This is the new format
of the show
going into 24 by the way.
Yeah.
Pokemon recap
and Miyazaki
existential crises.
You do sound
kind of like the heron today.
I had a cold
and this is
and yesterday
I was talking so much because I was at the Critic today. I had a cold and this is and I think yesterday I was talking
so much because I was at the critic circle and I was yelling results to people because I'm the
counter. You're the counter? I am. I'm the counter. He gets results. I literally get results. Do you
wear like a barrister's wig? I wear a barrister's wig. No, I wouldn't wear a barrister's wig.
What are you talking about? Why would you? I don't know, because you take your job seriously?
Yeah, because you care about the
sanctity of the process. I imagine it's all of you
in an underground chasm
around a marble circular
table. You're in a barrister's
wig with an abacus.
And then people in cloaks hand
you pieces of sharp metal
that account for votes.
And you go, one vote for Killers of the Flower Moon.
It's that except instead of a chasm,
we're in a sort of meeting room at the Film Society Lincoln Center.
And instead of metal objects, we have pieces of paper
that people have scribbled things on.
But there is an abacus and you do wear a barrister's mask.
Jordan Hoffman brought an abacus one year as a joke
and then two minutes in was like, get this out of here.
You're surrounded with the skulls of past members of the order of course
Andrew Sarris looks at us
from a shelf his body has been
stuffed and mounted and then you decide
who wins the Oscars
right and then we keep saying that we're like
they shall win
what was I saying oh I love Miyazaki
obviously but the big I mean I love him youazaki, obviously. But the big, I mean, I love him.
I mean, you can listen to the past episodes.
The big thing for me.
You don't think we should?
I don't know.
You're clearly filled with regret.
I am not.
Much like a Miyazaki character.
No regrets.
Yeah.
But I have a daughter.
Yeah.
And one of the first things I would watch with her
when she was a little baby,
is there something on HBO Max or whatever it's called now.
Zaz Labs.
Max.
Zaz Labs House of Fun.
Max is the one to watch when you want to watch HBO.
What do you mean?
Right.
It's very easy to remember.
It's called Zax now.
The logo is his little glasses.
The logo is just that picture of him and Graydon Carter look like they're like two guys who just shot an elephant.
You know, they're like these white suits. At the con
party while the strike's happening.
Why didn't anyone show up?
I'm sorry. We can cut that out if it's going to affect
any future business for you. Me
making fun of Dan says.
I mean, it'll be okay. Yeah.
Thanks, Ben.
You guys, I haven't told you.
Ben's my manager now.
Ben's your manager and you guys are pitching Zazz Lab hard.
You're like, here's a great project for you to sink money in and then never air.
Tax break.
It's like a producer's scenario.
You're pitching Zazz Lab to Zazz Lab, right?
You're pitching Zazz Lab tonight.
Exactly.
People just haven't gotten to know you yet.
The only reason they'll like you Is they haven't heard you talk
David
Happy holidays
Oh thank you
See you later
Okay bye
Ding dong
Who's at the door
I don't know
You should probably go open it
Creak
Hello
Hello who's this
Don't you recognize me
Uh no
Can't see you
So dark
Sack Okay you got a sack My long robe Okay Don't you recognize me? Uh, no. Can't see you. So dark.
Sack.
Okay, you got a sack.
My long robe.
Okay.
My hat.
My jangling bells.
Uh-huh.
Wait, you're a cowboy?
I'm Stompus.
What is Stompus?
Well, we all know.
Oh, boy.
Everyone's laughing.
We all know. Good sign.
Stomper Claus.
No.
What?
Stomper Claus, who brings you stamps for Christmas.
And I'm the evil version of Stomper Claus.
My name is Stomper.
I'm sorry.
You are the evil version of a stamps.com promo character.
Have you not met him yet?
Am I sort of jumping ahead in line?
I was told that Stomper Claus had already done a bunch of.
The IP had some real footholds.
You're telling me that I'm riffing on a thing that was not established within the canon of the show?
I don't know. Did you do this and I wasn't here for it?
Me? I definitely have never met either of these guys.
This is all new to me.
What's your deal? I'm Stompis.
Okay, so you're kind of like the Krampus to Santa Claus is the idea.
I think Krampus is kind of the Stompus to me,
if that makes sense.
No, it doesn't.
Okay.
Okay, well,
what's up, Stompus?
Well, we all know that Stompaclaus.
We all know from Stompaclaus.
We know how he works.
He brings the good children,
the boys and girls
of the world
their own stamps.
He goes to the post office.
He picks them up.
He drops them off
in their stockings.
Yes.
That is not how Stumpist works.
Okay.
Stumpist allows you to print your own postage at home.
Oh, okay.
Much like stamps.com.
Right.
I also just,
I don't want to have to make the house calls.
Do you send anyone a free scale?
I send them the scale,
I send them the printer.
Okay, okay.
Yes.
And then I go,
you know,
you put whatever you want on there.
Maybe put me, my smiley face, me, Stompis.
Like, would you recommend maybe people use the stamps.com mobile app to take care of orders on the go?
Yeah, I should mention, I don't have a competing business.
You are advertising stamps.com.
Yeah, I'm not on payroll.
Like, I'm not an official, but I just, I endorse their product and I send it to children.
And you endorse the fact that stamps.com seamlessly connects with every major marketplace and shopping cart if you're selling products online.
Yeah, it makes my life a lot easier.
Okay.
And it's been indispensable for over a million businesses for 25 years.
Mine, one of them.
Okay.
Stamps Industries.
Let me tell you something.
Give your business the gift of stamps.com so your mailing and shipping is covered this holiday season.
Okay.
Sign up with promo code check for a special offer that includes a four-week trial plus free postage
and a digital scale
with no long-term commitments
or contracts.
Just go to stamps.com,
click the microphone
at the top of the page
and enter code CHECK.
I just wanted to say all that
because I feel like your thing
is so convoluted
it might mess with the live read.
Well, you're a paid sponsor.
You have copy.
I do not.
Right, exactly.
They do not pay me
to endorse their product.
Your lore is so confusing.
I just didn't want to really get in the middle of it.
No.
No.
Knock at the door.
Oh, oh, oh, Mary Stampmas.
Get out of here, you jerk.
Am I late?
Yeah, you're late.
Sure.
No.
You were supposed to queue up this guy.
Clearly. All right this guy. Clearly.
All right.
Bye.
Bye.
There's a thing on HBO Max
called like Miyazaki like backgrounds, essentially.
That's just like a montage of like landscapes
with set to very plaintive Joe Hisashi movie music
that I used to put on
just to chill my daughter out
when she was not really watching
narrative television, but you could just put on
pictures.
Something that I was reading about.
Something I loved.
That's really beautiful.
And something I was reading about was that
Miyazaki agreed to license all of his stuff
to the streamers to fund this movie.
Yes. Right.
Because this is the most expensive Japanese film I've ever made. But now, my daughter who licensed all of his stuff to the streamers to fund this movie. Right, right.
Because this is the most expensive Japanese film ever made.
Yeah.
But now, my daughter was Ponyo for Halloween.
Ponyo is the first movie she ever saw.
She's seen it a thousand times?
I mean, she's seen it so many times.
And she refers to every...
Now, any time...
Like, when we were...
We watched Totoro recently.
Yeah.
And the little boy in that
basically looks like the little boy in Ponyo.
And she was like,
Sosuke, that's Sosuke.
And I was like, it's not, but sure, that's Sosuke.
Go off.
Yeah, go off.
I still think Ponyo is the easiest for a little kid.
Because even Totoro is a little more emotionally intense.
And Totoro, the being,
he's cool, but he's scary.
He's like, yeah, he's kind of of intense I think Totoro has a lot of adult
POV of childhood whereas
Ponyo you're like living
in even just how
it's animated it's like it's
child brain and it's so energetic
and like you know filled with
like laughter and screaming and running
and hugging and things she understands
Ponyo loves ham
and of course he has my ultimate crush in it screaming and running and hugging and things she understands. Also, Ponyo loves ham. Ponyo loves ham. Yeah.
And, of course, he has my ultimate crush in it.
Mega babe, hottest woman in cinema ever.
Sosuke's mom.
Sosuke's mom.
You don't remember this?
She's super hot.
She's so hot.
Also, just this voice is a good David character.
TikTok montage of Sosuke's mom with some guy screaming.
And the number one. Batra 10,000.
You've been waiting for it.
The number one.
With your raspy voice,
you sound like a monster truck announcer.
Start your engines.
SoSka's mom.
SoSka's mom would do great
at a monster truck rally.
She drives like a demon.
Ladies and gentlemen, rev your engines.
The top five times when I cried during a Miyazaki film.
Coming in at number five.
This is Macho Man David Sims.
I cry.
You know what really stands up?
I cry at the end of Ponyo all the time.
And I've seen it so many times at this point.
I watch it with my daughter.
The end always gets me. It's so powerful. And it's not even one many times at this point. I watch it with my daughter. The end always gets me.
It's so powerful.
And it's not even one of his more emotional endings.
It's just so perfect.
Absolutely.
They kiss and then she turns into a girl.
Anyway, I saw this film at its premiere.
The world premiere of the, you know,
non-Japanese version.
I was watching it with subtitles, obviously.
But like the world premiere of this outside of Japan.
It had come out
in Japanese theaters already.
It came out in the summer in Japan.
And one of the coolest movies
of all time
with zero marketing.
Zero trailer
and just a poster
that's just a heron.
Yeah.
The eye.
Wasn't the poster
just the close-up of the eye,
basically?
It's like the heron in profile.
Oh, sure.
It's like, yeah.
And I saw it
at the Toronto International
Film Festival opening night. Usually the opening night movie there. Oh, sure. It's like, yeah. And I saw it at the Toronto International Film Festival opening night.
Usually the opening night movie there is kind of like a, you know, crappy crowd pleaser.
Sure.
This is the boy in the Heron.
We're all seated in the Princess of Wales.
Obviously, Miyazaki doesn't come.
He doesn't fucking know.
You know what?
So the...
He was busy seeing American fiction.
I think Toshio Suzuki came.
He may not have even come because he's kind of old at this point.
Like a producer came out. yeah and basically was like you know miyazaki-san is like so happy for you to
see this film and we hope that you enjoy it like we worked very hard on it thank you and goodbye
you know like that was yeah rather than the usual like all right let's bring up this guy plays jim
the fucker yeah he's got two great scenes and here he is, you know, like for like 20 minutes. Jim the fucker. What was that?
The Jim the fucker didn't win any.
The awards campaign has died this season on the Vine.
Maybe he can get a Sagnum, you know, maybe restart it.
Remind me who played Jim the fucker?
I'm not going to tell you.
Okay.
If you don't know, you don't deserve to know.
Okay.
David, had you stayed cold on any information coming out of Japan?
I knew nothing.
Okay.
Like, truly nothing.
Yeah.
But there wasn't much to know.
No.
Because they didn't release, like, four stills.
No, but that's what I'm saying.
Like, when it opened in Japan, there was a bit of a, like, well, now if you want to dig online, you can find it.
I could have gone to Reddit and found people basically in English saying like,
Hey,
I've seen the film.
I speak book languages.
I'm like,
here's what it's about or whatever.
I did not do that.
You were going in basically.
They had released four promotional stills.
And I think I had seen those once or twice.
Sure.
But that was it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I saw the film and I felt like Griffin initially of like,
like an overburdened waiter.
Right.
You know,
I don't know.
I want mozzarella sticks and spring rolls?
Actually, maybe I do.
You know, but yeah, being like,
I'm trying to keep track of all this information
so I can understand what's going on.
And then I started to worry like,
look, I think this is interesting
and very like stimulating,
but maybe this is going to be like a weird one.
He's not going to pull it together.
And then he pulled it together so devastatingly
well that I felt a
fool for ever having
doubted him in the
intervening to, you know, like just
then. You have still only seen it the
one time? No, I rewatched it.
Oh, okay. Okay. Okay. That was my question.
Yeah. And I'm going to see it again
at BAM next week with my friend
Rachel, who's desperate to get back on this podcast.
Makes fun of me a lot.
Rachel Sanders.
Well, then we'll have her back on.
All right.
Let's find a movie for her.
Boy in Heron 2.
She likes to make fun of me for not having her back on.
It's a bit we have.
Well, sounds funny.
Yeah, it is funny.
Was it a long time ago?
Terminator.
Wow.
Very long.
Whoa.
You're two.
First year of BC proper. Dang. One BC. Wow. Very long. Whoa. You're two. First year of BC proper.
Dang.
One BC.
Wow.
How did it take nine years to get to that joke?
It's all a joke.
David, I assume you're not going to try to take your daughter to this.
This is not one.
No.
She wouldn't care for this.
Yeah.
No, we've yet to go to a film and theater.
It's because she's too young.
Though we're getting close
And I wonder
Couldn't get through the crowd
She was dying to see it
I love the fire bodega
Claude
That fucking movie
It's gonna like win the Oscar this year or some bullshit
Not impossible
It's not impossible
This obviously could win
But there's a world where Elemental wins Yeah and we just fold it up Not impossible. It's not impossible. This obviously could win. Yeah. Spider-Verse could win.
But there's a world where Elemental wins.
Yeah.
And we just fold it up.
Over the boy in the heron.
We fold it up.
We call it picture wrap on movies.
I did not see Elemental.
It's bad.
No.
Why not?
Racist against the fire people, I guess.
Yeah.
You think they should stay in their part of town.
You just don't like them.
Or you're racist against the water people. Do you think they're stay in their part of town you just don't like them you're you're racist against the water people do you think they're hoity now i'm trying to figure out what mapping
game griffin's playing i'm playing the mapping game relating to you the mapping game that they
do that my favorite joke about elemental now is when people say they haven't seen it for me to be
like yeah well that's because you're a racist which is the message of the movie i guess i bet you even think about how dirt people would take that news a thing the movie doesn't
even really bother itself with the dirt no they're kind of like oh they're trees i guess anyway right
the movie almost has a racist attitude of saying like the dirt people are kind of less important
people barely get any fucking rope either it It's an epic movie about elemental people.
It only cares about two out of four elements.
The air people are bossy and they love their air ball.
Yeah, they play a sport that's like air basketball.
I don't know.
The whole thing.
I can't believe this anymore.
Stop telling me.
David's review.
His letterbox line is the best summation of the movie ever,
which was
catastrophic metaphor collapse.
Oh my gosh. Anyway.
Ben, what's your Miyazaki?
Yeah, how you feeling about Hayao Miyazaki?
I had never watched any of his movies
until we covered him on
the show.
What's that?
No, I was just going to say, J.D. walking out
with the lights come up, and he's wiping away tears and he goes
I don't think a Miyazaki movie has ever actually
made me cry before and you
wiping away tears go uh
not me yeah well
you know yeah this
movie definitely got me
I'll just say
that I have uh since
we did the miniseries
revisited Kiki yeah I it's about life in the miniseries, revisited Kiki.
Your favorite.
Because I...
It's about life in the big city, man.
Kiki is incredible.
Kiki is such an incredible movie.
Kiki the movie where we came in to record
on a Saturday afternoon
and Ben was watching it on the couch weeping.
It's such a gentle...
I mean, there's so much to like
about Kiki's literary service.
Yeah.
And then I recently showed my girlfriend
Spirited Away for the first time. Oh, wow. Sure.
And she, as
someone who is so anti
cartoons, right, was like,
wow, I can't believe that
something can be
so deep.
She's a bit of an Eddie Valiant in general.
I don't know what that means.
It's Bob Hoskins' character in Who Framed Roger Rabbit,
who is prejudiced against tunes,
much as J.D. is prejudiced against the fire people.
Thank you for translating, David.
They should only have working class jobs.
They can't make art.
That's for sure.
I don't even know the context of this.
Everything I'm saying is in that movie.
We're not exaggerating.
I'm not taking the ball and running with it.
We're almost doing direct quotes.
That's the movie's vibe.
Fire people shouldn't make glass.
Obviously, the movie's vibe is that these beliefs are wrong,
but it is that these beliefs are prevalent in elemental society,
which is highly stratified and bureaucratic.
To selling embers, which is also her name.
Sure.
And keeping flames alive.
They shouldn't make glass.
How dare you even suggest it?
I just haven't seen this movie, so I just don't know.
Rich likes to say that the water guy, the main water guy in Elemental, is the biggest cuck in the history of cinema.
And it's true.
Anyway.
It's weird they didn't cast Jason Clarke to play him.
So...
Mamadou Athiou, of course, is also in this movie.
The Dup. David, I now have a question
for you that I'd like you to turn on
your professional
critic brain for.
Put the bearist away. Hannah Rosen is interviewing me
on the Atlantic podcast.
I feel like I've done this before in our friendship where I really like to ask Okay. Critic brain for. There we go. Put the bearish away. Hannah Rosen is interviewing me on the Atlantic podcast. I'll be professional.
I feel like I've done this before in our friendship,
where I really like to ask questions about your critical process,
because I think it's fascinating to me.
Oh, thank you.
I feel like at many lunches, I've been like,
walk me through when you see a movie, what do you do?
The practicality of my job, right.
So for a movie like this, that is the final film of a filmmaker.
Possibly.
Possibly.
You know, everyone around him has proclaimed this to probably be the case.
He's an older man just to be, you know, to get his age on the record.
It's 82.
And he'll be 83 in a couple weeks.
Quite a challenge to get this movie finished.
Yes.
He works methodically, slowly, however you
want to put it. And so
that's only going to hurt him more
if he wants to pump some shit out about
Thor fighting
fucking Ms. Marvel
or whatever Thor 5 will be about.
It's time for Betteray Bell to show up
in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
But as a critic,
how do you approach personal criticism of a film like this?
Do you fold in all of the context
and subtext in the career
that builds up to this?
Do you try to hold that in abeyance
and keep this to be a singular object
that you're looking at?
I'm obsessed with context.
My reviews are loaded with it.
It possibly could,
I maybe should do less of it,
but I am a,
you know,
as anyone who listens to this podcast knows,
I am mostly interested in what the filmmakers
trying to tell me about themselves
and their, you know, experience.
You know, I'm an auteurist,
whatever you want to call me, right?
You know, like,
I'm not,
like, it's amazing when I read my reviews back,
I'm like, I'm not even mentioning performances I like because I'm so into getting into
what the artist is trying to say with this movie or whatever,
you know,
like,
yeah.
Yeah.
So no,
I'm,
I'm having,
I haven't written my review for this movie yet.
Oh,
fasting.
I wrote a capsule for my Tiff coverage,
but am I wrong in my assessment of like,
I,
I,
this movie primarily to me plays as
a,
what am I leaving
behind film?
And through the
prism of like,
also using that
to explore,
like,
how did I get here?
What did I think
I was trying to do?
What am I actually,
what have I actually
been?
Yeah.
What happens after
me,
you know?
Well, so an interesting question
that I'd like to pose
that's sort of related to that idea
is how much do we think
we should be listening to
or believing artists
when they tell us about their work?
Well, this is a really interesting question.
I think that's a big question
about Miyazaki as a whole
and filmmakers in general.
And my opinion to a certain extent,
as someone who fans themselves
on the creator side of making stuff,
is to a certain extent,
creators are able to create their work
through whatever process, mental, physical, whatever,
it takes them to make this thing.
Their view of what that art object is that they created
is limited by their own POV to it.
And so oftentimes, I don't think artists
are the be-all, end-all source of information
about what a piece of art or an art object is,
especially because oftentimes the artist themselves
becomes an art object,
which Miyazaki has in such a major way.
He is a singular name
that represents themes and ideas
and all this stuff.
And we all know that cinema
is not a singular process.
Even the most auteur of auteurs
is a collaborative process.
And so, but the fact that his films stand to be
these are Miyazaki films,
it means he becomes this art object.
And so I think it's interesting
because he also has very strong opinions
about what his films are or aren't about
or what he knows or doesn't know about them.
And one of the things I think is interesting
is that he's...
I want to sort of talk about his personal history because this is the first film that he has been like, I want to make a film about myself. At a certain point in the process, that was something that he was sort of saying. But he's also someone that very much says that his films are not about him processing his childhood or his own trauma.
drama um but what's so interesting to me is because when i look at his life and his history and the themes of his film what i see is someone who is processing a lot of this stuff
so that begs the question of like do we what do we take from artists when they tell us about
i was uh talking to a friend of the podcast who i will not name for obvious reasons in a second
uh who who works on the creative side of things in the industry.
And we were talking about our love of like old DVD behind the scenes featurettes and documentaries, especially the ones that are filmed during the filming of.
Yeah.
And he said, can I ask you a question?
When did you realize that the people in those interviews aren't really telling the truth?
And I said, the first time I did an interview like that.
Right, right.
And it's not to say that they're all lying all of the time.
But there is that thing as film nerds, right?
And especially now that we're in the dossier era of this podcast and we're going for so many primary quotes, right?
and we're going for so many primary quotes, right?
Whether they're the quotes from, you know,
development, production, promotion,
retrospective 20 years later, whatever,
you're always seeing through the prism of,
A, how that person is processing their own experience,
which the movie doesn't really know what it is until an audience is engaging with it, right?
And so much of press now happens
long before anyone sees it where that skews it.
But also, yes, there's like elements of
people's lives that they want to hold on to for themselves.
You know, is Miyazaki lying to
us or is he lying to himself when he says
the work is not autobiographical? Either way,
it doesn't change it.
You can't take it 100% as fact
even if... Yeah, sure.
Whether it's strategic or whether it's just
the limitations of your own relationship to the
thing you make. He never worked at a mythical bathhouse is what he means.
Of course, he's in his art.
What makes him think he has the right to tell that story?
I mean, it's disgusting.
It's disgusting.
But he never saw his parents become hogs.
Right.
This is true.
So he wants to put words in the mouths of soot sprites when he has never been a soot sprite.
I don't know that they ever talk.
But here's a Miyazaki quote he said.
Well, and that's actually really telling and damning.
Miyazaki said at one point,
I do not believe that I'm the kind of person who is scarred
and makes that the theme of my movies or the manga that I make.
But like, he also, that's like what like Joe Biden would say or whatever,
where like Joe Biden's like, you know, no.
And I'm just like, this is your generation or whatever. Where Joe Biden's like, no, no.
And I'm just like,
this is your generation.
You don't want to be like,
now I'm talking about generations in this broad way,
but like a younger generation who's a little more like,
this is about me
and this is about something I went through.
This is about the experience of my generation.
He's just like,
yeah, shut up.
Draw the magic caterpillar.
It'll make sense.
Believe me, it's all in the suit.
I have the stuff figured out.
This stuff doesn't haunt me.
And I think there's an aspect of it too
where Miyazaki wants the work to be the work.
Of course.
And I'm sure he knows.
I mean, I'm not sure.
I have no idea what Miyazaki thinks,
but it feels like he is someone who has,
based on all the stuff.
I thought of Biden just because
they are almost exactly the same age, by the way. That's the only reason.
Got it, got it, got it. Having read a bunch of,
he's very acutely aware of
how life
and art combine, and he has these really interesting
ideas about that handshake between them.
But I feel like him saying that kind of stuff
also is him trying to
keep the spotlight on the work.
The way that he wants to express himself is through
the work. Because he's not a salesman,
but he is conscious of the way
his work is being presented to the world.
And he's trying to provide the context
that he wants around it,
which is he actually kind of
abhors the commercialization.
He wants the work to exist
as its own pure thing.
But yeah, you get into these questions of like,
is that him strategically wanting to put
the frame around the movie that he wants? Or
is this a guy who just like doesn't want
to have the conversation with himself about this stuff?
I'm not saying one's more interesting or the
other. We will never know the answer.
But this movie feels
so like
him just stripping everything out of his
chest. Well, this movie feels like
the conversation, right? So like
a little bit of the background, which I think you've covered, I'm sure multiple times in the when you originally did this series, but to do a little refresher is that the sort of like bullet points of Miyazaki's life were that he grew up and in a pretty affluent situation.
in a pretty affluent situation.
After the earthquake,
his grandfather started a company,
a factory that makes airplane parts.
I think it was engine bands for rudders,
whatever, something like that.
His father and uncle then sort of take over management of this factory.
The war happens,
and they make a lot of money
selling these airplane parts to the military as part of the war happens, and they make a lot of money selling these airplane parts
to the military as part of the war effort.
Boom times for that.
Yes, and Miyazaki has a lot of conflicted feelings
that he talks about in interviews about his upbringing
because he grew up very affluent.
One of the things that is often referenced
is that his family had a car and gasoline to run the car,
which is something that was not normal at the time. And also when I say affluent, I sort of mean that in relationship to
the other people around them at the time. And then when all of the bombings happened,
his family left and I think went to his grandfather's estate, which is this sort of
larger estate that had like a big garden that became the sort of inspiration,
theoretically, for a lot of the sort of inspiration theoretically for a lot of um
the sort of nature and stuff that popped up in his life but there's a moment that he's brought
up in interviews and i think it i think it's even in the documentary where he talks about
kingdom of dreams yeah where they're driving away from the fire bombings in a truck with his family
and another family stops in front of him and is like please take us
with you right and it was like it's funny because in this one book they're talking about how
miyazaki remembers that as a mom holding a baby and miyazaki's father just continues to drive
right and miyazaki's a child has this like panic where he's like i should have said something right
if maybe if i had said something my dad would stopped me. Surely we could have taken this family.
Miyazaki's brother contends, I don't think it was a family.
I think it was like a guy or like...
He's maybe sort of morphed the memory over the years.
But he's brought this up in a degree
that it clearly was impacting on...
Wedged in his brain.
Exactly.
And then they're there.
And then after the war's over, they return back to the city.
Miyazaki's mother was sick.
She had spinal tuberculosis for nine years.
And so she's in the hospital a lot.
A lot of this is obviously Totoro and stuff,
like the sick mother.
Yes.
And so these themes come up a ton in his movies.
And because of that...
To be clear, she lived to a ripe old age.
Yes, exactly.
Yes.
And then Miyazaki, as a kid,
had this really deep love of airplanes
and all this sort of mechanical stuff,
but knowing that his family business
was also supplying that for war efforts,
this thing that he thought was abhorrent and awful.
And he has a complicated relationship with his father,
who was...
He's also growing up
in the age where Japan completely
demilitarizes, and the idea
of the war is so horrifying
to the next generation. Right. And there's the idea
that his dad was part of the generation of
the modern man and modern war,
sort of like these people that were trying to
express different parts of themselves. And
for Miyazaki, there's this huge conflict. I think there's
a lot of cultural conflict
between his,
the traditional Japanese
and modern Japanese
that, you know,
that comes out in his work.
This is in all
Japanese cinema, too.
It's like,
post-war Japanese cinema.
The key conflict in him
of,
I look at this thing
that my family builds
as a form of art.
I'm obsessed with the beauty
and the engineering
and the design of this thing.
And it is made from a pure place.
The excitement of the pursuit
of perfecting this thing.
And then it goes out into the world
and is used in a way
that you cannot control.
Right.
And that's the themes that pop up
in so much of his films
are this push and pull
between the pursuit of beauty
and the beauty of existence
and how the allure of
that beauty can cause such rift and trauma and conflict among people um and so what's interesting
is that you know the wind rises with a film that it felt like everyone was like oh this is him
reckoning with some of that very literally also felt like an elegaic movie about his legacy that
he was you know bidding us goodbye with. It's also his
most literal
grounded film. There's nothing
else that comes close to that
in terms of just how...
Yeah.
Not really.
The big
opening point was the
earthquake.
For this movie movie it's literally
what i just described right it's the first thing in the movie the first thing the movie is
this element of his childhood so this is him telling the story and so i think it's really
fascinating too because also comparing sort of him telling this i mean it's it's not literally
because there's his mom didn't die yes and he wasn't then in this situation of like,
his dad marrying his mom's sister
and being like,
this is your new mom-ish.
Anyway, I gotta go.
You know, like, you know.
What I think is interesting though
is that that first two minutes
of the firebombings happening
and then his family having to,
like all this stuff,
that is,
seems related to his childhood.
And then everything that comes
from that point forward
feels like these semiotic expressions
of all the things that stemmed from that
throughout his career, his life, everything.
And there's also a really interesting context
to the making of this film
that we can sort of dive into
also of like how it all came to be.
So...
I feel like this is good.
Let's lay out context and then, you know.
So, recap the plot.
That's five, ten minutes.
Yeah, exactly.
So, one of the things
that's interesting
is that this film,
after the wind rises,
which was announced
is probably going to be
Miyazaki's final film.
We all braced for that.
Which was the third time
he had called a movie
his final film.
Right?
Mononoke was the final film.
Spirited Away was the final film.
Or Howl was the final film.
Howl, yeah.
Yeah.
But because of the context of The Wind Rises,
I think a lot of people tended to believe him this time
because it was like a departure from a lot of what he had done.
And it felt more...
It felt the most final film-y in terms of the actual meat of it
versus the other films where it felt a little more like,
I'm tired, I can't do this anymore.
Yeah, and The Wind Rises ends with this theme that is like,
you just have to live.
Just go and live.
Right, yeah, literally.
Instead of being yelled at him.
Yes, exactly.
And this film sort of starts from that point of life
and then complicates that message
because it almost feels like this is its own twist on that.
But what's interesting,
so this film is something that Miyazaki decides
he wants to do.
Right.
Toshio Suzuki,
Aisataka Hata passed away,
which was his longtime partner,
creative partner,
and...
Sort of, yeah.
Mentor to a certain degree.
More kind of a pseudo-mentor and then kind of like a parallel partner.
But was with him throughout his journey.
Certainly.
Also, fair to say the only other sort of like fully developed A-tier filmmaker within the G-Bleez system.
Which I think, I don't know.
In the early stages.
You and I disagree a little bit,
maybe,
and you obviously are coming to this
with more proper context,
but like,
the notion of,
does Ghibli exist in any form
after he's gone?
Yes, yes.
In that context, yes.
Takahata's films can stand separately.
And it was a proper bond.
In a very major way.
Yeah.
And, you know,
he has passed away,
though,
between Wind Rises
and this film.
And Miyazaki was developing
this film,
and originally the film
was a film that was
considered,
you know,
this is,
a lot of this is
Toshio Suzuki
talking about it.
The producer of this film.
Yes, and so,
who knows how much of it.
David's voice is quickly
becoming full
Super Dave Osborne.
That's,
you can't say that and so who knows how much of this is this is one person telling the story you
know what i mean um but originally developing this film this film was really about that
friendship and about that mentorship and then when he passed away he was mourning that and
then he really took that uncle character out of the story um okay and
obviously this is there's uh the the book grand uncle you mean yes grand uncle was maybe supposed
to be more woven in throughout because he only appears basically in the last 30 minutes 20
minutes and then apparently the heron became more of a character as the film was developed from that
point forward but any the point being miyazaki says, I want to make this film.
Suzuki,
on the record,
says that he almost didn't want to greenlight it because he was like,
I don't know how this could be possible
because Miyazaki is getting older at this point.
His eyesight is going away.
He's a lot more tired.
It's harder to get him to do things.
And Miyazaki's process up until then
had been extremely...
He had his hands involved in many steps of the process.
So he would not only storyboard,
but he would also do a lot of the key framing art.
So that's like all of the major motions within shots.
And then he would go through
and he'd do a lot of really rigid corrections
on people's work after they had done their animation
and sort of tried to interpret his work.
He would try to allow himself
to delegate things to other people.
He would usually then be overcome with,
I actually just need to do it myself and take this back or at least redirect it.
Yeah.
And he had,
he also had a reputation of being a very difficult to work with boss and manager.
He was known for yelling.
He was known for working until midnight.
And if you did not also work till midnight, that was against the culture of the office and what they did.
He's also just like an incredibly blunt man.
Yeah.
You know, I mean, it's the reason why so many of his interviews like linger around the Internet because you're just like no one talks this directly.
And you imagine if you're working for him and he just says like this is bad, it lacks feeling.
Yeah, exactly. All the time it starts to break your spirits uh absolutely um and i feel like there's a lot of animators that worked together throughout the history of anime um
and there's a lot of people that worked on mi Miyazaki's films and touched different parts of it. There's this one animator who's a very well-known animator, Toshiyuki Inoue, who has been an animator.
He's not a director or anything like that.
He's been solely an animator.
But his first job was on Kiki's Delivery Service, and he only took it because Miyazaki wasn't directing it.
And then when he showed up to work, they're like, oh, Miyazaki's directing it.
And he was like, I wouldn't have taken this.
Another thing that happened
a couple of times of like,
this is a B project.
Someone else can make this.
And then Miyazaki's like,
actually, I'm doing it.
They're fucking it up.
I'm taking over.
Right.
Yeah.
But Inui is really interesting
because he does a lot of interviews
and talks a lot about
the process of making the film.
More open.
Yes, exactly.
And so he does these
beautiful interviews
where he's talking about
the process of making this film. And what was so interesting was that this is the first film More open. process and that was Takeshi Honda right and Takeshi Honda is a famous animator of his own right um known for uh probably most notably like the Neon Genesis Evangelion sort of the work that
he added to that but has a very different style than Miyazaki and because Miyazaki was getting
to the point where he was older he was not able able to do the same level of extremely, extremely specific correction work.
And because of that,
this film ended up being
this really interesting collaboration
between all of these animators
that came back together again.
Right, to kind of be the web around him.
Yes.
And so when you watch this film,
what's really interesting,
and Inouye does this great interview
where he breaks down,
oh, this is this person's scene. Oh, this is this person. Oh, this person did all of these things. And if you watch The
Boy and the Heron, there's a lot of stuff that doesn't look exactly Miyazaki-esque.
And that's because number one, like Takeshi Honda has his own style that is very involved in this.
And then also these animators who Miyazaki had worked with for years,
than this and then also these animators who miyazaki had worked with for years you know off and on or that were just famous animators came back for this film together and because
miyazaki was at this stage where he could not work as quickly oftentimes they just did their work on
their own with very little correction what's it's a more extreme version of like when when elderly
live action filmmakers are making a late period film
and the insurance company demands
that there is a backup director on set
and you have like Paul Thomas Anderson
shadowing on Perry Home Companion
or Guillermo del Toro on Kane Mutiny Court Marshall.
But those guys are just like,
this is fun for me that I get to watch them more.
I assume I'm never going to have to do anything.
People love to theorize about their contributions, but those guys are always like, I'm treating this as a free film school.
He's clearly ready to take this movie on himself.
Whereas animation involves so many more tendrils.
And this movie goes on for seven years.
Yes.
That he really does start to have to for the first time in his life accept other people taking
the torch on certain things.
But like what you're describing is the
work of a director of an animated film.
Usually.
What happened on this movie is how it should be.
The normal process. Exactly. Like it's totally obvious
to delegate like a lot of that process.
Richard Williams is like the only other guy
in history who worked. He's never
stressed out. Like Miyazaki work and Richard Williams is like the only other guy in history who worked He's never stressed out.
like Miyazaki work
and Richard Williams
like couldn't ever
fucking finish his stuff.
He's making movies
that people can see
because they've never done.
Which you have to imagine
when you talk about
the nerves
and green lighting
in this film
that they're just like
this is Thief in the Cobbler.
This is never gonna get done.
But what's different
I would say
is that this is a fully
hand-drawn
2D animated film
which we have very few of
in the modern era. In general. Well,
more in Japan. Yes.
But in American animation,
when you're referring to this, how animated films are made,
well, not as much anymore
because so much is computer-driven. But then also,
the hand-drawn animation, like, stuff
that is done now, is done with such a
finite rubric
of, here's the exact rubric of here's the exact
character models,
here's the exact
how we do this,
here's what this person
looks like,
and all the da-da-da.
And because of how
this process unfolded
and Miyazaki's age
and all that stuff
and how much he had
to hand over to Honda
to take over
a lot of this stuff
and how much
they just let animators
do a thing,
there are sections
of this film
that look and feel
different than other
sections of the film.
It becomes an
interesting collage. That will probably feel more obvious. There are sections of this film that look and feel different than other sections of the film. It becomes an interesting collage.
That will probably feel more obvious.
And the look of characters changes
throughout the film. It's like really fascinating.
There's like a guy inside of him.
Yeah, exactly. One animator
just put a guy inside the heron. I don't think you're right about that.
I've only seen it the one time. Sometimes he's a
bird. Sometimes there's like a guy inside.
If that happened in the movie, I would have noticed it.
David! Yeah? It's that time in the movie, I would have noticed it. David! Yeah!
It's that time of the year. What's up? That time of the year
that comes around several times
a month. We love it. When Mubi
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David, we're happy to do any Mubi.
Yeah. Ad read? Sure. It's always a pleasure.
Love those guys. It's particularly exciting when Mubi has a new film they are distributing.
Yes.
That we get to.
They put things in theaters now over at Mubi.com.
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You know, they are a streaming service that's curated, dedicated to elevating great cinema
from around the globe.
But they also.
Passages, Decision to Leave, a lot of great movies we've covered.
Sure.
Well.
And a movie that is one of my most anticipated
movies of the year
that you have seen
and texted me almost
immediately
this is a real
griff movie
yeah
this is a big time
griff movie
it just came out
I haven't gotten
the chance to see it yet
I'm dying to
it's Fallen Leaves
the new film
new film
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master
Aki Kurismaki
it films like
Outside of Hope
and
La Havre
La Havre
and you know A Man Without a Past Stalagrave Cowboys yes Master, Aki Kurizmaki Hit films like Outside of Hope and Le Havre, Le Havre and
A Man Without a Past
Stonger Cowboys
Yes, all those ones
Did we put that on the bracket?
I think we did once
Fallen Leaves is his new film
It's a timeless, hopeful, satisfying love story
It won the jury prize at the
23 Cannes Film Festival
It's set in modern day Helsinki
It's about two lonely souls Al-Ansa and of the 23 Cannes Film Festival. Okay, it's set in modern-day Helsinki.
It's about two lonely souls,
Ansa and Holapa.
Leningrad cowboys.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, look.
I had to catch myself on that one. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You threw me there.
They have a chance of meeting
a local karaoke bar,
and then there's a bunch of hurdles.
And this is going to sound like no big deal.
Oh, lost phone numbers,
mistaken addresses, a bunch of hurdles. And this is going to sound like no big deal. Oh, lost phone numbers, mistaken addresses, a charming stray dog.
But he makes all of these little happenings uproariously funny in that great mordant Finnish way.
Is it fair to say he's one of those filmmakers who makes movies unlike anyone else on the planet?
He has a tone, a look, a style.
All to himself.
A humor.
I think reflective of his country, but maybe the best version of theirs
is humor or whatever.
He doesn't really make bad movies.
They are all 82 minutes
long and they all rule. But this
I do think is a special one, even by his standard.
I'm so excited. It's going to be on my top
10 of the year for sure.
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Yeah, Fallen Leaves isn't playing in a theater near you.
It will be coming to MUBI soon.
This film ended up being an interesting collage of all these great animators who i think there's
a funny element to it also i don't know this to be true but in some of the vendors assembled
situation in some of the interviews that i read i think i get this energy so this is me doing a
little bit of fan fan casting right now but i think this is there a little bit where
miyazaki does not trust that many people. He has a very high bar
of accomplishment
and I think
has to be
sold on
certain animators
being allowed
to work on his films.
Yeah.
And so I think
he has this
sort of
this group of people
that are like these like,
you know,
young upstart animators
that he's like,
I trust this person.
I can have this person
come back.
Those animators
are all now in their 60s
and extremely accomplished famous animators.
You put young upstart in air quotes.
Yeah.
They are extremely accomplished animators
of their own right that have their own careers.
But to Miyazaki, it sort of feels like that.
Like, yeah, these are the young guys.
Come help me out.
I don't know if that's exactly true,
but there's that energy that's there.
And so a lot of these people came together.
A lot of the... There's a handful of people that energy that's there. And so a lot of these people came together.
A lot of the...
There's a handful of people that are part of that realist anime sort of generation.
The people who did Akira and Jinra
and all these movies that have a lot more realism
and volumetric animation,
whereas Miyazaki's work is so bubbly
and round and expressive and doesn't do that.
And so this film has a lot of elements
that are not Miyazaki elements.
They're Miyazaki stories and frames
and storyboard moments,
but then these animators take them
and sort of express them in their own way.
There's even, what's the aunt's name?
Yeah, Natsuko.
In the movie? Yes. Yes, yes. There's even, what's the aunt's name? Yeah, Natsuko. In the movie?
Yes.
Yes, yes.
She's one of the first characters
ever in a Miyazaki film
that was not designed by Miyazaki.
That was a character designed
by Takeshi Honda
because they're all like,
Miyazaki's not great at adult women.
What do you mean?
Like,
and there are-
Jessica with her giant boobs,
which she always talks about.
I'm trying to think of adult women
actually
because it's funny
because he's the most
the most iconic animator
of young female characters
yes
like he's
there's no animator
who's better known
for like his plucky little girls
right
but there's not a lot of adult women
in this one interview
they referenced
the female lead in Porco Rosso
right
but just like
seems a little off.
Something's a little off with that.
Well, let's try to take an inventory, David.
Who are the characters you have in posters on your wall
surrounded by paper mache hearts?
Yeah, wait a second.
He designed the hottest woman in the world.
Yeah, wait.
Actually, can you just show us your phone background?
Okay, so yeah, there's Porco Rosso.
There's Nausicaa.
No, Sosuke's mom is, you know,
the number one woman in the world.
So they're wrong.
But so they talk about how Takeshi Honda
just basically was like,
I'm going to do the whole character sheet for this character.
So I love that this film ends up being a pastiche
because also...
Pastiche isn't the word.
You mean like a patchwork?
Yes, not a pastiche.
It's the baton being handed off between different animators.
No, what you're saying is beautiful.
That like, whether by hook or by crook,
like Miyazaki allowed a little more support
and collaboration because of his age
and because of, you know, circumstances.
Support isn't in the word.
It sounds like he extended trust
in a way he had not really before.
Well, yeah.
Because when you even talk about the young,
quote unquote, young upstart animators that he does trust, he had not really before. Well, yeah. Because when you even talk about the young, quote-unquote,
young upstart animators that he does trust,
he trusts them to do
the exact thing he wants
rather than incubating
their own development,
if that makes sense,
which is why most of them left
and went off and did their own thing
and didn't look back
for however much reverence
they may have for him and his work.
It's like,
well, but I was,
I was functioning
as a finger on his hand.
Right.
Well, that's like
Takeshi Handa
was going to do
a new Evangelion thing
and was like,
all right,
if Miyazaki calls though,
you have to answer the phone.
You have to kind of do that.
Sure.
Another great example is
Katsuya Kondo
was the animation director
on Ponyo.
And I think he did a lot of the characters on Keys Delivery Service.
I think he has a lot more of this sort of like light expressive style to him.
There are sequences that apparently in this film, Miyazaki just let him do it and like didn't do any corrections.
It was just like, yeah, that's fine.
Let that go.
He said, go off King.
Yeah. It's fine. Let that go. And he said, go off king. Yeah.
Which is crazy.
Exactly.
You dropped this.
And then he sent an emoji of a little guy.
And then, yeah, Kondo went into Miyazaki's office and Miyazaki was just head down in a dab.
He solemnly took off his glasses,
looked down and said,
we have no choice but to stand.
That's everything that happened. But I think that's really,
so one of the things that I love in films,
right?
I'm just actually picturing Miyazaki in his green apron.
Just cigarette.
You know,
that shot where they're doing the like interview uh interview in front of the miyazaki
museum and then he just sort of like workman like walks through the background yes what if it's just
in the middle of like walking just stops it does a quick dab flips a water bottle yes um anyways
no bits um no bits no bits but i will say the themes of this film are about legacy and passing down
and what can we pass down
what of our imperfections
are permanent
what are the things
that we hold on to
what are the things
that we can resolve
and what of those
imperfect and perfect aspects
of the world that we build
can we hand down
to the next generation
and I think what's so beautiful
about this film is that the film is an art object that is that also yes it's right these are all
animators that came up um either working for takahata or miyazaki or other great people that
are sort of all sort of interconnected and now he's at a point where he cannot physically do
all of this stuff on his own and so his only option is to pass the baton down to these animators
and ask them to step in.
And they are not going to do exactly what he did.
It's going to be different.
And that's okay. The fucking shapes will be in a different arrangement.
Exactly. And it might not be exactly what Miyazaki would have done if it was just him.
And it might look different. The characters might change.
There's a big thing about their noses
are sort of different based on what animator is doing.
But that's part of the passing down of art, right?
And looking at this film as this art object,
I think there's something interesting about final films.
Here's a question that I don't know the answer to
that I'm curious if you guys can think of.
What filmmakers do we have that got to make a final film?
Consciously?
Yes.
Like, deliberately?
That it was announced that this is their final film, and it was.
Well, this is the whole Tarantino thing, is being like, make your final film with intentionality,
make your final film with intentionality even if he's like
capping it decades earlier
than he would need to
so you don't end up with an accidental
final film that is whatever
you know it's a good question
who actually called their shot
and it was that because so many people
unretire
is sort of a final film I think like
but like I think even with stuff like that
where it's like David Lean was old
and had been in retirement
and then was like,
okay, I'm going to make this.
I don't know if he was actually like,
this is it, bitch.
The mic is dropped.
Right.
People don't usually do that
because you'll end up looking like Miyazaki
where you're coming out of retirement
and sort of embarrassed and like,
I know I said I wasn't going to do this anymore,
but here I am. And that's what's going to happen to one Quentin Tarantino
oh it's absolutely going to happen
but Terrence Davies a couple times was like
I'm walking off the court but Terrence Davies was someone
who had to push every movie uphill
so hard that he's probably also
in the press cycle like I fucking
can't do this anymore you know
there are a lot of those guys I mean Schrader is very
much in that phase right now
where he's like,
look, between the state
of the industry
and my health,
every time he's promoting
a new movie,
he's like,
maybe that was the last one.
But he's also like,
I'm going to make
another one if they let me.
Right, but rarely
is it this thing where
people go,
they take their pause
and they go,
and this is going to be
this final film.
And I'm designing it
as my final statement to some degree. Yeah, there are movies like A Prairie Home Companion. Which I going to be this final film. And I'm designing it as my final statement
to some degree.
Now, there are movies
like A Prairie Home Companion.
Which I think is a great final film.
Right.
It's easy to read into that,
like, this is someone
who probably knows this is it.
But he was actively
prepping another film.
He sure was,
because he's a grumpy
little munchkin.
Yeah.
No, I mean, he,
before that...
I was really waiting
to see what that last word was.
He's also a very tall man.
Little munchkin. He was like your size. All right, he's a tall... I was really waiting to see what that last word was. He's also a very tall man. Little munchkin.
He was like your size.
All right, he's a tall man,
but you cannot deny that there are parts of old Altman
that are a little munchkin-like.
Like a munchkin isn't the word I would use.
David Sims, The Atlantic.
Yeah.
Grumpy, certainly.
No, but that was, you know,
he won his Lifetime Achievement Oscar, right?
He talks like this, you know.
I don't think that's what he sounded like.
You're still sounding like Schrader.
In my head, he's just like this little bridge troll, you know?
This is all Schrader stuff to me.
Well, fine.
He won his Lifetime Achievement Oscar.
He gave this whole speech of like,
I had a heart transplant five years ago.
I've never disclosed it because I didn't want to be uninsurable.
And that means I have another 20 years of directing left in me.
In Prairie Home,
he was like,
here we go.
I'm obviously in a late stage
looking back, reflecting,
thinking about death.
But like, next movie,
Hands on a Hard Body.
He was supposed to make
Hands on a Hard Body.
It was cast.
It was prepped.
He died.
And yeah,
so it's like that's a great
final statement movie,
but he was rejecting that fully.
They usually do
because it's annoying.
Right.
But here's the thing that I will also posit
is I think the idea of a final film
or a final artwork
is actually more of a romantic and philosophical idea
than is it ever something that
sees the light of day in real life.
Because I also think that final works,
I think people want them to be, oh, the grand
perfection of this person, the final message that we're going to be left. But I think actually
final works, especially if they occur in your end of life, are transitional.
Yes.
Someone's career is not an essay that has
a concluding sentence. It is a
stream of human existence
that transitions
somewhere. And the final film is the last
bullet point, the last
data point of transition that we have.
But it's not going to be the thing that summarizes
the entirety of a career.
Wind Rises was him attempting to do that.
And then he wakes up the next morning
after it's done
and released
and is like,
fuck,
I have new thoughts.
Right.
You know,
I mean,
I'm not basing that
on anything other than
that's how human beings exist.
Right.
You know,
and like,
as you said,
David,
it's like,
what else is this guy
going to fucking do?
this guy can't stop
expressing himself
artistically
as long as he has
the means
and the wherewithal to manifest
it in any way. I mean, first he made
a little movie about a caterpillar and then, yeah.
I mean, I am in a phase in my life
which is, I think, kind of like one of the more tired
phases that people go through where you have young
children and you're just kind of like run ragged.
You seem full of beans today.
I am full of beans. And I had a burrito
yesterday, I'll have you know. Okay, so
he's literally full of beans. And let's put that in the episode notes we should um david's full of burrito beans but um
uh you know you have that fantasy of like what if someone came to me tomorrow and was like
you won't have to work another day in your life here's whatever that's taken care of. Now you get to go retire. You know, you can garden and cook
and experience great art and travel.
And, you know, would I like that?
I'd probably take it being like, hell yeah.
And then like six months in, am I like,
the fuck do you do?
Okay, this has been fun,
but now I want to return to, you know,
creating or whatever, whatever it is.
I do it myself.
Yeah.
And I think that's...
That beard is so crazy.
I was waiting for you to...
Well, you came in later. I already cut you off, Mike.
Wow.
That's neither here nor there.
JD has a beard. It's just different.
I mean, I've known you for like...
Almost 15 years now, perhaps?
I've known you for 10.
And you walked into the Angelica yesterday,
and I was shocked.
I've never even seen a hint of a beard before.
I mean, talk about transitional stages
and big statements from major artists.
I was about...
J.D. Amato has started a new era.
I'm on a local competitive running team,
the Hellgate Red Runners,
and one of my teammates, Andrew Gorman,
accused me of being a coward for never attempting to grow a beard.
And I
said that I don't think I could grow a beard. And he said,
you can. You're just a coward. And so
then I have attempted to grow a beard
and... Succeeded. Yeah. I think
he was right. I was a coward.
I think a lot of people who say they can't grow a beard
are, you know, right.
More just like, well, they're weak.
It's more a thing of like, well, I don't like
those first two weeks where it
looks shitty. And it looks bad
and it feels bad. It does feel
kind of bad. It feels terrible.
Alright, The Boy and the Heron.
So it's about a boy
but it's not
Chris Weitz is about a boy. It's not about
a boy. And Paul co-directed that one
let's give credit where credit is
but is there any more context
you want to get into before we
discuss the plot of the film
the one thing that I'll say that I think is interesting
obviously it's also inspired by a book called
How Do You Live
which was the original working title
which the Japanese title
assumed it was going to be more of a direct adaptation
those fools because every adaptation he's ever done i mean how's
is like maybe the most faithful adaptation of the work he's done and it's still obviously a
departure and then there's stuff like wind rises where he's like it's sort of inspired by this book
but it's also about this real guy but the events happening this real guy happened to another guy
in this book right you're like what
ponyo he's like i called the character sosuke after this book the gate which is this like
masterpiece of japanese literature i read the gate it's about this couple who are like can't
have kids it has nothing to do with ponyo except they like live on a hill started as little mermaid
right well ponyo has a lot of little mermaid right it also has like wagner in it like it's
got all kinds of weird shit a The couple in that book love him.
They do.
They do love him.
It's just,
I read this book,
knowing obviously that it would not be about a little boy and a little girl who loves him.
But like,
where I was like,
it's this like stunning,
quiet book about this couple who can't have kids.
And then later you realize like,
oh,
they both,
this relationship was the product of affairs.
Yeah.
And they feel guilty.
It's like written in 1900. Mm-hmm. And it's just so funny to think of miyazaki being like i shall call this
six-year-old in short pants so skate after that book of you know no relation anyway um no i i was
reading that the sales of uh how do you live have gone like through the roof in Japan because people are looking for
clues or understanding
but the book itself is
an element of the film
and that the lead character has the
book. Did you read this book?
I did not read that book. You read a lot of books.
I also watched Future Boy Conan.
Oh sure.
I've never seen that. It finally was
because it was unavailable here for a while, right?
I believe it still is,
but I got it through other means.
What?
I thought GKids maybe either
announced they're about to release it
or just didn't release it.
I had someone offer it to me,
and I accepted,
and the way that I saw it
did not have any English around it,
so I did not understand fully
the words that they were saying,
but it's a show that you don't
necessarily need the words to fully understand.
I don't know. Is Andy Richter in it?
Yes. In the year 2000.
That's why they call it Future Boy Conan.
I will say after we watched
The Boy and the Heron,
I went home
and I re-put on the
pilot, like the first episode
and I like,
I cried again.
Because it is,
watching this film,
and then seeing where
he came from,
and it felt like,
you know,
like in like,
Toy Story 2,
when they watch like,
the Woody's Roundup TV show,
or whatever,
and you're like,
oh,
the joy and simplicity
of where it all began,
and like,
now where he is,
is this old,
or,
can I just say it?
Woody's Roundup looks like it sucks that's so fucking wrong
having been made to watch Toy Story 2 so many times recently
he's trying to start another dumb animation nerd
he was angry that this episode
don't put me on team Griffin on this one
I might be on team David for this one
some guy named Will Vint
Woody's Roundup looks like a great fucking show
Critters
yeah the Critters.
Yeah, the Critters.
Prospector.
He puts his butt on the dynamite to try to... That part's pretty funny. Blown out.
I don't know if I'm putting too much
weight on this in the context of the thing.
But especially with you talking about
his...
Ben, am I just laughing at you saying that?
That's
nine years of working with Griffin.
Okay. What are you
putting too much weight on? No, you're talking a lot about
the, quote-unquote, the younger
generation of animators who came back
for this movie, right? Who were
sort of the children of Miyazaki, but all left
and went off and did their own thing.
A lot of them continued working on Miyazaki films.
Hardly young people at this point
to be clear. They're all their own.
I put in air quotes.
Well, you can't hear air quotes. I said the quotes.
I said the quotes.
The Goro
of it I do think is interesting
in this movie
and him sort of reckoning
with what is the thing I've built
and what happens to it when I'm
gone. Because Goro is the one who has stayed. And whereas these other guys, even when they have come
back and worked on Miyazaki, am I taking something that you want to get to? No, I want to do a bit,
but I'm not going to do it. You said no bit. We're not doing it. We're not doing it. We're
not doing it. Those guys found new means of Yeah. And am I wrong in thinking that
this sort of narrative around Goro is like,
he is trying very hard to uphold the legacy
and it is not quite hitting.
Yes.
This movie has a fail son in it too, sort of.
I don't know.
Who would you consider the fail son in this movie?
The dad, kind of.
Oh, sure.
And like, I watched it, and I...
You can't not think about Goro Miyazaki for a second,
and usually I just kind of put it aside,
because I'm like, it's too simple, you know,
and I shouldn't, you know, read into this relationship.
But it is true that Goro Miyazaki exists,
bears the Miyazaki family name,
directs animated films, and they are all mediocre.
Yes. I don't know what to make of that.
I don't know if his father agrees,
but every time you read about his father's opinions
on his son's movies,
he's always like,
he worked hard.
I can tell.
It's always like this sort of like very vague statement.
But he's trying so hard to be like,
I can crack what a Ghibli movie is
versus these guys who are like,
maybe I'm taking what I learned from working there
and expressing this in a different way,
my own prism at a different place,
whatever it is.
I do think it's like similar to the Pixar problem
that has really come to the surface of like,
Lasseter built a dream team
of all his fucking CalArts compatriots
and lured them all over to him
and then never established a next generation below him.
Right. A classic him. Right.
A classic thing that...
Totally.
You know, yeah.
And Lasseter, on top of that,
started getting aggressively bad at making films himself
in a way...
And aggressively good at hugging.
Great at hugging.
Incredible at hugging.
But in a way that Miyazaki didn't,
where it's like his eyes off the ball entirely
and Pixar exists in this weird state where they're like,
we're now trying to do the work
that needed to be done 20 years
ago and finding the Domi Shis
and finally giving them a boost
rather than like years of them losing
directors because they're like they're never
going to let me make what I want
my way here I have to go
off and do something somewhere else but I
think that's an aspect that
this film is addressing totally that's
why I'm bringing this up.
I think it is a very...
The building of the tower
is when I got really locked into like...
Right.
But I think there is this belief
that everything needs to be passed down
and remain the same.
Ah, Studio Ghibli needs to remain the same.
Who's going to take over that mantle?
And I think the answer that this film,
both in how it is made
and what the film is saying,
is that you don't need
to hand down
the exact replica.
You add but a small piece
to the thing
and then that goes off.
So all these animators
that worked with Miyazaki,
they've all gone on
to make other films
and other stuff.
That's the next generation.
You don't need someone
to just step into Ghibli.
Right, right.
And that's why I think also
it's interesting because people also often try to, I don't need someone to just step into Ghibli and that's why I think also it's interesting
because people also often try to
I don't know people have the
dumb comparison where they're like oh Ghibli's like
you know it's the Disney of Japan it's like it's not
it's not because Disney
is a multi you know
armed like conglomerate
that yeah has tendrils in every part
of life and Ghibli's not like that at all
yeah but here's something I found very interesting and I don't know if I just missed that this hasrils in every part of life and Ghibli's not like that at all. But here's something I found very interesting.
And I don't know if I just missed
that this has been in previous films
and I hadn't caught it,
but it felt new to me.
In the end credits,
there is a full block of merchandising development team.
There is a block of the Ghibli Park team.
Well, they've got the Ghibli Park now,
but they've always had merch,
or at least for a long
time but that does it's not usually a thing I think that gets credited in the film I'm not
saying it's unusual that they have merchandising it felt like a more explicit acknowledgement and
even the streaming thing I remember talking the guy who runs G kids in 2019 when we were doing
this series and he was like they will never be streaming right he likes the sanctity of it
needing to be a deliberate choice and engagement with
a screening at a, you know,
when they do the Ghibli Fest every year, or
buying the one disc or whatever it is.
And then a year later, they announced
HBO Max is getting all the Ghibli movies,
and they're also creating these sound and image scapes
and all this sort of stuff. And all of this
was just like,
you know what, Miyazaki, if you're gonna
finish this movie, you have to make some concessions
because this project
is going slowly,
getting more and more expensive.
We're not getting money
in from other areas.
This is the only thing
we're all working on.
We need to open the doors
a little bit.
And there's this, like,
chunk in the credits
of acknowledging
tendrils of the company
that are not
direct expressions
of this movie, but are the direct expressions of this movie but are the
things that allowed this movie to stay in production for seven years but that's still
that's nothing like this i'm not saying it is right yeah yeah you're having an argument with
a disney guy who what you are having an argument with a disney guy that was not the point i was
making scrappy the cat you're arguing with scrappy Well, sure. But I'm addressing the point you made. Yeah.
Yeah.
Like, Disney's a company that makes like $90 billion a year.
Yes.
That's a lot of money.
And they are not... Like, Jubilee is not a company that makes $1 billion a year.
No.
Like, yeah.
It is a small concern, but...
And despite the name, it is not a company that is about one creator, Disney.
Right?
Right.
It just isn't that. Walt's still there.
He's just got to go deep.
This is the point I'm trying to make
is that Disney
is like we find a way
to monetize every element
of what we do, right?
And to pump it out into all quarters.
And Ghibli's thing has always been we strategically
with a
tremendous amount of control
make the deals and the expansions that allow us
to continue making our movies. We don't
need growth quarter over quarter.
We don't need to outdo ourselves.
It's just enough to keep the lights on and maintain
the same size. And the last
seven years have been them
accepting more of that.
Which doesn't feel like them trying to
take over the world.
They get a lot of shit for it. People have criticized the park
especially.
But it's all truly, this movie doesn't get finished if they don't do it.
It finally got to this point.
You have this environmental message
that runs through your movies. Like, why are you building a
fucking theme park? That's so contrary.
Everyone who's been to the theme park is like,
it's really a park. It's not that much of a theme park.
It's philosophically so different than what we think of.
And I'd love to go.
Yeah.
I also think there's a...
I don't know Miyazaki's actual opinion on this.
He might have spoken to it on an interview somewhere.
I don't remember what it exactly is.
But I would not be shocked
if he is not concerned about the legacy of Ghibli after he goes.
He's definitely not. He's
spoken on this extensively. Yeah.
In that he's just like, it doesn't matter.
Ghibli's just a dumb name. What do I need
to do to get this movie done?
But also, maybe this thing doesn't need to exist
past me. There's a fun anecdote from
when I was in college. I was at,
I went to film school and I minored
in computer science. Humble brag.
Jesus Christ. We get it. You minored in computer science. Humble brag. Jesus Christ.
We get it.
You minored in computer...
No, go ahead.
Sorry.
David, come on.
Go on.
Sorry, I minored in computer science.
David hates computer scientists.
Computers.
David's an anti-computer.
David never has a laptop in front of him when recording.
And is actively scrolling and typing something.
I'm trying to find this Miyazaki quote.
Okay. I know it's in my Tumblr? I'm trying to find this Miyazaki quote. Okay.
I know it's in my Tumblr,
so I have to load my Tumblr. You still have a Tumblr? I mean, it exists.
Like, it hasn't been updated since 2015.
Do you want to promote it?
Do you want to promote the Tumblr? DavidSimms.Tumblr.com.
Wow. No L?
No L, which means I really must have
made it a long time ago.
Well, we're not.
No L?
No bits.
Christmas-themed Tumblr.
So when I was in college,
because I spanned those two
departments, NYU
connected me. MoMA had reached
out to NYU and said,
we need help. We
have a whole
digital art wing of moma but our um and this was you know
back in the the 20 thoughts what do you call that yeah um they're like we don't really have
our preservation department is not robust yet in terms of our digital artwork. And so they wanted students
to come in and to be the go-between between artists and MoMA to figure out how to take
any of their work that used computer programming or digital stuff to figure out a preservation
strategy to hold on to this for years. And one of the first things they told us when they sat us
down is they were like, first things first, when you talk to the artist, the artist will tell
you that one of the things they think is beautiful about this work of art is that it will one day
fall apart and cease to work. That is wonderful for them, the artist. We have just spent $200,000
on this work of art. We are a museum. We do not share that opinion. Yeah. So no matter how much
the artist tells you that this thing falling apart and dying at a certain point
is beautiful and wonderful,
that is not your job.
Right.
And I think about that a lot
because almost everyone
that I know as,
you know,
working professionally
in this industry
as a writer and director
and all this stuff,
like,
I do like to move forward.
And when I move on
from something,
I'm like,
yes,
if that disappeared,
that's okay. Not from the universe, but like, I want like, yes, if that disappeared, that's okay.
Not from the universe,
but I want to continue moving forward.
And the fact that these things have lifespans
is interesting to me.
So with something like Miyazaki,
there is sometimes this feeling that people are like,
oh, what's the legacy going to be?
How does this continue to go?
And the answer is, it doesn't.
Who gives a shit?
Can I read you the quote?
Someone has, yeah.
Someone has a career arc.
Yeah. And that is it.'t who gives a shit can i read you the quote someone has yeah someone has a career arc yeah and that is that is it that's the the lifespan i believe this is from kingdom of dreams and madness pretty much it's from one of the documentaries about him someone asks him aren't
you worried about the studio's future and he says this is translated future is clear it's going to
fall apart i can already see it what's the the use worrying? It's inevitable. Puts on sunglasses.
Ghibli is just a random name I got from an airplane.
It's only a name.
Then he looks out at some trees
and says, how pretty.
I mean, it's classic Miyazaki.
I mean, obviously.
And it's also,
what's so beautiful about that
is it's everything we said
where it's like,
it's both, that's how he feels,
but then I'm also like,
but I also don't believe him.
It's a little bit of an act
or a persona that he has.
This movie's metaphor is right
the world's worst jenga tower that includes spheres like objects that you cannot stack upon
it's non-euclidean and this kid keeps on pushing back on like not even you're giving me pieces that
are fucking bullshit right you basically gave me like a misfit. You gave me cursed pieces. It's the actual,
it's like,
these are cursed.
These are from tombs.
Yes.
Man, this movie is wild.
And you're just like,
maybe this just needs
to topple over.
It's actually kind of
unhealthy that it has
stayed up this long.
Yeah.
So that's a long way
of saying the last piece
of context before we talk
about actually getting
to the plot of it.
When asked,
Miyazaki was like,
I don't really even know
what every aspect
of this film is about, which I think is the best type of art. Correct. When theaki was like, I don't really even know what every aspect of this film is about, which
I think is the best type of art.
When the artist is like, I don't know, but I'm
being summoned to create these images. I'm
summoned to tell this story. I cannot tell
you what it exactly means. Here is
what it is. It's no good if they can
tell you exactly what it means anyway, right?
Yes. You want a little bit of mystery.
Beyond that, I mean, talking about
people lying in interviews strategically, sometimes it's just like, I don't want to little bit of mystery. Beyond that, I mean, talking about people lying in interviews strategically,
sometimes it's just like, I don't want to feed it to people.
The thing is not functioning properly if I'm preloading into people's heads
how they need to process it.
There are artists who are like, look, it's there if you want to figure it out.
But there aren't too many artists who are like,
let me tell you what I was trying to do.
Now it happens.
I would disagree. I think there are today too many artists who try to do that me tell you what I was trying to do. Now it happens. I would disagree.
I think there are today too many artists
who try to do that.
Maybe there's too much of that going on.
Well, it drives me nuts about the Kubrick stuff
where it's like,
actually the carpet means that
He's yelling at us.
And it's like,
no, this...
He doesn't build movies that way.
Yes, and that's the whole purpose of semiotics, right?
It's the stuff gets,
it gets baked into us as creators
and it comes out in ways that we don't even know.
And it does have meaning, but
that meaning
doesn't only exist if there is an intentionality
and a didactic point that is
trying to be made through those elements.
Can I say, before we talk about
the boy in the hair, just one other thing.
Our 15th time saying we're about to start talking about it.
My daughter is watching more and more
stuff as she grows. And we've watched, she's gotten 15th time saying we're about to start talking about it. My daughter is watching more and more stuff.
She grows.
And we've watched,
she's gotten obsessed with two Pixar shorts.
One is Bao.
To my utter surprise,
she over and over again wants to watch this story of... He's a little food baby.
Yeah.
A little food baby,
but also, of course,
an immigrant parent dealing with her son growing up
and changing and marrying a white woman.
And also about her consuming her food baby,
like, you know, fucking Neptune or whoever,
you know, from mythology.
My daughter just watches it and is, like, loving it.
She also likes Jack Jacketite.
We talked about this.
She also loves La Luna.
Oh, interesting.
The one by the guy who then does Luca,
which she calls Moon and Stars.
Anyway, you mentioned Dummy She a while back.
Yeah.
You know, 20 minutes ago.
Boy and the Heron is the movie we should talk about, though.
Right?
Yes.
1943, right?
Yes.
What a time.
The war is afoot.
World War II.
Is happening.
Yes.
There are firebombings happening in Japan.
And our film opens with 12-year-old Mahito experiencing a firebombing in his hometown.
Tokyo.
And right away, his father announces that his mother's hospital is on fire.
Yes.
And he's running into the fire.
And the fire overwhelming the frame, like, overwhelming the frame.
And the father runs out
and then I think
there's a really beautiful moment
where we see Mahito
want to run off
and then return
and then we watch him
as he changes clothes.
Yeah.
And then he runs out
and by that point,
it's all a fire universe
that he enters into.
It's very overwhelming,
especially given that, like you,
I'm watching this movie with barely any understanding of what the movie is going to be.
Yeah.
And it's this very jarring, upsetting beginning
that does kind of feel like, unlike other Miyazaki movies.
Yeah.
They do not usually have beginnings this sort of visceral.
And there's a freneticism too
and a specificity to the images that feels very both Miyazaki,
but also there's an edge to it that is not totally Miyazaki
that feels more like other anime.
Like it's very interesting right off the top.
The fire itself feels very Akira.
And I forget the term you used of just the move towards realism that
happened in the 80s, but just like there is an
intensity there that feels
more realistic
than the sort of expressionistic
thing he usually does.
Yeah. And then
the film jumps to a year later.
Yes.
It's a year later. His father has
remarried his wife's younger sister. Yes. It's a year later. His father has remarried
his wife's younger sister.
Yes, which it takes
in very classic
Miyazaki sort of form.
You sort of glean through
words that that's what's happening.
And you're like,
wait, that's his
mom's sister.
Kind of old-fashioned
biblical notion of,
right, you know,
like if, you know,
you lose this person,
you can marry someone else in the family.
Or a classic Bogdanovich notion.
Yeah, and I think Peter B., he pulled that one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, of course he did.
It's like the Bible.
I don't know why my Peter Bogdanovich impression is Lorne Michaels.
Go on.
There's a really visceral moment to me very early in the film that like i cued into which is um you know obviously we know that the idea of ma the moment between moments that miyazaki talks about a lot these
spaces between moments are what defines a miyazaki film to me in a lot of ways and there's one early
on here where um uh we're introduced to the new home that he's going to be in once his family has fled more towards the
countryside. And he enters the home and then he goes into a bed. And it's like his new bed.
And he has a moment where he just sits in the bed and then just topples over to the side and just
closes his eyes. And it's just laying there in this sort of like prone, uncomfortable position.
And it's like, to me, such a visceral moment of grief.
That grief being this thing that comes in these waves.
And I know those moments well where you're just...
And I remember watching the film and think about this.
He's laying on this like patterned blanket.
And I'm
like, I know that feeling so well of going through something that is traumatic and being somewhere
new and being like, this isn't mine. This pattern is meant to amuse and it's not mine. It's not for
me, but it's trying to comfort me in this moment. And right now I'm just going to lay my head down.
Even all of this is so foreign. It not none of this is mine but in this
moment this is where i have to rest and where i have to find comfort in this thing that is so
foreign to me and it's like this really beautiful moment that again i feel like other filmmakers
might focus on the big feelings of all of that sure and miyazaki is like no it's these moments
between like him putting on the clothes to go help his dad put out the fire at the hospital. It's like, that's a moment that as a kid you would think back on and go, oh, but maybe if I had already been in the right clothes, maybe I could have gotten there and done something. It's like you get locked into these moments that are so specific and small. And I think... Well, even just, you talk about the thing with him in the car,
seeing the family.
Yeah.
And like living with that.
If I had said something,
there was a split second of a decision.
You never stop reliving,
even though it is fixed.
And you can never know
if the outcome would have changed.
And it's all in your own head.
Yeah.
It's all...
Yes, exactly.
Because that's not how life works.
Time just keeps going.
Yeah.
Which is part of the theme
of what the movie goes on to tell you.
And what's interesting is I think
there's a lot of talk about how Miyazaki
storyboarded this straight ahead, right?
So just like chronologically.
And so the first chunk of the film
has more Miyazaki influence.
He was more actively involved
because once he completed that,
he went back and started,
all right, I'm going to go correct animation. I'm going to go draw some key frames and dive in there. he was more actively involved because once he completed that, he went back and started,
all right, I'm going to go correct animation.
I'm going to go draw some key frames and dive in there.
And that's when they're like,
Jesus Christ, this will never be done.
Yes, there's talk about how in the past
it had been 10 minutes of film per month.
Right.
And this current process,
they were producing one minute of film per month.
Because I think this movie was originally announced
in 2017 for a 2020 release
timed to the Olympics
that didn't end up
happening that year.
And in 2020,
they announced
it is like 30% done.
Yeah.
In the year that most people
thought it would be finished.
And the last three years
since then
have been very
touch and go.
Yeah.
And they weren't really communicating.
I mean, especially with them not revealing information about the movie in terms of the marketing.
They also were being very cagey about the timeline of it progressing.
Well, it was one of the first things where they said, there's no timeline.
Right.
We're just going to let this film move ahead at whatever pace it needs to move ahead.
And apparently, the work from home stuff with COVID actually helped them because animators could go work independently
without him hovering over their
shoulders well because it's just not possible
so
then we're introduced to
very soon after
what audience my audience
really you could feel the relief
coming through them when the four little
ladies show up they're like okay
we're in here's the lady isn't it like eight of them when the four little ladies show up. They're like, okay, we're in... Here's the ladies.
Isn't it like eight of them at the beginning?
There's always four.
There are four maids credited
in the cast. I mean, there's a bunch of them.
Can I tell you that my...
When they came on screen, my first
instinct, I had two things that they reminded me of.
Number one, the Cenobites.
And number two, the killer comes from
outer space. In the sense that it was
like oh there's like
the short round one
there was like the
tall one with the
weird long face and
we're all yeah
exactly and I was
like and they put
they move in this
sort of all of our
friends yes they
move in this like
undulating form
you should
certainly bend
social groups
and and it's it's great because you're like here it is And they bend social groups.
And it's great because you're like,
here it is.
Not only are we getting like a group of people,
a Miyazaki thing,
we're also getting Miyazaki's depiction
of the elderly,
which is like always such a joy to behold.
And he loves a sort of collection of crones
with like humor and,
you know, delight and all this. I don't
know. Also, a collection.
He loves like a character
that is a grouping of
be they verbal or not, be they
sort of group-minded or independent
but like, I mean, this movie has like
four different masses
in a way, you know?
I think it's got like six.
Because there's the parakeets,
they're the sort of...
The creatures that look like
the Doctor Who adipose.
Yeah, the little souls.
They're the maids.
Yeah.
Who are the other ones?
The frogs become a mass.
Oh, sure.
The herons become a mass.
The pelicans become a mass.
Yeah.
I guess there's four different types of birds.
A lot of...
I will say my favorite character
in this film,
I'm just going to say it right now,
best part of the film is there's a shot where we first see the old women walking and they pass by a little
staircase and there's a little old man sitting sitting on the stairs he doesn't move you're
like oh that's just a background thing and at the last second he just does one little tiny he does
a little tiny wave and then we never see that man again because i don't think it's even the older
guy that teaches them i was about to say is it not that guy i don't think it's even the older guy that teaches him. I was about to say, is it
not that guy? I don't think it is. Maybe it is.
I have the movie right here. I'm now going to watch it.
Wow. Wait, you have the
movie? Screener.
Oh my God, he's a critic.
JD, he's an awards voter.
I don't know if you forgot about that.
Critics don't get shit, but awards voters.
Oh, excuse me. Do you want a
Nyad water bottle? Please, please take my water voters. Oh, oh, excuse me. Do you want a Nyad water bottle?
Please,
please take my water bottle.
Yeah.
Listen,
I could tell you about the,
um,
I heard that Nyad water bottle,
by the way,
it was lying about how much water can contain.
Go on.
Sorry.
I had to make that joke.
Oh,
what's it called?
Uh,
what's the,
um,
Rachel,
um,
the TV show,
cat skills,
comedian,
New York,
marvelous. Mrs. Maisel
I don't know
if this
it's a brief aside
yeah
as a
and just what we need
right now
is the marvelous
Mrs. Maisel aside
as a current
Emmy voter
yes
and a WGA voter
I get a lot of
screeners
and things like that
for years
the marvelous
Mrs. Maisel
would send,
like,
somehow,
a full-on,
like,
package,
like a parcel
to every voter,
every person.
They would basically send,
like,
an Upper West Side apartment.
Like,
some of these fucking studios,
the money they spend is,
it's sickening.
You would open,
it's truly awful.
You would open the box
that was Santa Claus technology
because more stuff would come
out of it than could possibly be inside of it.
How could this work? To this day, I still have
Marvelous Miss Maisel poker chips
on my desk that I'm like,
these are too nice to throw away, but
there's no context that I could ever
use these. We want you to think of Margaret every
time you play poker. I mean, the wildest
one of all time was
when Fox slash Disney sent out the giant box of food to all the critics and voters for Nomadland.
And they were like, here, it's the thing she doesn't have in the movie.
Oh, my God.
They should have sent a bucket to poop in.
That would have been good.
We got you fresh produce from our partner at like Whole Foods.
I like it when they lean in.
I'll also say I've never gotten one of those and been like,
oh, I got to vote for Miss Maisel.
That's the ultimate truth of this.
You might be like, wow, I still drink out of my Nyad bottle,
but not like, and that's why Jodie Foster was the winner.
It's like, no, why would you ever do that?
Whatever.
Okay, back to Boy and the Heron.
Sorry, that was a brief aside.
I did hear that GKids
is sending out herons
to all voting members
though
yes
but it's scary
yeah
and they say like
pretentious things
like yeah
no they're sending out
a heron costume
so you can be
the little weird old man
that would actually
be good
yeah
the heron hoodie
will you go on the record
and say that if they
send you one David
you will vote for the Boy and the Heron we already did it was one best the record and say that if they send you one, David, you will vote
for the Boy and the Heron?
We already did.
It was one best animated feature
of the New York Film Critics Circle.
No, David, that's smart.
Actually, establish a timeline
on this episode
that people don't know
that we're recording this in August.
So that when you finally do
bang your giant gavel
and your barrister's wig
and decree...
I have said
I'm going to be the chair
of the Critics Circle
probably at some point
because I'm the vice chair right now. People are going to sit on said i want a gavel i want a gavel because we don't have
one and i'm like i need a gavel what you need i'm a big survivor head you need a torch or an
immunity idol maybe every would be funny if it's like niad has the immunity idol so actually it's
gonna win every movie gets a torch and you snuff the ones that don't win. Yeah. It would be a lot of torches.
Would you,
if they gave you
a gavel
on the condition
that you wore
the barrister wig,
would you accept?
Yes.
Okay.
No bits back.
So,
while he's at this home,
yes,
there are these four
lovely crones
tooling around,
but there's also
a mysterious gray heron
Yes.
that is chilling. it's a little aggressive
I wouldn't say chilling
I'd say the heron's got
aggressive vibes
from the beginning
and there is also of course
a giant ruined castle
that's on the grounds
where they're like
yeah
you know
avoid that
yeah
don't go over there
also have you
have you heard the thing
that Toshio Suzuki
has said about the characters in the film?
No.
What do you mean?
I don't know.
Miyazaki is the boy.
Okay.
He is the heron.
Suzuki is the heron.
Suzuki says that this is what the film was about.
That Miyazaki is the boy.
So after we talked all about how you don't really want to lay it out, Suzuki was like,
well, here's my read.
He's the boy.
I'm the heron.
Yeah, but he's just offering his read.
Takahata is the granduncle.
He's the granduncle.
Yeah, sure. That's interesting. Because obviously the easiest way to watch's just offering his reed. Takahata is the granduncle. He's the granduncle. Yeah, sure.
That's interesting.
Because obviously the easiest way to watch this movie is you're like,
Miyazaki is the granduncle.
This is about his legacy.
About blah, blah, blah.
But Miyazaki's probably like,
What?
That guy?
That guy's fucking old.
I'm not that guy.
I'm the boy.
Yeah.
I'm full of vim and vigor.
And what's apparently interesting is that apparently Suzuki had to,
because Miyazaki was having trouble writing the granduncle because of his sorrow
having lost Takahata,
is that he started,
he was like refocused around the heron
and then the heron became this character
that evolved and became,
you know,
because they have this really aggressive relationship.
Because in the beginning here,
the heron is scary.
Yes.
And it's like evil
and it's doing the heron voice
and screaming at people,
at him,
and threatening him
in strange ways.
It's scary.
And then eventually
they become like,
not friends.
I was going to say,
like,
they have an uneasy ally thing,
which I really like.
It never becomes
a buddy movie of like,
okay,
okay,
we both have
one of the same things.
They're always kind of annoyed at each other.
Do we have any
understanding of how
Boy in the Harem became the American title?
That's just what they decided to call it because they thought
How Do You Live was too
inscrutable a title for the American audience.
Because do any of the other films have a title that
is not a direct translation?
Lots of them do. Really? Okay. Yeah. Like
Castle in the Sky is called Lepusha.
Right.
Right.
You know,
in,
or whatever.
Yes,
they often have,
totally,
and obviously like
Spirited Away
is called
The Spiriting Away
of Sin and Chihiro.
There's stuff like that
where they simplified.
I think The Boy in the Heron
undersells what the film
is about.
I do too.
It puts a weird
focus on
that only. I think if you're
a generic American audience. So what should it be called? Granduncle's
Dreamscape Adventure.
Well, that kind of gives up the ending.
Okay, fine. I think it should be called The Boy vs.
the Parakeets. I mean, How Do You
Live is just such an evocative
cradle. Of course, but like Magic Rock
Castle.
That's kind of fun.
Castle in the Water. Castle on the ground how do you say
part of my castle in a place of little bubbly spirits how do you say their name warawara
i would call the movie and introducing warawara they were really the breakouts for you absolutely
did you not see the delightful floating creatures
that literally took like a big deep breath
and then floated
into the sky
that's like my I love that
um
okay so uh
Mahito's uh
aunt is pregnant with a child
let's also say just even from the introduction
of the hair gun, you're like,
the fuck? Why does he have teeth?
Yes. And before the full
transformation's happening, you do have the very
unsettling effect where you'll like
see the nose start to slip under
the beak. Right. Yes. And you're like, why is there
a face inside of his mouth?
Yeah. But you're also like, I love this.
Yes. Yeah. At least I am.
No, no, no.
I was, yeah, it's cooking for me,
but it is deeply upsetting.
Yes, it's very upsetting.
Okay, so his dad's basically abandoning him here because he's kind of like, I'm going off to work.
Busy to make airplane canopies.
Yes, and his dad makes airplane canopies.
Yeah.
As you referenced earlier,
they have a car, which is unusual.
He drives him to school.
That's no good for him.
He has a horrible experience
at school so bad
that he hits himself
in the head with a rock
and starts bleeding.
Repeatedly.
To try and like
get out of school,
essentially.
Yes, and I think just-
Is that the read you had on it?
That he was trying
to get out of school?
I'm trying to remember
exactly how it like
develops now,
but it's after he's bullied,
right?
Like the kid fights him. He's bullied, but I see him as being so distraught
yeah exactly it's a
classic I'm trying to feel something
I think it's self-harm yeah
calculated yeah that he's so
angry and so he's got this grief that he
has not processed he doesn't know where to put it right and
it comes out it's a physical flashing
back to the flames as well obviously
you keep you keep seeing the weird digital flamey stuff.
Yes, and he's having these visions of his mother.
And I think it's this grief that's not been processed.
And I think they reference at the end is that's why he's like,
I can't accept this honor because I have malice.
I have flaw.
I've done this thing.
And it's like, everyone has these scars that are within themselves.
So yeah, he
hits a rock into his head and makes himself bleed
and then everyone... Very nasty. Yeah, and everyone
in the home tries to care for him and take care of him.
But at the same time, his
aunt is pregnant
and he has a strange relationship with her
because she's new mom, but he
has not yet processed
the loss of his... Yeah, and she's not mean or anything. She's new mom, but he's, has not yet processed the loss of his...
Yeah, and she's not mean or anything.
She's quite kind, but it's, right, the dynamic is so...
Yeah, he's 12, he's going through all this, you know.
And then he visits her.
That's what happens next, right?
It's like he visits her,
because like he hasn't visited her,
and the old ladies are like, you have to go visit her.
Yeah, they like, yeah, they talk to each other.
Yeah, but it's like a very cold relationship.
And then that's when he discovers the...
He finally follows the heron
and then makes it to the castle
that he cannot get into.
He crawls into the castle.
It's this weird ruin.
Yeah.
The old ladies come get him out
and they're like,
don't fucking go in there.
Yeah.
Then he hits himself in the head with the rock.
Right.
Then he's bedridden and he has a big bandage.
Yeah.
And a cool undercut to accommodate the scar.
Very true.
It is kind of cool now.
Yeah.
And then the heron's being a pain,
so he's like, I'm going to fight the heron.
And he swings like a stick, you know,
he goes and challenges the heron
and swings a stick at him.
And that's when the heron's like all right you know good job uh and they sort of have their first kind of showdown right i guess yeah and uh the heron's like your mom wants you
you gotta go find your mom yeah and you're and does the her heron, I don't know what the order of events is,
but basically the heron's like,
your mom's still alive.
Yeah.
Yes.
And the boy's like,
no, she's not.
Like, this is horrible of you.
And the heron's like,
no, no, no,
it's just human trickery.
Like, you're, you know,
you just got to go get your mom.
He faints.
I think they say,
did you see her body?
Right.
Yeah.
Which is like its own.
You don't know this classic human trick.
Yeah, and it's like such a...
It's such a cruel thing to say to a child, right?
It's like, did you see her body?
And then like, that brings up,
I'm sure, all these things for this kid who's like,
no, when you're a kid,
you don't witness death in that regard.
It's like shielded from you.
It's taken away from you.
I mean, the heron's going full,
let me be frank on him.
He says,
come to think of it,
you never did see my body.
Oh my gosh.
That's one of the things he says.
You know that video better than I.
Yeah, because it's my audition piece.
Every year I go and perform
for the Juilliard judges.
I'm going to say this
with all due respect to Miyazaki-san
and his
wonderful artistry but at this point the heron is saying like your presence is requested it's like
bashing his wings around and his eyes are bulging out of his beak yeah and his nose which looks
like balls looks like a big old ball sack sure can we Can we just agree on that? This was the thing
you say with respect
to me as an author?
Exactly.
I don't want
to imply that I don't
like appreciate
his artistic choices.
Do you think he has
a scrotum nose
that's coming out
from under his beak?
Yeah.
I just want to make sure
everyone agrees with me.
Okay, well.
That didn't read as
close.
Okay, well,
how about I show you guys
an image and you guys
can tell me if I'm crazy for thinking
this looks like balls flip it around
it just lets uh you know he's picking
out the knife okay
uh
this is the section
of the podcast where we wait for David to find
kind of in that one
shot I mean even
that
here's another one here's what I'm gonna say with all due respect I need more wrinkle with all yeah I mean, even that. Here's another one. Here's what I'm going to say with all
due respect. I need more wrinkle
with all. Yeah, I mean, look, maybe it's a young
ball sack. Smoothest scrotum.
Okay. Okay.
With all due respect to you, David,
it worries me that
that's what you think. I'm not saying
that's exactly what they look like.
Okay. Did you think it
looked like that? Or did you think it looked like that?
Or did you think Miyazaki's intent was...
I can't believe it was crazy.
A dick in balls is going to come out of this hair in his mouth.
Are your balls wrapped in a beak?
It would be funny if I was like,
you know, before having sex with a new person,
I was like, just, my penis is totally normal.
My balls will be emerging from a beak.
I can't, I'm, I'm appalled. They will slowly cough out. And they do have eyes above them. My penis is totally normal. My balls will be emerging from a beak.
I'm appalled. They will slowly cough out.
And they do have eyes above them.
But they cannot see. They are starting to bite teeth.
But the teeth don't hurt.
God, what a... They're large. They seem
too large for the beak they're coming out of.
Guys, this is the last film of Miyazaki.
He did it! He built
a bow and arrow. We can't do this.
We can't do this to Miyazaki. David! it! He built a bow and arrow. We can't do this. We can't do this
to Miyazaki. Quite crucially,
he takes some of the discarded feathers
from the herring. And I know it's ironic that
I'm the one saying...
You said it was a No Bits episode!
You called it! That's what's honestly scariest
is that wasn't a bit.
David was serious.
David was serious.
He had tears in his eyes when he said that.
He makes the arrow and he makes the arrow.
He makes the arrow,
and he makes the arrow from the flechette,
the tip, not the tips,
the other side from the heron's feathers,
which is going to be sort of an important weapon later.
Yes.
That he has his own magic to use against him, basically.
And then he goes off.
Then the lady of the house disappears, right? That's the big inciting incident. It's not like he goes off. Then the lady of the house disappears, right?
That's the big inciting incident.
It's not like he goes off on his own
just because the heron's being such a pain in the ass to him.
It's when she disappears, he's like,
okay, I guess I must now travel into this place.
And I think that's a really important moment
because he sees her walk into the woods,
and this is someone who he doesn't hate,
but he is feeling a level of
separation from because of his situation right and yet he feels some sense of responsibility
for this person who he knows yeah he does care for to some degree and wants to have in his life
even if right now he has this indignance about the situation he is in,
what draws him into the adventure
is going to help this person
who he knows his dad loves
and who he knows is trying to love him.
And it's his mother's sister.
That's important, obviously.
But I think that's very important.
Like you said,
he's not going into this selfishly
right in fact
he's not trying to just escape or run away
yeah that's also the moment that sends us into the
adventure also is that
we can get we'll get there in a minute
but he
he then goes into the woods or he
everyone's trying to look for her right
that's what happens next yeah and then he goes to the
big creepy you know archway
tunnel that lights up with all the books the maid is with him going like you can't go like you know
like all that uh the mirror made kiriko and then the the castle opens for him and the heron summons
him inside and that's when the heron is like come in right get
in here come hang out you know adventure
I don't know what the exact line is
that's sort of just a rough that's my dub of
it but also so much
there is such a
sourness
to his tone yes at all times
it's not even like yeah it's not even like
oh he's kind of cranky and he's got like a voice
like he's very antagonistic he's not even like, oh, he's kind of cranky and he's got a voice. He's very antagonistic.
He's not a little stinker.
He's worse than that.
There's something upsetting about him.
There's something kind of vile about him.
Now, Mike, I wonder if the dub will soften that at all.
But it sounds like Arpatz is going full asshole with it.
Little asshole.
He's a little asshole.
Again, this is 45 minutes into the movie
he's finally
inside the castle yes he's in this
big room with the sun painted
on the floor his mother
supposedly is like lying on a couch in front
of him right the heron is there
this is the first time I think a lot of the audience is
thinking like okay now the movies
we're in a Miyazaki movie in another world
like okay
he tries to touch the mother and she like is made out of the movie's... We're in a Miyazaki movie in another world. Like, okay.
He tries to touch the mother and she's like,
is made out of water.
It's such a cool... Yeah, she's like a jello kind of...
She acts like a puddle almost.
She melts.
She melts and it's horrific.
Yeah.
And it's, again, this moment...
And he's mad.
He's like, you can't do this to me.
Yeah, but it's a moment you think of a kid
who lost his mother and then it's like,
there she is and just wanting to touch it and then her turning into this like, it's like, there she is, and just wanting to touch her,
and then her turning into this like,
it's like horrific.
Yeah.
It's horrible.
Yeah, yeah.
And that's what I think
is so interesting about this
is that so much of what
is drawing this character forward
is this trauma and this scar.
And it's not...
A sense of exploration
that maybe a lot of young Miyazaki heroes have.
But what's interesting, right,
is it's not that he believes that his mom is alive
or that he believes he's good.
It's that he's being told by this evil force.
Yeah.
If only you do more right now,
you could get your mother back.
Yeah.
Which is such an interesting take on that
because I think there's a softer version of that where it's
like you know the naivete of child and trying to and then reality no this is a dark voice a dark
voice inside the world that's trying to tell him if you just do more you can get this thing back
i would say he almost reacts as if he he never fully believes it like he is very wary of what
the heron is selling him even as he moves forward through this,
which makes the sort of
jellification of the mom
even more upsetting.
Right.
Where it's like,
why put him through this whole fucking,
yeah.
And that's why he keeps bringing up Natsuko,
his aunt,
and his father's new wife,
as being as important to him
as this goal is because she...
She exists.
And...
She is a tangible present thing.
And his father loves her.
Yes.
And he brings that up.
Yeah.
As that's part of his motivation.
I have to do this for my dad also.
And that's such an interesting thing.
That's what's driving the character is
this thing that he's being taunted at
to maybe you can solve this.
And this thing that is someone else's relationship
that is not the thing that moves, but he knows that it's his responsibility to try to seek something this. And this thing that is someone else's relationship that is not the thing that moved,
but he knows that it's his responsibility
to try to seek something there.
That's a really interesting motivation.
Yeah.
Because then they have this whole battle scene
or fight between the heron and the boy.
He shoots the arrow at him and he actually,
you know, yes, penetrates his beak.
That's when he gets the hole through the beak.
Yes.
And that's the moment at which the heron starts actually
being sort of a reluctant ally.
But the thing is...
He's fully vomited his own head out of his bird mouth.
He's being a huge pain in the ass,
but in a way that's kind of threatening and scary.
And then finally, like, after this battle,
all the way up at the top of the stairs,
like, there's this shadowy old man
who says, like, foolish bird,
like, be his guide.
And you're like, bitch.
Like, where were you before?
And he keeps...
Shadow man?
Yeah.
I know, I know.
He keeps doing this in the movie,
popping in and being like,
I told you,
stop trying to kill or torment this boy.
Uh-huh.
You're supposed to be his guide.
And the Heron will go like,
yeah, okay.
And then the minute he's gone,
he's like, fuck you.
He never really turns around on it.
And to me, that's a reading of,
from what I'm projecting to that from my own life,
is that's that constant struggle with the,
our own traumas
and the things that we're trying to reckon with
and the things inside us
that are taunting us to move forward. And at some point, those things are both our antagonist and
also our guide. And when Mahito is able to assert some sort of control through this sort of magical
fight with the Heron, that with the, the Heron.
That's also in the Heron's willing to be like,
okay,
I guess I'm going to be your guide because you have some,
you've gained enough,
um,
self ability that I have to sort of supplicate to you to a little bit.
And this,
this,
this great force,
this,
you know,
this,
this legacy is telling me to also be your guide.
Right.
And I think that's a really interesting battle because that's so much of grief and trauma and loss is like this
thing can both be an antagonist and it can be a guide yeah terrific point it's sort of reminding
me of another dynamic yeah um spawn and violator uh griffin has a big thumbs up from the bathroom ben like like the thumbs up at the end of
t2 i have griffin trying to put my finger on who the fucking heron reminds me of you're totally
right now the difference of course is this is a little boy not a dead you know you know a secret
agent who became a hell superhero whatever whatever the fuck spawned.
They're different in that sense.
It's funny how the movie Spawn,
which you went to see without me in theaters.
I was very jealous.
I yelled at Alex Perry for weeks about it.
Wait.
The original Spawn?
Yeah, the 90s Spawn.
Oh, I was...
My brain was so scrambled.
I was like, wait, that came out in like 1995.
You guys went to see it.
I rewatched it recently just for fun.
What a picture, obviously.
Leguizamo's best work.
A brave performance from John Leguizamo.
I haven't. I haven't revisited Spawn since I saw it in theaters.
But yes, Violator is technically there to help spawn understand
things right but he's also kind of a villain i mean he is the villain yeah and he's mean the
whole time he sucks he's beyond that he's so i wish there was some sort of cue that they could
give us that he was that's what interesting is like spawn soft plays that he's a villain
because uh they name him what do they name him violate and what's he is like spawn soft plays that he's a villain because they name him. What do they name him?
Violator.
And what's he look like?
A little clown.
Yeah.
Okay.
Got it.
Got it. Got it.
Like two seconds into the movie, he's like, oh, I farted.
Oh, no, that was a wet one.
You know, like pulling his pants on me.
Like, do you see poo on it?
You know, it's like.
We're talking about how much clown sucks.
Yeah.
When I saw that movie for the first time, I contended to my father that Leguizamo was robbed of an Oscar nomination and we
saw it in 35mm a couple months
ago as it was intended
as it was intended in gorgeous
35mm and the second
Leguizamo came on screen
what you're describing basically
his like off camera dialogue
I turned to Ben I was like this is the worst performance
it's the most insufferable characterization
in the history of
cinema. He's disgusting.
He sucks. He's a bad thing.
I haven't seen it since the 90s. I still think it's good.
That movie is too
fucking awful to hate
in a way. You're kind of like, I love
this. There are moments of genuine
something. There's some moments of
something and then there's moments like where they go to
hell and it looks like, you know, PlayStation
minus one graphics. Yeah.
And you're like, these sweeties put this in
theaters. Like, this is what they had for us.
And it was directed by the guy who basically
was one of the two dudes
responsible for the CGI breakthroughs
at ILM that allowed Jurassic Park where they were
like, well, you've cracked the code on
computer effects.
Right. Go show us everything you've
got in this movie he also did like the
T-1000 and all that right
A.Z. Dippy
Mark A.Z. Dippy
anyway Spawn miniseries Mark
A.Z. Dippy miniseries coming
2027
we could do a Spawn episode
but the Heron if Ben chooses it
I mean I think
it's
a rich text i remember i think there's a lot to say there's a lot to say clearly not not just the
one that we just said there's more a lot more absolutely i remember there being a ton of behind
the scenes featurettes about how hot the costume is that leguizamo had to be in and how it was so
it definitely doesn't look comfortable walking in a squat the whole time the whole thing is fucking insane you sort of admire the performance except for that it's
the worst it's the worst you're sort of like i can't believe how committed to it he committed
he is to this yeah it's unbelievable he had a really strong take on the character which is
what if the audience hated beetlejuice everyone hates beetlejuice in the movie too. The movie. I'm saying
the audience every time it comes on screen
is like, fucking come on.
The worst thing about Spawn is that he has to deliver
all of the exposition.
He's the only character in that
movie that knows what's going on. Until
Cagliostro comes in the last 20 minutes and is
just like, here's everything that hasn't made sense for the last
two hours. He's hanging out. I forgot about Cagliostro.
But he doesn't start explaining stuff until usually he's
like spawn you have to listen to me and spawns like
what and then
you know
truly he will enter
scenes just doing that
one of the original comic book
movies yeah there's two things I
have to say and we still have like an hour plus
left of boy and heron plot to untangle
yeah we really need two hours of Spawn plot.
We need to...
No, that movie is a tight 71 minutes long.
It's got two hours worth of story.
When they say feature film, they spell feature differently.
You know, it's like when they're...
F-E-E-T.
How KFC had to turn into like just KFC.
They're like, this is a feature.
It's a PHI.
We need to order lunch because we're going to have to record another episode
right after this one.
So let me know what you guys want.
What's the other thing?
Oh, we have to record another episode right after this one.
Right, that's what it is.
Thank you for reminding me.
So he gets transported to a beach
and he sees all these ships sailing by
What we have not mentioned yet
Only in passing is that
The Heron is a man
There's a little man inside the Heron
He has a big nose and crazy teeth
But he is
He is a little DeVito
Inside the Heron
Yeah I'm trying to think if there's someone
He's got a little bit
He's DeVito meets Polito perhaps
he's got a little John Polito in him
there's a little Gonzo in there
there's a little Gonzo
Gonzo's
Gonzo's so sweet though
yeah he's not sweet
but even DeVito there is an inherent cuteness
to DeVito even when he's playing his
most unsavory type and a little like
come on I'm not all bad.
The Heron feels like, is this guy
just 100% unpleasant?
Right, right, right. Like, why am I supposed
to even root for this guy? But then he is also
little... There's a little bit of
monkey bone in the Heron. A lot of monkey bone
in the Heron. Well, Miyazaki's favorite
film of the 2000s.
And can I say this? Miyazaki goes hard
against Snow White
for rotoscoping
and all the stuff,
but he's like,
but Monkeybone.
Monkeybone was pure.
Monkeybone was good.
I don't know
if I'm going out of limb here.
The relationship
between the boy
and the hammer
reminded me a little bit
of Spawn and Violator.
Do you know what I'm saying?
So,
here's what
I'm trying to come up
with an analog.
Here's what he's confronted with.
Do you guys remember Spawn?
When he arrives at the beach.
He's stuck in a loop.
A view of boats.
Oh my God.
No, no, no.
What?
What?
Kuriko is like,
we should go back.
Yeah, I mentioned that.
And he's like,
no, we still have to go get Natsuko.
Yes, he's going to get his aunt.
He could have gone back and he's like, I'm not gonna. Oh, get Natsuko. He could have gone back, and he's
like, I'm not gonna. Oh, of course not.
Okay, he lands on a beach.
Boats in the distance. Yes. There's
a bunch of pelicans. Yes.
Looking like normal
pelicans. Yeah. Yeah.
Well, relative to... They are the animal,
the pelican, right? Yes. You know.
There's no briefs.
I was about to make that same stupid joke he goes
and sees it's just so miyazaki this like you know there's a big golden gate and then there's just
like a sort of cave behind it yeah and like a black hole and he goes and gazes at it and this
is what makes the pelicans go insane and start screaming and talking to him in human language like this is
the point i think where i am beginning to be like i don't know if i can handle yeah the world building
it might be too aggressively surreal for me i was feeling that a bit yeah like i like it more than a
bit as imagery and i like it as atmosphere but i'm also still like i I am watching a film where I need to grasp what's going on.
It's funny because I had the opposite.
The moment that moment happened,
I was like,
and here we go,
the movie begins.
I definitely do have that thing of like,
yeah, like,
okay, we're in Miyazaki territory.
Like, okay, fantasy, animals.
Like, sure, that's what he does.
I should feel comfortable right now.
But it does feel like more aggressively
surreal than ever and I will say also
because there's a lot of these incredible
animators that come from this sort of background
of realism or just have
totally different styles there's a couple
animators who are known for their very specific detail
there are so many giant
swarms of things that are so brilliantly
hand animated in this
think about animating every one of these
pelicans and every...
It's like absolutely, absolutely
amazing. The fire, when the wrapping,
the paper is sort of flung around his head.
Yeah. But then, so then the pelicans
all swarm him. They do.
We've also missed a scene where
before that, he's swarmed by frogs.
That happens right in the
real world, yes. Yes. And they, when we say swarming, he's like enveloped by them. And happens right in the real world, yes. And when we say
swarming, he's like enveloped by them.
And it happens again. And then these pelicans push him
through this gate. But they're also like screaming
in human... Yes.
Like human, Jesus.
In whatever. English.
Japanese. Dan Stevens.
And then a badass pirate
queen storms in
and saves him with a fiery whip.
When I saw her,
I was like,
David's gonna love this character.
Yeah.
Florence Pugh's doing her
in the dub, I believe.
Oh, okay.
I was trying to figure out who.
And then she has this magical whip.
She also sets aside her sailboat
and it's like the seas are really rough
and really crazy.
It's like really rough seas going on. really crazy like it's like really a rough
seas going on and she jumps out and then forms this like magical circle that and then gives
some very specific instructions like keep looking at the cave do not look behind yourself step
backwards and then now you are safe and it's like okay this person who knows this world and
understands it and can sort of take him under her wing. The cave is the void, right?
Like, it's...
You can't define it further than it's just
it's like, if you
go in there, there's nothing else.
Did we
brush over him needing to
whittle the cork, basically,
to fill in the heron's
beak from the damage
he himself caused.
No, that happens later. Oh, it happens later.
Okay.
So he gets in her boat.
They go over the bar,
much like in the great Craig Gillespie film,
The Finest Hours.
And then it's calm.
Yeah.
Yes.
And then they're like sailing.
And there's weird mythical creature.
She captures like a fucking manatee monster
from the sea.
Yeah.
You're kind of like,
can someone finally
explain what's going on?
Right? Like, the movie has slowed down.
And she
doesn't really, but she does say, like, in this
world, most people are dead.
Like, that's her kind of big takeaway, right?
She's like, all of those ships are illusions.
Right. Yeah.
And she knows he's on this quest.
And again, it's just so much Miyazaki imagery.
These people who look like the spirits from Spirited Away,
they're like black jelly creatures with eyes.
Another swarm, basically.
That are like rowing boats.
They're like hollow people.
No one is like, this is the afterlife. They're like hollow people. Like, no one is like,
this is the afterlife
or this is
where people go
after,
you know,
like whatever,
like after something or other.
Right?
Yeah.
And Miyazaki does an interesting thing
where he pulls a lot of imagery
and a lot of concepts
from like
Shinto tradition
and all this stuff.
But then also...
He does that in a spirited way.
Yes.
But then he's adapting it
and creating his own version
of it as well
and he doesn't
name or specify
too many things
he lets them be
these ideas
where you sort of
kind of glean
what they are
and what they represent
and what they're from
but it's never
a character's never going
those are the dead people
and what they do is this
and what they feast on is this
and when they did it
like you just sort of
get these glimpses of them and these these um emotional responses to that right
it's much like spirited away it's like who's on this train spirits what do you mean yeah and then
yes the warawara show up after that little adipose like you said from doctor who or what's another
blobby friend from what they're like is the souls from Soul.
That's true.
Kind of.
I thought of Kirby.
Yeah.
Kirby.
Or blobby.
Blobby.
Or the water babies from Elemental.
Clearly, it just shows that you haven't seen it.
You're showing your ass on this one.
It's just disgusting that you would try to fucking,
you know, fake your way through that movie.
You gotta study Elemental. You got to study elemental.
You got to steep yourself.
You know,
the water people cry a lot too.
They're very emotional.
So they cry a lot.
The tears flood their apartment.
That's the kind of next level intellectual thinking going on.
I haven't seen it.
I'm sure it's great.
Their high rise apartments are flooded,
but they don't swim.
They don't like swimming.
They just walk through water and eat dinner on inflatable furniture.
I would eat the water.
J.D. Amato and I love movies.
Elemental's a movie.
I'm sure I love it.
Elemental is a movie.
Right?
It was classified as such
by the FDA.
Yes, although there was
a lot of fighting.
David.
Yes.
Masterclass.
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Yes. There are a lot of film-related ones I've talked in the past about. Samuel Jackson and Helen Mirren have
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Helen Mirren, in particular, opens
up her lesson with her
walking on screen and sitting in a
chair and then saying, that is the single hardest
thing to do as an actor. And unpacking
it in a way that's really interesting
that I think about a lot. Yes.
Well, you know, right.
That's what I'm saying. Like, there's obvious, like, Gary Kasparov teaches lot. Yes. Well, you know, right. That's what I'm saying. Like there's obvious,
like Garry Kasparov teaches chess.
Sure.
Like he's famous for chess.
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He scored a few films.
Scored a picture too.
I just like that there's also like
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I think I got that figured out.
Amy Poehler teaches you to prepare
to be unprepared.
I guess that's probably sort of aim probably. That's something I actually do have figured out. Amy Poehler teaches you to prepare to be unprepared. I guess that's probably sort of aim-pravi.
That's something I actually do have figured out.
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What were we talking about? Okay, she's on the
pirate. Yeah, the Wawa Weewas show up.
The Wawa Weewas?
The Wara Waras. Sure.
The floating soul boys. Yes.
They look very nice.
Exactly.
Oh my God. Then she cuts open the giant fish for them.
He helps.
A bunch of guts come out.
Yeah.
And then she's like,
yeah, this is for the little bobs to eat
so they can fly.
Okay.
He goes to her house.
Wait, why did you say that?
No, no, no.
I love this.
No.
All right.
I don't want to sound like I don't love these moments.
I think I'm more just like the first time watching it,
I'm like, okay, they watch it.
They eat the fish guts from the weird sea monster
so they can fly.
Filing that away.
I assume that will matter.
What you realize in the end of this movie is like,
yeah, sure, maybe there's some dreamy logic
to a lot of this stuff.
But that's not what's important to the story being told.
So that sort of leads to my last
sort of big diversion
that I want to take real quick.
I'm going to kill you.
Listen,
when you ask, you know what you signed up for.
How dare he do the podcast?
We're very good friends.
We all know that, Nelson.
Okay, so I've been on part of why I was going so deep on Miyazaki stuff before this and Japanese cinema and all this stuff before this was part of a larger thing that I've been going through as a byproduct of my own career.
so obviously I I think a lot of my
public projects are like a lot of like the weird
like variety shows and things but in the
past five years I'd said I've made most
of my money as a writer and
writing stuff even if a lot of that stuff
does not see the light of day remains in
development yes
I'll say here book coming soon hey
book coming soon
but part
of that process has been very interesting to me.
And I went off an evolution
that was kicked off
by a document that I was sent
that I sent to all of you guys.
That's the thing that I sent.
Okay, right.
I forgot about this.
So this is...
Don't get too excited on Mike.
I would like to blind item the...
It might spike the level.
You know what this document is?
What is this document? Wait, wait, wait. Can I just say... There's a just, because sometimes. I would like to blind item the. It might spike the level. You know what this document is? What is this document?
Wait, wait, wait.
Can I just say.
There's a reason I sound the way I sound.
I want to blind item the.
Okay.
Company.
It is a large streaming company
that has a document
that outlines for one,
how to pitch something to them,
basically to fit into their model.
Yes.
So I was sent this document at a certain point.
And these types of things float around a lot in the industry of,
hey, actually, here's how story works.
Right.
I'm going to say this document sucks.
Is that fair?
Are we all on the same page about this?
One look at this document made me despair.
It boils things down.
It makes it simple.
So this document upset me.
And one of the things that upset me is that it doesn't suggest this format for how stories work.
It demands it.
It says that if you are going to make a story for us, this is what it is going to be.
And it feels retrofitted from analytics.
We have identified the commonalities
between the things
that audiences react to.
The other thing is
that it is loaded
with imagery from shows
that are not
from this company,
which is insane.
Now, it has some,
a few pictures of shows
that this company
has actually created.
Mostly, it is not.
Yes.
This one show in particular,
they're really foregrounding
that it is not their show.
It was not created, you know, through this kind of robotic pitch process.
No.
So one of the things that this document includes is also it really heavily goes to bat for the Dan Harmon story circle.
Which is really just a sort of simplified version of the hero's journey.
Yes.
Which is the, yeah, exactly.
And that was the thing that was floating around in the industry a lot
of like,
oh, this is this rubric.
So having gone to film school,
I've read every one of these.
I wonder how Harmon
feels about that, honestly.
Given that he's like,
that's how I process
how to write a script.
Yes.
That's not like the rules
that everyone needs to follow.
It's not a,
it's not dogmatic.
It's a guide.
Anyway.
And this guide
was extremely dogmatic and it was extremely like, this is how you have to do it. And if you bring us something that's not dogmatic. It is a guide. Anyway. And this guide was extremely dogmatic
and it was extremely like,
this is how you have to do it.
And if you bring us something
that's not this,
you're not doing it correctly.
Right.
And having...
Well, stories are math
and we all know this
and technology is finally perfect.
Plot armor,
my favorite new phrase
that you taught me.
Yeah, plot armor.
Yeah, well, having gone
through film school,
I was forced to, you know,
I've read all of my Joseph Campbell,
I've read my John Truby, Save the Cat, this. Back when I was in film school, I was forced to, you know, I've read all of my Joseph Campbell here. I've read my John Truby,
Save the Cat, this.
Back when I was in film school also,
so I was an animator
in film school. That was like what I focused on
on top of the live action
writing and directing stuff, is the big thing was
like the Pixar rules. There are 22
rules of storytelling and whatever.
And all this stuff, I feel like there's a trend.
Trey Parker, NYU
lecturer that gets circulated all the time. Make sure that the fire people rules of storytelling and whatever. And all this stuff, I feel like there's a trend. The Master and Trey Parker NYU lecture
that gets circulated
all the time.
Yes.
Make sure that the fire people
in the Bottega
well,
it's a Pixar rule.
It's all great,
but I had a big reaction
from it,
which is,
I have a very complicated
relationship in my own life
with rules.
I was very
adherent to them
and felt very
terrified by them
growing up as a Midwestern Catholic
boy. And so I
when someone gives me a set of rules, if
I don't agree with them, it creates a schism inside
me where I get very like, okay, now
I need to break these rules because like
something's wrong here. And so
I went down this tirade
or this path of thinking
where I'm like, I think
the hero's journey is bullshit.
I think the,
uh,
the three X structure is bullshit.
I think that is a,
my POV.
And I think,
you know,
other people have talked about this where it's like,
I think the hero's journey,
uh,
as it's been,
uh,
adapted because the Joseph Campbell stuff is actually a little more broad.
And like,
what's him looking at stories and being like,
what,
you know,
it's insane with harmon is
finding the commonalities by observing the things that organically happen and how we process them
but rather than imposing when those become templates on which stories are that's where
things get dictated i think it's also my pov is that there is a imperialistic background to that
hero's journey right because a lot of it comes from Greek and Roman epics,
which a lot of those stories,
having taken Latin for eight years and into college as well,
is like...
Oh, Bob Brann.
Pewter science.
Latin.
It's my, you know,
my credentials here.
But even, right,
just the notion that they're rooted
in people, quote-unquote,
conquering things.
Well, the idea is that
some of these stories are
there's a character
that wants something
and there's going to be
things that are going to
get in their way
and they have to fight
through them.
And sometimes those fights
are going to be so bad
and horrible,
they're going to feel bad,
but actually in the end
it's going to be good.
And at the end,
it's justified.
You're going to get
what you want because
you went through all
these trials to get this thing.
And that's a gross
simplification of it.
But somehow,
sometimes that's how it reads.
And then there's a big part of this, which is
I think in Western American
storytelling, conflict is at the
heart of all of this. You can't have
story without conflict is the thing that's told over and over
again. So I got into a big
discussion with my dear friend Aaron Covington.
Do you guys know Aaron? He's the host
of Black Guys on
White Movies. He's also the writer of Creed
and he's a wonderful writer of his own right.
Where I was like,
I think there's other story structures
and the fact that we're saying
that this is the only story structure,
I think is bullshit.
I think it's sort of like American centric thinking
and imperialistic and all this stuff.
And so he was sort of testing me
and trying to get me into it.
At the same time of all this,
a side thing that's been going on in my life
is for the past five
to eight years, I've been diving
into the world of amateur haiku
universe and trying to get published in the
haiku space. Ben looks shocked. You've never
mentioned this to me. This is the thing that...
You're absolutely out of your mind. I love it.
Once a year, I try to submit haikus
for publishing. I'm yet to be successful, so I'm
very amateur. But I really
go down the path
of all this stuff
because it's really interesting.
Which is a very strict format.
No.
No.
So, okay.
My brief thing is that
what people think of haiku
is actually not
what modern haiku
has evolved into,
especially in the English sense.
When you think of haiku,
you probably think of 575.
Miracle, yeah. What modern haiku has evolved into, especially in the English sense. When you think of haiku, you probably think of 575. Miracle, yeah.
What modern haiku has evolved into
has nothing to do with syllable counts
in that same way.
The idea of haiku at its core,
and I could be getting this all wrong,
maybe that's why I'm an amateur
and nothing ever gets published,
but is you're trying to create
the juxtaposition of two images
as taking the idea
of there's a separation in the haiku that divides into two parts. And so you're taking two of two images as taking the idea of there's a separation in the haiku that divides
into two parts. And so you're taking two of these images, two of these ideas that you put them next
to each other. And in their objective nature, putting them together will tell you a larger
truth about the world or about this moment. One of the exercises that they do in haiku sometimes
is you go, all right, think of a moment that's important to you. Now look to your left. What
do you see? Look to your right. what do you see? Look to your right,
what do you see? Do those tell the story of this moment?
And haiku is about trying to be as efficient
as possible. We're trying to distill these
moments down to these
as few words as possible,
as illuminating words as possible to tell this
story. A big part of haiku
is a kigo, which is like
a word that will
sort of cue you into the season, either in a literal
sense or an emotional sense. And there's like the koreji, which is like the cutting word,
the word that slices through things and changes the tone and pace at the end of it.
So at the same time, I'm going through all this stuff and learning about the history of haiku.
And that's when I stumble upon, there's a thing that is uh in um like eastern cultures and
like japanese culture uh kisho tenketsu which is the story structure that a lot of uh japanese
writers and things like that are grown up to learn which is uh key is the introduction show
is development and then 10 is different than in America where we have conflicts.
Right. Well, 10 is the twist.
It's a change. Something changes.
And then Ketsu is the conclusion.
And what's interesting about Kisho Tenketsu is that it's a different
frame of thinking about story.
Now, you can take stories that fall
within the hero's journey. You can apply all
of these to any story, right? Just because
you're taking a story and
putting it within this context doesn't
change that they can all have a lot of these things.
What's interesting, though,
is that the primary driver of the plot is
not conflict. It is not that you
have to have this conflict and then it has to be
resolved. And
with a lot of the Miyazaki films,
there
is a lot of plot that moves
without conflict being the driving factor.
Processing change rather than conquering conflict.
And the second and third act is something will change.
It's not that someone, you finally got into the phone,
you're going to have it out and something will happen.
Yes, there's not usually some straightforward villain
to defeat or anything like that.
And even the movies where there is a villain,
it's not that we're going to have it out
and then either we're going to get our way or we're not.
It's usually that something just happens
and something shifts in the universe
and then the film ends.
And that shift connects back to the themes
of what's going on in the beginning and the middle,
which I think is a really interesting way to think about story.
And this is another film where i think conflict
though there are parties that are working against each other it is not the driver of the plot
and i think that's really interesting and the other thing is that in my sort of adventure of
all the story stuff there are tons of other story structures that come from other cultures
that do not rely on uh conflict or that sort of like a character.
Because I always say the thing where I'm like, I don't even know if that a character has to go
through change for it to be a story, which is usually a thing where it's like, well,
we all know in story, at least the character has to change. And my POV is like, I don't think that
is true. Think about fables. In fables, rarely do the characters change. What changes is the
audience's POV. I love fables.
Right. But you refer to. I love fables. Right, but...
You refer to Bill William's fables.
And then, yeah, exactly.
But at the end of a fable,
a lot of the characters don't know what's different.
They don't accept the change.
The audience reading it takes the change.
Very interesting.
I would have to think about that.
But anyway.
I'm sure you're right.
And then there's also like, you know,
etiological stories where it's like,
oh, it's a story that's telling you about
how something was created.
And so it's not about
a change from the character,
but a change with the universe
that happens.
So anyways, that's all to say,
I think there's a lot of fixation
and a lot of the way
that we as Americans read films
is like you're saying,
okay, great.
The fish is being cut
and the war war eat it.
I have to hold on to that
because that's going to be
a piece of...
Right, that'll be important.
Later, he'll use the thingy to do the thing.
You don't introduce that character
if that character doesn't have...
Chekhov's gone way of thinking.
If in the end we need the war war
to fly up to get a thing,
and so we need to feed them fish to fly the thing,
and good thing we learned that earlier.
But now may I speak on this same topic?
So the warawara introduced.
Then he goes and he chills out with,
what's her name, Kiriko,
in her house for a minute.
And then they go outside
and they see that the Warawara
are now floating into the sky.
They've gotten turned into balloons
and they're floating.
And it's like, oh yeah,
these are souls going to be born.
Then a bunch of pelicans
start eating the Warawara.
And he's upset.
And it's awful, right?
It's like a bad thing is happening.
And then he starts like fighting the pelicans, right?
And there's the fire and it's obviously like,
there's a boat, the fire,
the boat catches on fire and he's upset.
And then he goes to see this dying pelican who will one day have the voice of Willem Dafoe, I guess.
Right?
Oh, that's a great casting.
And, you know, the Pelicans, like,
we were brought here to eat the Wara Wara.
Like, we're a solution to a problem that was created earlier.
Because this is Miyazaki talking...
Maybe.
I don't want to put words in his mouth.
What it feels like to you is...
Yeah, like, talking about, like, the creative process, for one, right?
Of, like, well, I brought this in, but then this meant for one right of like well I brought this
in but then this meant that made no sense
then I brought that in you know then the old like
you know I swallowed a fly thing right like
you know yeah we got the goats to
eat the bamboo but now we have goats
everywhere so we need snakes to kill the goats so you
know like and also he's talking about
the way our earth functions
and you know what humans have done to it
I'm sure right like there's environmental thinking.
But I just also love that he's like,
no, this is like roiling chaos
of a man trying to like
tweak something into perfection
and it only makes things crazier
and more surreal and hard to understand.
Yes, and that for me...
This film is for children.
For me, when I saw this...
It's not really for children,
but it sort of is.
For me, my reading, right,
is that this,
the fantasy world, right,
is the sort of subconscious.
It's the internal world
of a person.
And within that,
we have all of these things
that are fighting
against each other.
And there's this innocence
and this, you know,
joy and purity
that I think the Wawa represent
where it's like,
oh, these... Little babies! Yeah the wire wire represent where it's like, Oh,
these,
this sort of like babies.
Yeah, exactly.
And then there's also these Pelicans that have to keep that in check.
Right.
And those are,
I don't know.
We came here because that's what we're supposed to do.
Right.
And that's so much of adulthood,
right?
As we have these things where you're like,
you're like,
why do I have to keep this aspect of my,
but I do in order to survive.
And it's not that that's bad.
It's that that's part of a job that these things have to do within ourselves to keep
ourselves in check.
And it's like, again, it's not necessarily that like, oh, this is going to lead to something
in the plot.
But it's this moment for me that is so beautiful and resonates.
And I'm like, yes, this is part of the experience.
This is how we live.
This is part of it. I think it's beautiful. yes, this is part of the experience. This is how we live. This is part of it.
I think it's beautiful.
Everything about this is beautiful.
It's the same thing with the heron.
Yeah.
Like where it's like, why aren't you helping me?
And he's like, because I'm a complicated little fucker.
I don't, I'm not here to help you.
He's telling me maybe, but like, that's not my, you know,
purpose in this story.
Right. Right.
And yes, after this is when they have
the thing you were talking about,
they're fine.
Kiriko's finally like,
can the two of you just work together?
Yeah.
Like, come on, you can help him.
And then, you know, he makes the cork thing,
like you say, to sort of, you know,
sort of bridge the divide.
He can no longer fly because of the hole.
Right.
That moment's kind of funny because at first, after he plugs the hole, he's kind of like, fuck you.
Yeah.
And flies away.
And then he's like, actually, it's kind of blocking my sight.
Right.
Could you, sorry about all that stuff I just said.
Could you fix it?
And I really love that moment. And to me, that resonated
to me as such like a...
To me, I'll have these
scars or traumas or things that I've tried to reckon
with. These parts of myself that I don't like, but that
also are important to keep me driving
forward. And then I'll find solutions
to sort of clip the wings of those things to keep
them from getting in my way. And then
I'll realize like, okay, I can't totally
just shut down this aspect of who I am internally. This thing that this does drive me somewhere.
So I have to give it some, I have to create this weird allyship with the things that are inside me
that are troublesome. And so I love that they have this weird relationship where it's like,
He says, I'm not your ally. Like he says it very blankly. Like, yeah.
It's this internal thing that is pulling the boy on this
journey but also is an antagonist and then the boy stops it and it's like great then you're not
going to be you're going to have your ability anymore and then the heron's like i sort of need
it to help you and also like i need it and then the boy's like all right fine i'll help you and
then the heron's like what can you actually can you keep working on this aspect of yourself like
you know what i mean it's like there is a therapy. What I project onto it
is like a therapization process
where it is like,
oh, you still got to,
can you just shave down
this little part of it a little bit?
Because like,
you did solve this,
but like,
it needs to be a little better.
You know,
it's fascinating.
What happens after all this, guys?
I don't remember the exact next moment.
The next thing is
the introduction of the parakeets.
It's that late into the movie.
It's suddenly like, oh, so she's in there.
What's in there?
Oh, the kingdom of parakeets.
First they go to the house
where the parakeets start chanting edible.
He meets the parakeets.
Because the parakeets are like, oh.
Red parakeet.
Yeah, who's like, come here.
Your aunt's inside.
Yes, by all means
and then they pull out
silverware
to eat
and they
they explain that
the aunt was carrying
a
was with child
and so they would not
eat her because
she was with child
right
but because he is not
with child
he is
eatable
eatable
and they start chanting
eatable
is the subtitled translation that we got.
And then he's like,
you tricked me.
Right.
You just were taking your eat.
But then in the moment,
you're like,
yeah, man,
they were going to eat.
Yeah, what'd you think was going to happen?
But then he is rescued by another new character,
Lady Hemi.
Yes.
Who appears out of like a flaming portal
and beats them away.
We saw her earlier in the movie.
Right.
We briefly glimpse her.
Where she is helping to defend the Wara Wara
when they're being attacked.
Yes.
She's shooting fireworks out the air.
Don't get too excited about it, David.
She takes him to this...
No, I am excited.
And then what's interesting is that
she's protecting the Wara Wara,
but then her fireworks that she's using to protect them are setting
fire to them. And that's part of it is
Mahito is
like, you have to stop. You're
also setting fire to the Warawara.
Again, it's this complicated...
It's so amazing to me.
She appears.
Should we talk about who these women are
or should we just get to it?
Yeah, we can just get to it.
I mean, if you're listening to the plot beat by beat,
then you've either watched the film or want to understand it.
Right, right.
Like, you know, obviously, Kiriko is the maid.
Yes.
Like, as a younger version of the maid.
Kiriko is the old woman that he went in with.
Right, yes.
Version of her.
Yeah.
Full of gumption.
And then Hemi is his mother, basically, as a younger woman.
And you find that out
pretty early on
because she keeps referring
to her little sister,
which is...
Which is the, you know...
Katsuko.
Natsuko.
Natsuko,
who Mahito is trying to find.
And so you're like,
oh, that must be his mom,
but you don't really get
that solidified.
I wasn't thinking about it
when I watched the movie,
which is the only reason I paused on whether we should.
I was kind of just like,
okay, another character.
We'll figure this out.
I was curious because they dropped references
and the whole time I was like,
that's his mom, right?
Right.
And of course,
the heron has been saying like,
your mom is waiting for you.
Right.
Right.
But they make it very overt by the end.
I mean,
it's worth acknowledging.
But the end is when like,
I felt like this movie dropped 80 pianos on me.
And I was like, of course. That's what the movie
is. Right.
That's how he can think about his mother.
I mean, it's, you know.
But right now, she's
a plucky Miyazaki helper
heroine, right? With magical
fire powers.
With magical fire powers.
Yeah.
And then he finally is led to natsuko who is surrounded
by paper well so spirits basically in a bed the lead up to that is that then they she knows where
natsuko is and it's like the castle the parakeet all these doors that like lead to other places
yes again this is all imagery like the paper paper is from Sparrowed Away.
Like the doors,
I feel like he's done that kind of imagery before.
And also we didn't mention
Mahito sleeping beneath the table
protected by the dolls of the elderly women.
Oh,
he's got this sort of little wooden,
yeah.
It's like,
don't touch them.
They're protecting you.
And it's these older women
who are these generations passed down.
That's so beautiful
and we've also
not mentioned too
that part of this
and I mentioned it
because it's thematic
is that to make the arrow,
he needs the help of
an old man
that also lives at the estate
and he trades cigarettes
for the aid.
Who you say
is not the same old man.
It might be.
Oh, it is?
I don't know.
I don't know. I don't know.
You can look it up.
I mean, he's my favorite character.
My favorite character is just
whoever the man is that waves
in the first scene
when they're walking by.
Whether that's his entire role
or it's the same as this guy,
that's your favorite character.
Yes, exactly.
That's the best character
in all of Miyazaki's films.
What do you make of this?
Revelation of the mother...
No, sorry, the aunt.
Lying in repose,
surrounded by these paper spirits,
and he tries to get her,
and she's like,
get away from me.
Yeah.
And the paper kind of like,
you know,
sort of shoots them out.
Yeah.
I don't know what to make of this.
Or at least I have not yet fully unpacked
what's really going on.
And again, there's no right or wrong answer, right?
This is, Miyazaki himself even says
he doesn't know exactly what it is.
My read on it is that so much of this
is the subconscious of this boy, right?
Right.
And what he pines for most dearly
is a connection to a mother figure.
Sure.
And his greatest fear is rejection of that right right deep within this castle
inside to her and she was like no by the way yes if he was like if he calls her mom and she
rejects him in some way that will be a second loss of mother that he has experienced right
and so to me part of this is that he has to go and face that fear to a certain extent.
And that's also when he refers to his mother
at the end of that scene, correct?
He calls her mom.
Isn't that the moment?
He calls her mom at the end.
Right, right, right.
When he's like being shooed away, you mean?
Yeah, I believe so.
But like he has to face this dark moment.
And his mother, in the form of He-Me,
tells him, don't go in there.
And part of that, I think,
is that childhood thing of facing these fears
that we create within ourselves.
We are like, listen, this is weird to say,
but as an adult, I had to reckon with this
just this past week at a moment where I realized,
I want to hug my family
more. And there's a part of my
adult self
that feels like, oh,
adults don't need to hug that much. And I'm
like, but that won't always be
there. And you're gaming this out in your
head in a way you don't as a child,
where it is instinctual. Sure. Yeah.
And so then... Behavioral.
A part of it is there is this Sure. Yeah. And so then... Behavioral. And a part of it is
there is this weird
id fear of rejection there.
Right.
That doesn't...
That's not logical.
Right.
It's a subconscious thing.
Am I wrong?
I mean, look, clearly...
What?
I had a harder time
connecting dots on this movie
than you did,
and David has seen it twice now.
But I almost viewed it partially as, even with it being dots on this movie than you did, and David has seen it twice now. But, um,
I almost viewed it partially as
even with it being
in his unconscious or
subconscious, that
part of the rejection from
the aunt is that he
does not, he has
not gotten to know her well enough
to even test having a relationship with her.
Right. Right? There are like depths
to plumb in him developing a relationship
with a childhood version of his
mother because that was someone he truly
knew. There has been
whatever arm's length at the
sort of like resistance
to the idea of the aunt
occupying this space that as
much as he does need someone to step
in and fill the mother role,
he's resistant to letting her take that
because part of accepting that
is pushing his mother away from that spot
in a more permanent way.
And it's this whole battle of like,
is there a way to go back and get my mother?
Can I spend time with my mother in a different form?
Or am I looking towards trying to
save my aunt and preserve her in this place?
Right.
How do you balance that?
Again, just to re-underline it,
there's no right or wrong answer
in any of this stuff.
No, there is.
There's clues, Easter eggs,
and so on and so forth.
It's the carpet.
The artist is leaving us clues.
That's the joy of it.
These are these art objects.
And when an artist plumbs from their depth
and also brings in collective artists, right?
The collective consciousness
of a group of people making something.
Things are put into that work
that are without explanation
and that are connected to this
universal feeling that we have.
And so each person can project onto that
whatever they need.
That's the point of art, right?
Everyone projects onto it what they need from it in that moment that whatever they need that's the point of art right everyone projects onto it
what they need from it in that moment
and I think that's really beautiful
nonetheless this is a film
made by an 80 plus year old master
yeah in which the next
scene is him going to the top of the castle
or whatever and meeting an
old man who like
you say has the most most cursed Jenga
tower of all time.
Just bad. Just poorly thought out.
It's a bunch of fucking bridges and balls.
The balls are the thing where you're just like, right.
Yeah.
Don't even introduce that into the vocabulary.
But he's this wizard.
Yeah.
Grand uncle who is family of the main character
and explains that he has created this entire world.
There's this backstory, by the way,
that we get in a sort of,
we leave the fantasy world for a second
where the maid tells the dad,
like, a meteor landed here.
And that's like the origin of this.
Yeah, that this castle is a giant meteor
actually that's landed.
And that they built a castle
around the meteor.
And the meteor, the castle
actually is just surrounding this meteor.
And then also that the mother went,
spent a year inside this castle
just like our main character did
and then returned
and acted as though nothing
had ever occurred inside
that castle. I can't
tell if I am misremembering this
because this film has been in the
pipeline for so long
without him clearly sort of expressing at early points
what the movie was.
I don't know if it changed or whatever.
But I remember when we talked about this
back when we were doing the series,
that part of his statement of why he was coming back
and making another film
was that he felt there was something he needed to like
impart onto children.
Yeah.
Not in sort of a lesson way,
but in much the same way that like so many of the films came out of i met a girl who was my my friend's daughter
and spirit of the way was influenced by her yes i'll read so the again miyazaki never really says
anything but so suzuki said miyazaki is making the new film for his grandson it's his way of saying
grandpa is moving on to the next world,
but he's leaving behind this film.
Thank you.
Now, with no context,
that just sounded,
you were just like,
oh my God,
most devastating movie of all time incoming or whatever.
Well, especially when the title was,
how do you live?
Right.
Well, here's another quote that I love.
Yeah.
The mission of my,
this is him talking about this film.
Yeah.
The mission of my films is to comfort you, this film. Yeah. The mission of my films
is to comfort you,
to fill in the gap
that might be in your heart
or your everyday life.
When he was asked
about the answer
to the Japanese title
of his movie,
How Do You Live?
Miyazaki responded,
I am making this movie
because I do not
have the answer.
Yeah.
It would be cool
if he did though.
But even,
the Spirited Away thing
where he was like,
there's something I'm seeing in this girl that I don't see in movies,
and how do I, like, capture that,
and do I need to put it back out there for this girl
or for girls like her, what it is?
It does feel like he's grappling with, like,
things he wants to communicate to specific people.
That is the way he's thinking about his legacy.
Not in what is this company after I die,
not how is my body of work seen,
but like that the films are trying to engage in,
not provide answers or morals,
but engage in conversations with specific people
or types of people in a way that is so much
of what this final section of the film is about,
of like, why do you need to maintain this tower
or build a new tower?
I also think it's interesting
in starting point and turning point,
especially around the time
of Howl's Moving Castle and Spirit Away,
around 9-11,
a lot of people were asking Miyazaki about it
and how much it inspired Howl's Moving Castle
and all this stuff.
He talks a lot about his belief
of how children are not allowed the room to be children in modern era.
That's a lot of his interviews in the early 2000s.
It's about how he thinks that the educational early childhood system has failed children in a large way.
Which is also interesting coming from someone who grew up during a world war, you know, like during wartime, let's say.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Well, there was a lot of institutional shifts that
were happening in terms of how much was dictated by the government versus not it's like very
interesting stuff going on um he's mentioned this film also of wanting to hand it down to
his grandchildren is something that he's mentioned not his children his grandchildren exactly he's
he's skipping a certain someone yeah look the grand uncle presents a giant floating stone to his son.
He's like, look, that's where my power comes from.
Not his son, his, you know, his grand great nephew.
Great nephew.
And he's like, I want you to continue my work.
I need someone from my bloodline to be in charge of this.
I could, you know, the stone created everything.
And I've got to move on.
Like, I'm.
Yeah.
I'm sundowning.
I'm waiting for the guy to come in and take over this shit.
And I have to give it to someone who is from my bloodline and
also without malice right but he also
there's this energy to the grand uncle
of like the world can be fixed you can
make it more harmonious like here's a
you can add one of the tremendous amount
of pressure on him not only is he saying
I need you to take over this but he's
saying by the way do what I couldn't do
which is solve this permanently and And what do we know about
him? That he read too many books and
went mad. Yep. Yes. And so
you're not trusting this
guy. He's a little scary.
And that's a really interesting detail.
I'm glad you brought that up. They
bring up how he read too many books
and went mad. And then now
the thing that he's passing down is, here's
this lopsided tower of stones
that I've made.
Right.
And I need someone
to hand this down to
who's from my bloodline
and also who is like,
untouched and perfect without flaw
because I'm flawed
and I need someone
that's not flawed to have it.
He has this line that's like,
you know,
worlds are living things
like mold and bugs infest them.
Where I'm like,
you don't seem to have a great view on like
life he's gone too deep into his
own thoughts David right I knocked my head over
as we hit our four
of this podcast but um
like I know he says something
along the lines of like look it can be a paradise
or an abomination you know depending on what
you do but I get
the vibe from him that he's just like
hammering dents out of the car and he's just
like i can get it smooth like you know we're close i just need to add some more uh flocks of animals
to eat the other animals this is a great responsibility someone needs to maintain this
he's like i have been i've committed my life to the pursuit of a final form a sense of perfection
that i did not hit but don't, I think you can do it.
Yes, and he's like,
it's just a horrible thing
to put on.
He's like,
and all you have to do
is you just have to add
one little thing
to prop it up.
And then you see this image
of a piece going in
and it's not like
you see the piece going in
and you're like,
you're right,
that's what it needs.
You're like,
that just looks more complicated.
Right, you added,
you created a new angle
of stability
that does not solve
the underlying issue.
And this guy's whole life work
seems to be that like, all right, I've put this piece right here. issue. And this guy's whole life work seems to be that like,
all right, I've put this piece right here.
Yeah.
And now I think it's a little more stable.
Where did the parakeets come from again?
Do we learn where they came from?
I think he brought them in
and then they started reproducing.
Right, because the idea is like
they are out of control.
Now they're a civilization
and they're like,
we want rights, by the way.
Like, I want to conquer you or something.
Like, that's the point of the Parakeet King.
Right.
Have we been introduced to him at this point?
The Parakeet King?
No.
Like, not really.
Because like, it's after that confrontation
that Mahito wakes up
and then he's in this like Parakeet dungeon
and then they're making a giant
banquet and uh his mother you know his child mother is being like brought through in like a
glass coffin you only meet the parakeet king once they go up the crazy stairs right yeah
uh he's the one who's like i'm gonna bring her up the stairs and i'm going to you know
confront the the guy and get us parakeet rights or whatever it is the Yeah, and he's like, you two carry this thing with me.
And it's this really beautiful moment where the two parakeets
get to go into
utopia with the Parrot King. And they're like,
is this you?
Is this it?
Is this the thing?
This is so beautiful. And the guy's like, stop looking around.
Just stay on the mission
here.
It is all so insane.
In a great way.
And it's so beautiful.
And it's like...
It's like the idea being she gets them in, right?
Yes.
They have her so they can like cross the barrier.
Because they have to deliver her to him.
Right.
And so because of that, they can cross the barrier into this like utopia universe.
Right.
No, they...
Right.
They see parakeets, regular parakeets.
And they're like, look, it's us, like our ancestors.
Like, that's what we were. Right. Right. Yeah. And they're like, look, it's us, like our ancestors. Like, that's what we were.
Right.
Right, yeah.
And they're so, like, you know.
They're crying.
Yes.
And the original ancestors are like, oh, they're just wild animals that fly around and eat fruit.
And then they're these creatures who have formed this entire civilization of war and feast, you know, all this stuff.
It's the unnatural order.
Yeah.
That we have imposed upon a natural
world. But you don't get the impression
from Grand Uncle that he's like, I love those
parakeets. No. What they're doing is great.
No, he seems kind of disgusted with
what he's created. Hopefully you can clear all that
out. Yeah, right.
Like a parakeet Armageddon.
Oh my God. And then
what's the horror of that?
At this point, I am like, that's the horror of that? You know, at this point,
I am like,
that's the point.
The whole,
this whole section of the movie
is when I am crying
and starting to get emotional.
What I was trying to say earlier,
too,
is like,
I don't hit crying breakthrough points
with him.
I just start to spiral.
Like,
what you're saying,
David,
is like,
it's too much to grapple with.
I don't,
I don't,
I don't,
like,
you're like,
right,
I've reached some sort of overload point.
This is starting conversations
that I cannot handle
in my own brain.
But what's also beautiful to me is that during this,
what I'm imagining,
right?
Yeah.
Is Miyazaki trying to communicate all of these thoughts and this room full of
animators trying to be like,
like this,
right?
I think like this,
I think this is what you're trying to say.
And it becomes this,
this collaborative sort of like all these people
trying to help convey this message that miyazaki himself is unsure of exactly what it means or how
it comes out and because of that it's like to me that that's what became so beautiful is it's these
parrot creatures crying looking around at regular parrots and i'm like that's an animator that's
like miyazaki's like and then the parrots, and these guys are like, yeah, okay, all right, and I'll draw this parrot.
And these parrots are tall, big guys now.
They're like, yes.
And he's like, then I'll do that, Miyazaki-san.
It's like this, it is this moment where he is expressing all these ideas that I don't think he even knows what they are.
But they are so visceral to me.
but they are so visceral to me and like you said
seeing a giant parrot crying as he looks
at a normal sized parrot
I can't tell you
why
but I understand it
I'm like yes Miyazaki I understand
what you are saying
the one part that kind of hit me
emotionally
that maybe just speaks to me being basic as hell.
And I don't know if I'm skipping ahead
too much now.
But when he finally puts together
that she is his mother.
Yeah.
And it realizes like...
Oh, I started weeping.
Right.
That is when I was very...
Well, hold on.
This is why I'm here.
This is why I've gone through this.
The whole point is to change
the course of her life
so she doesn't go into the fire
and she doesn't die.
Like, how do I back to the future
her out of having me, basically?
Although he's not consciously saying that
and her response is,
no, I look forward to being your mother.
That's the moment, baby.
It's the arrival thing of like,
I don't care if you're telling me
how this ends
and how it ends poorly.
It's about the journey.
And how I know we're not going to get
all the time that we wanted
together.
Yeah.
But I'd rather have that time
That's not the point.
than change it at all.
But you're saying,
I mean,
in this conversation of like,
do directors have
conscious final films
that have worked,
that have landed,
that have actually been
planned as their final statement
and received as their
final statement.
Miyazaki's trying to do that
while also questioning
if I'll make another movie after this and how many
times before I thought I was doing this. But this is a film
that is basically him saying like, I have
no easy answers.
It's a final statement movie of
unclarity. Yeah. Just to fill
in what happens in between. Yes.
Sure. He goes to see the granduncle one more
time. Yeah. Granduncle's like,
like, come on, man.
The fucking rock stones. You gotta make
them into a tower. And he was like,
he's like, these stones are cursed. And he's like,
all right, here's these stones that aren't cursed. Right.
And he's holding the stone
and the little
totem of the maid. Right.
Or is that later? I'm going
home. Yeah. I'm gonna go home.
I don't want to deal with this. And the granduncle's like, you would go back to's like, I'm going home. I'm going to go home. I don't want to deal with this.
And the granduncle's like, you would go back to this terrible world?
And he's like, yes.
I'm going home with my mother, referring to his aunt.
And he's like, fine, go home.
But before you do it, please stack the stones.
And he's like, I don't want to.
And then the parrot king shows up and is like,
fucking this is it?
Like, stupid, this is our fate? Yes. And so he just like, the parrot guy shows up and is like fucking this is it like stupid this is our fate yes and
so he just like the parrot guy puts it together everything starts to go crazy the floating rocks
and also crumble we missed the moment where he points to the scar on his head and explains that
he is flawed yeah he does right that he's not perfect he's full of flaw and that he's pointing
to the scar on his head and then that's when i think is it the grand who is it that says like i have a scar too sure the grand uncle the grand uncle is like oh i have
a i have a similar scar which is like i'm like yeah we got this like everyone's working through
these things these generational things and then yeah he's like he doesn't want by his own creations
the parakeets are what actually like blows up essentially. And that's what's beautiful also is that the boy doesn't want to take over the weird,
fucked up Jenga that his grand uncle has magic.
I'm not going to try and fix your legacy
and maintain it or whatever.
I'm going to go home with my mother.
My new mother.
This is my mother now.
The person who I'm going to say that this is who I want.
And then they emerge with the parakeets and they cover everyone in poop. This is my mother. Right. Yes. The person who I'm going to say that this is who I want.
And then they emerge with the parakeets
and they cover everyone in poop.
Right.
Yes.
Back into the real world.
Big parakeet man
tries to build a thing.
I told you.
Yes.
But then the whole,
that whole world starts to collapse.
It starts to collapse
and the parakeet man
chops it in half
and it explodes
and then, yeah,
they got to get out of there.
The whole tower collapses.
And then that's that moment
where they're at the doors,
which are the, like, the Beetlejuice doors
that lead to different realms of reality or whatever.
But it's also sort of like,
does everyone go back to their timeline
to where they belong?
Right.
And that's the moment that truly,
that really, I mean, it was so,
that she would choose to,
beautiful, and then he that she would choose to, beautiful.
And then he steps back out into home and then all the parakeets go with them.
But they're regular parakeets.
They're not evil, crazy, giant parakeets.
Batistas.
Yes.
They're not big Batistas.
They're not big Batistas.
If only they were.
Bunch of Batistas.
That's it.
They were.
A bunch of Batistas.
That's it.
And then it's the the rare sort of like
Miyazaki epilogue,
which is the like
the war ended two years later.
Right.
And they went back to the city.
Right.
And that's
play the song.
Get the fuck out of here.
Right.
He says that he gets
it's weird.
He does the Ferris Bueller thing
where he's like you're still in the
theater get out of here he comes out
smoking a cigarette but here's what I
think is really fascinating yeah the
wind rises ends with the character
literally being like go live life like
you know yeah like maybe your work is
gonna be used for evil but like the best
you can do is the best you can do and
like you just gotta like live and
horrible things why you have to to like live in horrible things.
And you have to just like keep living.
Sure.
And this film ends
not with a character telling us that,
but characters doing that.
Sure.
Just continuing on.
I think in The Wind Rises,
he's less sure about it.
Yes.
And here he's like,
to me,
what I got,
and again,
there's no right or wrong answer.
Miyazaki himself doesn't even really know. But to me, what I got, and again, there's no right or wrong answer. Miyazaki himself doesn't even really know.
But to me, what I got was a sense of like, you just enter into this world with all of
these baggage and flaws and scars that you're going to pick up along the way and things
that will get in your way, but also drive you.
And it's this complicated thing.
Enter into a world that is overwhelming, that is on the verge of toppling over and collapsing. Yeah.
And you try to create some sort of structure and order. And there is a hope that you can pass that
down and that will be meaningful. Right.
But part of the process of growing up is learning that you can choose to go your own way and accept
or reject or take with you any aspects of that journey.
And there's some things you can change. There's some things you can't. But your only option is
to continue living your life and not letting those things take over. I think there's another thing,
too, which is, is your life's work being able to communicate the answers that you have spent your
life working toward? Or is it being able to express the journey
of you trying to work through these questions,
which in its way provides people the answers
of feeling less alone?
That this is basically the underlying,
like the purest state of the human condition.
Yes.
And so for all hands to come together to make this film,
which is this person,
an older person who has said publicly,
everyone in my life,
all of my family members died at age 80
and I'm 83 or whatever.
82.
82.
That's right.
Happy birthday.
Happy birthday.
For him to be like,
lay hands on this idea
and help me tell this,
that everyone is allowed to move forth
and do what they need to do
and I don't need to hand down.
It's a flawed idea to think that
I can create some structure
that will solve all the problems in the world
and hand that down.
I think it's such a beautiful idea.
And what it brings me back to
is the ending of Nausicaa.
Where the end of Nausicaa
is that someone can be so pure
and so perfect
and so connected to the earth
that the earth will,
in kind,
resolve all of the issues
and create this...
Rise up to help you.
Sure.
Stasis and this handshake
that will solve the problem.
Because it's his way of thinking
about the environment
in so many of his movies.
Right.
And Miyazaki has often said
that he wishes
he didn't end Nausicaa that way.
And I would say
the ending of this film
is how he wishes
he had ended Nausicaa?
Is the exact opposite
of that.
Sure.
It's not that
if you're pure enough
and good enough
that all will work out
and be resolved.
He's telling a story here
where it's like
no one is pure enough
or good enough.
That's part of living life.
Nothing ever gets resolved.
Yes. Part of life is being scarred and being imperfect
and that's part of it. Yeah. And I think that's
so beautiful to then see
that theme transition
through his work. Having just watched them all chronologically,
it is such a beautiful,
beautiful career
that he's built that tells this story.
I often think about
how people will sometimes criticize filmmakers.
And this is a feeling that I have globally across all art.
People criticize filmmakers
for making the same film over and over again.
It's like, that's just the same movie.
They just keep making the same movie over and over again.
Those are my favorite types of filmmakers.
Because to me, that means
that there's something inside themselves
that's compelling them to tell that story.
And it's something that they're wrestling with.
And every film, every chapter of that struggle
is them hopefully learning a new thing
or testing a new theory around that.
By the way, sometimes people will suggest,
why haven't they covered blank?
Have they ever considered doing a miniseries on blank?
The people that David and I disregard the most
as they would not be interesting to talk about
are the people who do not do that.
Which is not to say the people who make
wildly different types of films.
It's the people who make films
that might seem interesting in how could all this
come out of one person, but they don't
by and large feel like
they are honest extensions of
what that person is going through. They are jobs.
And perhaps jobs
well done.
Right.
You know?
But box office game,
this movie's going to get its ass kicked by Beyonce.
Yeah, it's going to be a rough box office game.
I was trying to think of the best way to do that joke and there's not any movie opening against this movie.
Yeah, Miyazaki's going to go into his Oprah opening weekend
of Beloved.
I just ate a bunch of mac and cheese
and got depressed that Beyonce was beating me.
I really thought I had number one in the US.
Luck.
Oh, man.
But isn't it such a beautiful career that he's built?
No, I think that fucking sucks.
What are you talking about?
I love Beyonce.
Yes, I agree with you.
After watching the movie,
I was so overwhelmed by this being the end.
I was not really overwhelmed by this being the end. I was not really overwhelmed by this being the end.
I was relieved that the film was so meaningful
and that I already had so many feelings about it.
Because I was a little worried just like,
God, you know, he's never made a movie I dislike,
but what if this feels minor or kind of...
Messy.
Messy in a way that doesn't really exc, you know, excite anything in me.
And instead I was like,
I can't stop thinking about all the stuff bubbling in that movie.
I think this is a beautiful,
I think this is like,
it's not,
it's funny.
Yesterday I was talking to Ben Griffin.
I was like,
Oh,
maybe we should talk about like our Miyazaki rankings.
And I'm like,
I have no interest in Miyazaki rankings.
Because to me,
it's a body of work.
I have no idea.
Yeah.
I don't know.
To me,
it's the,
and watch them chronologically. It's,, it's a body of work. I have no idea. Yeah, I don't know. To me, it's the body.
And watch them chronologically.
It tells such a story.
Seeing all the protagonists change and evolve,
getting to this point,
it's so amazing.
I know.
I know you do.
Of course I do.
Because your job
is to have that kind of stuff.
It's not my job.
I'm sick.
I'm sick.
Your job,
I forgot your job
is being sick.
Your job is a sicko,
full-time sicko.
We need to end this episode.
Ben,
how long have we been gone?
I shudder to ask. And obviously, we took
a couple breaks. Yeah, I'm
going to guess that we're
at about three hours and ten
minutes. All right. So, you know, longest
ish episode ever, but not quite
the record breaker. In the zip code.
Not that we were aiming for breaking any records.
No, we put some ads in there,
you know. I also don't feel like we're stretching.
I think we're just talking about the thing.
There's so much we haven't talked about.
I mean, it's incredible.
Here's one thing can I add.
Violator.
We didn't touch on him at all.
I felt at moments the dynamic between the boy and the heron
reminded me of Spawn and Violator.
And I don't, it's not a box I want to open this late in the episode.
It's the kind of thing that you can get in a lot of trouble for saying
because it's too bold and too intelligent.
I would say one of the best...
If they cancel me, I'll go to Daily Wire and I'll announce it every day.
I would say one of the best Leguizamo performances.
Yes.
No, it's funny.
It's funny and it's warm.
It's a warm, inviting performance.
Can I say something that really interests me
as someone who has gone through a lot of career ennui
recently? We have to be done.
I'm not saying that in an aggressive way. Yes, you are.
I'm saying in a practical way. You're holding a gun
up to his head. I'm incredibly hungry and we
have another episode to record and I have to be
home in time for my kid.
I'm just saying all of that stuff on the record.
Future boy Conan, age 37.
Okay.
What do you think? That was his first directorial debut.
Oh, I'm 37.
37 years old.
I'm 37.
Should I start my career as a beloved actor?
You're Miyazaki here.
It really actually made me feel good to realize that because we...
Because you think of him as being old, but it's like, right, but that's his storied career.
He must have started when he was 18 years old.
And it's like, no.
And there's a lot of, you know,
the adulation of like the wunderkind, whatever.
And it's like...
He had his slut era too.
I'm sorry?
Imagining like Miyazaki in his 20s being like,
Wah! Party!
I'll animate when I'm 30!
It's funny because in Starting Point, you know,
he does all these essays where he's in his 20s,
he's working.
He's just a TV animator at that point.
And he's like throwing 20s he's working he's just a TV animator at that point and he's like
throwing fucking shade
at Disney
and he's like
really aggressive
and you're like
yeah this is someone
who's 28
who's just like
it's also a bad era
for Disney
you kick them
when they're down
and he's a career animator
who's just like
yeah that's bad animation
and actually that's bad
you know
but they're like
his sloppy Tumblr thoughts
exactly
100%
he's just throwing throwing strays.
So I love that he started his career at 37, 38 years old.
I think that's really wonderful.
I think he lived, it says in his Wikipedia page,
he lived in an 80 square foot apartment
when he was in his 20s working as an animator.
It's pretty small.
Yeah.
Goes for like 10,000 a month in New York City.
So we can't even play the box office game
because the box office,
or I guess the... Did it come out last weekend?
The thing is it did eventually have this weird limited release, right?
On Thanksgiving weekend.
But it came out officially on the 4th.
Right. There was a
one or two day IMAX run
and then there was a limited run and then
it's going wide
in a couple of days from the time we're recording this.
Its personal result is not
listed, but the Thanksgiving box
office was number one, a film starring
a friend of the pod.
Hunger Games. The Ballad
of Songs and Snakes.
Birds and Snakes.
Hunger Games, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
Has anyone seen apart from me?
I'm still hungry.
I have not yet fed my appetite.
I think we can't underestimate
how funny it is to add
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs
as a subtitle.
That is a really good point.
The Hunger Games,
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
Because we don't think about
that as a subtitle.
Buster Scruggs also would do well
in The Hunger Games.
The guy's a dead shot.
Well, but he ultimately was undone
by his own vanity
and his commitment to songs.
But you know how for a while the story of many Hunger Games competitors, they're always fucking singing.
That's true.
You're like, you're in an arena, god damn it.
Fuck, you're right.
Buster Scruggs was built for the Hunger Games.
That kind of like hack thing is like something to Electric Boogaloo.
This is what I'm saying.
Hypercube.
2X, 2Y.
That's our own hack version.
But you're like, what if the entire, what we know of as its own proper
title is in fact
good fodder for other
sequel subtitles. Anyway, Hunger
Games Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes, so good.
And just the kind of thing where you're like,
yes, we're cooking with, you know,
this is better. Like, let's
go back to this. A better time of
franchise, as you're saying? Yeah.
It's place before.
It's a prequel.
It's a prequel.
It's the Adventures of Young Donald Sutherland.
Correct.
Number two at the box office.
You know, a gigantic epic.
Napoleon.
Napoleon.
Colon, The Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
Right.
Yes, he made Buster Scruggs the governor of Italy.
It didn't work out for him, obviously.
A whole movie about a dessert?
Yeah.
Okay.
Number three at the box office.
One of the most embarrassing flops in recent memory.
For a studio that's just been releasing
embarrassing flops.
Colin, the Ballad Buster Scruggs.
They're now trying to edit him in.
Just anything to give them some juice.
Juice the numbers.
Scruggs is in it?
I can't remember if it was you guys
or someone else.
Probably a parasitist was talking about how
at the end of Wish, they
have all the pencil drawings of the original
Disney characters.
As if to be like, and you know, Wish is
now a part of that. Wish is the
Little Mermaid.
Wish is Pixar Theory the movie.
It is, what if these are all connected?
Really? I have no idea.
Where do Wishes come from? All these Disney characters
have wished for things.
It's tying together the wish-averse.
Like, literally, she becomes the fucking
wish star. It doesn't matter. Okay.
Number four, the box office. It matters a lot. Don't say that.
We can end the episode, and I know you want to
get this over with, but don't pretend it doesn't matter.
Are you guys not hungry?
Genuine question.
I'm starving. I told you I'm hungry for Hunger Games.
So you're saying,
do the water people live next to the fire people?
Different neighborhoods.
Different neighborhoods.
Also, the water people seem to live in skyscrapers.
I don't know.
Yes.
Are there lightning people?
No.
No, that'd be great.
That would be a great idea.
Bring them in.
Lightning's not an element.
That's the problem.
By their rules.
Well, the cloud people get lightning when they're angry
true
like if the team
they root for
in skyball
what are the elements
air water
earth and fire
so it's clouds
dirt
what about hearts
I was gonna say
that's Captain Planet
Erasure
no
yeah well that's
fine
number four
the box office
an animated film
that made almost
as much as Wish
in its second weekend
uh
it's a Trolls
World Tour
no Trolls Band Together thank a Trolls World Tour.
No.
Trolls Band Together.
Thank you.
Trolls. It was the second one.
Ballad of Buster Scruggs.
I have yet to see them band together.
I texted this to you,
but you sang the Disney's Calamitous Year.
February,
Quantumania comes out
and people are like,
P, you,
look at this fucking atomic bomb.
And now Disney's like,
if we could have something gross
half a billion dollars,
we would be thrilled.
How are we having multiple movies
end up less than a hundred?
And to have Leo eat their lunch.
Leo is so good.
I watched Leo twice with my niece and nephew.
Leo rules, right? It's good. It's fucking got jokes.
Number five at the box office, a horror
film that already has a sequel announced.
Thanksgiving. Yeah.
It's probably in there somewhere.
In part two, yeah.
Number six, The Marvels. You saw The Marvels.
I did. Ben saw it 50 times.
Exactly 50 times.
Really? Number seven, The Holdovers,
which has been doing surprisingly crisp.
Maybe not surprisingly, but
healthy business. Yeah, which is why I'm
excited that it's going to VOD in
two days. Yeah, whatever. No one even notices.
Everything sucks. Okay.
Number eight, yeah, the Heiress tour, which made
tons of money.
Good for Taylor. Maybe my
only good choice in the Voltaire draft.
Taking a lot of L's recently.
Number nine, Salt Burn.
Haven't seen it. It's a movie for silly
abilities, in my opinion.
Is it, like, in the Salt Bae universe?
Yes.
If only.
Yeah.
Finally, something salt-connected
that's worse than Salt Bae
has been created.
We saw Boy in the Hair and Angelica.
They proudly advertise
the collectible Salt Burn cup
while supplies last.
I've seen two movies of Angelica
in the last week.
It seems the supplies have run out.
No, they're gone.
It's like a buddy journey between
Salt Bae and Ken Burns.
Number 10 is a horror film.
Where Ken Burns gives
Salt Bae a haircut advice.
That's where the haircut came from. He salted it.
Number 10 is a horror film.
It's a different horror film? Yeah, huge hit of the year.
It's a huge hit of the year?
Fuck. Gen Z loves it.
It's not Freddy.
It is Freddy.
Five Nights at Freddy's.
Number 11.
Next School Wins.
Culling the bell
and Buster Scruggs.
Next School Wins.
Doing great.
Number 12.
Priscilla,
which has made
20 million dollars.
Yeah.
Also that movie rules.
But it's also like a movie
where you're like,
you know,
that's a tough hang
of a movie intentionally.
Yes.
And like, God bless him for making 20 million bucks on it.
Yeah.
No, well done.
Anyway.
One of the best films of the year.
JD, you know I love you.
Love you too.
And I'm excited to record another episode with you.
I know.
In about 20 minutes.
What do you think about Ben and I?
You're my favorites.
You are.
But you don't love us?
I love you very much.
Okay, thank you.
It's important to say sometimes
it's important to hug the people
you love in your life sometimes.
I'm big on it.
Love you guys.
Love you.
Thanks for coming to talk.
My stomach is actually going like this.
The thing I want to say,
but I did a buttered bagel eight hours ago.
It's like all the food I've eaten today.
I had banana bread.
The bit I want to say,
but I didn't,
but anytime you mentioned Goro Miyazaki, I imagine Goro from Mortal Kombat. I do too. It's like all the food I've eaten today. I had banana bread. The bit I want to say but I didn't but anytime you mentioned
Goro Miyazaki
I imagined Goro
from Mortal Kombat.
I do too.
And it's funny to imagine.
He's the one with the multiple arms.
Yeah.
That's a signal for you
to wrap us up.
Oh sure.
Ben.
I just wanted to say
love you guys.
Love you.
Hey Ben, love you.
Thank you all for listening
and we love
most of you.
Our listeners.
90%. 90%.
90%.
And if you're wondering if you're part of it,
tell yourself you are.
Tell yourself you're part of the 90.
Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe.
Thank you to Marie Barty, our associate producer,
helping keep the show running.
Thank you to AJ McKeon, Alex Barron,
for our editing.
JJ Birch for doing nothing this week. Fuck you to AJ McKeon, Alex Barron for our editing. JJ Birch for doing
nothing this week.
Fuck you, JJ.
Fuck you, JJ. JJ will
not text us four times in
the hour after this episode drops going
I mean, I thought it was funny and I did laugh, but I want
to make sure you guys aren't actually angry at me, right?
Sorry, JJ. Yeah, and also, JJ,
fuck you.
Fuck you. Thank you. Now you, too. Yeah, you rock.
Lee Montgomery in the American
novel for a theme song.
What?
You're just like, you gotta tell people that
love each other. Yeah, yeah. And like, within
20 seconds, you're just going off
on your audience, your
fellow co-workers.
JJ has to get knocked out of bed.
But by the way,
Joe Bone, Pat Reynolds, we love you.
You can go to Blankjack.com
for some links to some real nerdy shit,
including our Patreon Blankjack special features
where, hey, we're talking the walk.
Something that's going to happen right after this
and will definitely be normal.
It's going to be so fucking normal.
This was no bits
oh baby wait for that one
and as always
just kidding AJ we love you
we love you
you fucking stinky piece of shit
what the energy shit
but sincerely with 100%
honesty fuck you
and we say that with love
we say that with love
you motherfuckers do that all day