jojo wrote: ↑Mon Jul 03, 2023 8:37 am
I'm kind of curious as to what compelled Goro to enter into the anime industry after having tried to avoid it for so long. His insecurity for being "Hayao's son" seems to supercede whatever he wants to say in his own work.
Which is too bad, because he's a fairly compelling interview. He has a lot of interesting things to say in them, but for some reason those thoughts and ideas aren't being transferred into much of his work.
Definitely agree with everything you said. From what I read, Goro entering the anime industry seemed a response to pressure and encouragement from the producer Suzuki at Ghibli––Hayao kept retiring, and I think Suzuki was trying to put a square peg into a round hole, or what have you, recruiting Goro as a replacement. I wonder if Suzuki thought that the animators at Ghibli would listen to Goro because he was the son of their fearless leader? But I don't think Suzuki reckoned on getting anything but a dutiful heir to his father's legacy, and instead, Goro spend a lot of his life trying to be distinct from his father in key ways. It seems to me that Goro is wrapped up for life in wrestling with his father's legacy; if his thoughts and ideas don't make it into his movies, I would guess it's largely because he doesn't have the storytelling skills his father has. Goro doesn't bring with him that lifetime of visual storytelling experience which has made Hayao's movies so compellingly watchable, even when they were less than one might want them to be (a la The Wind Rises, perhaps, or Howl's Moving Castle). Goro isn't the visual artist his father is, either, and I think it shows––not only in the drawings he does, but also in what he imagines for his visuals. Poppy Hill was helped by being set in a very pedestrian world, which Goro could animate almost like a Nobuhiko Obayashi drama. But the more exaggerated, communicative visuals which are the Ghibli standard call for not just surer drawing skills, but a more well-exercised visual imagination––which I think comes with drawing all the time, very purposefully. I don't get that sense from Goro––his drawings don't quite imply that energy. I think computer animation has been a retreat for him, to tax his drawing skills and his visual imagination less, and to avoid constant comparison to his father––comparisons he makes perhaps more than anybody. I wonder, too, if the self-consciousness which seems to present in Goro's mind really offers him any respite on a project, allowing time for him to think about how to put his ideas into his filmmaking? That's my somewhat florid take, anyway.
And while there are more feature animators out there now, making movies which are different than Ghibli, I don't see any of them so far creating as consistent a run of engaging movies as Ghibli has done. I thought Belle and Weathering With You were just terrible films (haven't seen the "girl falls in love with some *sshole who becomes a chair" movie yet, but I'm about to). I don't see any of these creators offering the kind of consistency Ghibli has in the past. I think the television anime out there right now offers much more consistent interest.