Michael Kerpan wrote:I wonder whether Tale of the Bamboo Cutter WAS a child's story in origin? Given its early date (in written form -- who knows how old it was at the time it was first recorded), could it initially have been a Buddhist "parable" of sorts. I should probably have done more preliminary research. Certainly Takahata's treatment is far more complex than the little story I linked near the start of this thread.
Probably not. It’s probably like the Brothers Grimm, where local folk and fairy tales over time become children’s tales. We tend to think of this mode of storytelling as appropriate for kids. So is Takahata’s film a kid’s movie (in the non-pejorative sense)? I think it would work as one. But I don’t know how it was conceived.
“Michael Kerpan” wrote: I find the "motion scenes" in this film breathtaking, possibly the best of any anime I have scene. And part of the impact is the precisely the restraint in the way the scenes are presented. There are few (if any) unnecessary details. It almost as if one is seeing traditional Japanese art works brought to life. I remember being utterly stunned by Kaguya's flight, as she shed her kimonos, the first time I watched this. And the impact has never lessened with multiple re-viewings. And I was beguiled by her flying scene, even more than ... (oops). These scenes (and all the others here) always seem perfectly timed. Not a second too long or short. And other more ordinary moments, like the chained sequence of Kaguya's growth spurts, similarly delighted me at every instant.
What’s so brilliant about Kaguya’s flight is how it comes out of nowhere. It bursts out as a moment of uncontrollable emotion when you’re settled in for a long scene of social humiliation. It’s startling but so joyous, because you as an audience wish to escape the entrapment that Takahata has composed so wonderfully (I believe most of the scene is framed through fabric or rice paper as Kaguya observes snatches of the tedious party). It’s a wonderful release. Yet tonally complex, too, because I remember the moment acquiring a melancholy shade as it went on.
What I love about these “movement scenes” is that they lie somewhere between reality and dream. They are not simple dream sequences; in a sense they have actually occurred (Kaguya could not have simply dreamed information she cannot have known; the young woodcutter could not have simply wandered off and fallen asleep in a field, let alone accurately dreamt an adult Kaguya he’s not seen before). It’s almost as tho’ the sheer force of longing and imagination is able to conjure these moments into existence for a brief moment, but cannot sustain their reality for too long. A lovely idea.
“Michael Kerpan” wrote:An interesting aspect of many of Takahata's films including this is the question of what one is supposed to feel at the end. Is it sad? Of course. But categorizing it as sad and stopping there seems to miss the point. Kaguya has had a precious experience -- and like the "clients" in Kore-eda's After Life, she has managed to snag at least a tiny memory to carry with her. In Buddhist fashion, joy and sorrow are inextricable. Similarly, I find the "epilogue" of Grave of the Fireflies to offer an element of joy. Brother and sister reunited -- and serving (in a way) as guardian spirits of a reborn home city. Pom Poko likewise presents a quite emotionally complex (and irreducible) conclusion. The little song at the center of this film (is it based on a real folk song) encapsulates the notion of the inseparability of life and death, joy and sorrow.
I keep coming back to the Japanese symbol of the cherry blossom. In Japanese culture, as I understand it, the blossom is beautiful because it is so short lived; and part of the emotion that comes from its contemplation is a joy mixed with sadness. I see
Kaguya’s ending similarly, as one where the joys are made more keen from their being finite. The ending is melancholic, but one that takes stock of everything wonderful that occurred and concludes that death doesn’t rob life of meaning, it’s actually what gives it that meaning. It’s what allows us to not to take life for granted. Indeed it’s only after realizing her time is up that Kaguya fully appreciates what she’s had. The movie wonderfully avoids implying that one can go back, that the past ought to be recaptured. This is not a nostalgic movie.