The following comments refer to feature-length films only!
Oy vey. Ok Daannny, you can like what you like. I won't begrudge you that, but do you think you could answer without a sense of holier-than-thou haughtiness?
Anyway, what you call "meditation, moments of silence, and slow pacing" I call "lack of plot, lack of tension, and lack of conflict."
In western culture, the magic tends to make much more sense. Ariel goes to a witch and signs a contract which binds her to the spell. Magic is based on rules. In Miyazaki films (nearly of them in fact) things just happen and no one ever reacts to them like they're out of the ordinary. I think this has a lot to do with his films not doing well in the west. We like exposition and explanation. We like it when people react to the fantastic. Miyazaki does not do this.
Western audiences also value different things when it comes to animation. Miyazaki is a master at placing characters in elaborate backgrounds. He also is a master special effects animator. He completely falls short as a character animator, though. Despite a few impressive moments here and there, his character animation is filled with stunted movement, overused key frames, and lip flap (a personal pet peeve of mine that I never have been able to overlook). His characters designs also tend to have this blobby nondescript quality to them. Many times I wonder if he spends more than five minutes designing them.
Now, western animation does not put nearly as much emphasis on backgrounds. I don't think that I've ever seen a western film with a background as detailed as Howl's dressing room, for instance. We are also are not as good at special effects animation. The perfect example of this is the waves from Ponyo. We do, however, destroy Miyazaki (and Japan in general) when it comes to character animation. Take a look at this, for instance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=DB7IqNgufk0. Look how the mouth moves with the dialogue; look at how much movement there is; look at the breadth of expression; look at the fluidity of the movement. Now look at Fujimoto from Ponyo and you'll see lip flap and a low frame rate that destroys the fluidity of the movement. There really is no comparison.
It all comes down to what you value. Most western audiences prefer character animation and design over backgrounds. Is that right? Well, there is no "right" or "wrong" here, just personal preference.
Western audiences just have a different set of values. It's not just about pop-culture references and jokes. After all, plenty of successful and popular anime boils down to just that, and movies like Wall-e make a lot of money here in the west. Really it has more to do with rule-bound fantasy, character design, character animation, a sense of conflict and consequences, and traditional story structure. If you don't place a high value on these things, then Miyazaki's backgrounds, quiet moments, and take-it-at-face-value fantasy that has "poetic" undertones will appeal more to you. It's all about CULTURE NOT QUALITY!
Well, I feel like I've ranted enough. I apologize if I've offended anyone; that was not my intention. I just feel like people who prefer western animation are looked down on in internet forums, and I felt like I had to say my piece. I don't really like the majority of Miyazaki's films, but I know why other people do. I don't think any less of someone for preferring his films. All I ask in return is that you don't look down on someone else for preferring western animation, because they may have very legitimate reasons for having that preference. I hope this has been useful food for thought.
If you paid to see Transformers 3 in the theater, shame on you.
reply
share