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A smiling pilot pig in a red airplane against a sweltering sky makes up this upbeat poster for Hayao Miyazaki's Porco Rosso |
Rosso is a master pilot, who hunts 'air pirates', and gets help from a 17 year-old girl to repair his plane, so that he can get back home to Milan, Italy. - Oh, and a curse has turned him into a pig.
Porco Rosso is written and directed by Japanese master filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki (Lupin III: The Castle of Cagliostro/Rupan sansei: Kariosutoro no shiro (1979)), whose 7th film it is. It is based on the three-part 1989 watercolor manga Hikōtei Jidai by Miyazaki. The English title is in Italian, because the character is Italian, and it means 'red pig', a literal translation of the film's original Japanese title.
Almost everything about Porco Rosso seems truly peculiar, but never absurd or grotesque, because Miyazaki's often beautiful compositions and exciting scenarios are accompanied by a warmth and a childlike matter of course. This makes the mostly strictly realistic (believe it or not), fantastic and deeply childish story very inviting and enjoyable. The strange norms and foreign values make the film even more worthwhile.
Something that's never quite cleared up bothers me though: Why exactly is the protagonist a pig?
Related posts:
Hayao Miyazaki: The Wind Rises/風立ちぬ [Kaze Tachinu] (2013) - Miyazaki's beautiful but languid last film
Top 10: Best fantasy movies reviewed by Film Excess to date
Howl's Moving Castle/ハウルの動く城 [Hauru no Ugoku Shiro] (2004) - Miyazaki's hugely successful, gibberish fantasy
Spirited Away/千と千尋の神隠し [Sen to Chihiro no Kamikakushi] (2001) - Miyazaki's highly Japanese, enormously weird story of a girl
Princess Mononoke/もののけ姫 (Mononoke-hime) (1997) - Miyazaki's grand, magical adventure masterpiece
Watch a trailer for the film here
Cost: 9.2 mil. $
Box office: 45.3 mil. $
= Big hit (returned 4.84 times its cost)
[Porco Rosso was released 18 July (Japan) and runs 94 minutes. Japan Airlines was a major investor behind the film, which was to be a 30-45 minute long in-flight animation. But Miyazaki made the film longer and secured a theatrical release, although the airline reportedly showed it in-flight long before the premiere. Nevertheless the film was the highest-grossing on the Japanese market of 1992, making 43 mil. $ (94.9 % of the total gross). Disney created an English dub version for their home video release of the film in 2005. The film has been re-released on several occasions. Miyazaki returned with Nandarou (1992, TV short), Chage & Aska: On Your Mark (1995, music video) and theatrically with Princess Mononoke/Mononoke-hime (1997). Porco Rosso is fresh at 95 % with an 8.00/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of Porco Rosso?
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