Laputa: Castle in the Sky is an animation film by Hayao Miyazaki released in the United States in 1986; the movie film takes its distant inspiration from a novel by Jonathan Swift, Gulliver’s Travels, where Laputa is a floating island peopled by superior creatures. The story of this castle in the sky proves one more time that people remain fascinated with the sky and what is out there so little accessible to us without the intermediary of technologies. The plot starts from the premises that there is still a hidden flying city camouflaged behind clouds; to some characters this remains fiction, while others seek to find the hidden fortress. Laputa: Castle of the Sky has to reveal its secrets!
This castle in the sky surely belongs to a parallel Earth with an alternate history since none of the regions or place names that we come across in the film corresponds to real geographical data. We know that the action takes place sometime between the middle of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. The creator of the film imagined a very complex documentation for the castle in the sky and the history is pretty elaborate given the fact that it is pure fiction. Thus, there are hegemonies over other aerial cities, then, Laputa, normally governed by a royal family, has been several times abandoned, not to mention that details about the connections between Laputans and earthlings abound.
The creator of Laputa: Castle in the Sky says to have been greatly influenced by the architecture of a mining town in Wales, and this model served for the design of the buildings of Laputa. The release on video and DVD took place only in 2003 as the project had been postponed several times before. During that year, Laputa: Castle in the Sky became the second-best selling DVD distributed by Disney after Spirited Away.
Various distinctions set apart the original and the English dub, but the effect of Laputa: Castle in the Sky was not lower by such differences. The music in the film sounds different and it was modified for the very purpose of rendering the anime more popular to the Western public who is normally used with very serious musical support. Moreover, all the alterations received the approval of the makers although some fans opposed some of the decisions. In Japan, Laputa: Castle in the Sky received wide acclaims and several awards among which Best Film of the Year as well as Best Anime at the 9th Anime Grand Prix.
0 Responses
Stay in touch with the conversation, subscribe to the RSS feed for comments on this post.