Sunday, March 29, 2020

The Films of Hayao Miyazaki: Castle in the Sky






The third film in my sociological retrospective of the films of Hayao Miyazaki is the steam punk sci-fi adventure The Castle in the Sky. The first film that was under the Studio Ghibli banner, Castle in the Sky acts as the coming out party for Miyazaki as a superior talent in animation and filmmaking. It is the film that people began to sit up and take notice. It also acts as a fledgling studio’s raucous opening volley whose impact changed the landscape of the medium of animation forever.


PLOT
As young Sheeta is being transported by her captors, their airship is besieged by Dola and her family of pirates. In the ensuing chaos, Sheeta escapes by plummeting to earth from the airship. Her descent is arrested by a mysterious necklace that was given to her by her mother which holds the key to Sheeta’s past and lineage. She is plucked out of the sky by Pazu, a young miner with penchant for aviation hoping to find the floating city of Lapita once photographed by his father. Together, Pazu and Sheeta seek to prove the existence of Lapita and uncover its secrets while evading Muska and his government agents; who pursue the power of Lapita for their own dark purposes.






HISTORICAL CONTEXT
The establishing of Studio Ghibli and the release of Castle in the Sky marks a considerable and significant shift in animation that reverberated through popular culture. We consistently see its influences in the films of major animation studios like PIXAR and Disney Studios but also specifically influenced the Japanese Final Fantasy Bioshock and Mega Man game series, the song “Laputa” by jazz funk artist Hiatus Kaiyote as well as its contribution to social media when, on August 12th 2013 the term “balse” was tweeted by 143,199 people at the same time as it appeared in the film during a Japanese re-watch party; breaking the record for most tweeted moment in history[1] Though these markers, the influence of Castle in the Sky as a historical and cultural product is both vast and immense.




The Foundation of Ghibli
When Toshiro Suzuki first met Hayao Miyazaki it did not go well.  Suzuki was a journalist with Animage and was looking for an interview with the young director after the release of Castle of Cagliostro . Miyazaki declined. Suzuki then decided to “stage a protest sit in” in Miyazaki’s office for a full day and a half before Miyazaki decided to talk to him[2] Once this barrier was broken, Suzuki and Miyazaki along with Isao Takahata founded Ghibli; the term derived from an Italian word for Libyan/Arabic “hot desert wind”; emblematic of the changed they wanted to make in the anime industry. Given the fact that 6 of Ghibli’s films (four of which directed by Miyazaki himself) are on the top 10 highest grossing anime films of all time[3], it is inarguable that they have succeeded[4] 

One of the interesting factors in the success story of Studio Ghibli, which bleeds into one of the more thematic elements of their products is the studio's unique anti-capitalist ideology. Miyazaki, in an infamous statement to his animators, told them that if they were looking to rise up the corporate ladder they were in the wrong place. Miyazaki desires to do one film at a time, hoping that the money from the previous film would be enough to get them through the next one[5]. Unlike the structure of Capitalism, Miyazaki is not looking to make ridiculous amounts of profit off his work. In fact, his level of modesty, stoicism and control has been anathematic to Ghibli’s success, hindering Ghibli from becoming an animation monopoly[6]. However, given the gravity and potential profitability of recent events, will see if that is still true in the near future.[7]


Steam Punk and its derivatives
Steam Punk[8] is a retro futuristic sub-genre of science fiction fantasy which incorporates the visual flare and design of 19th century industrialization and steam powered technology into a futuristic culture of clothing, lifestyle, advanced machinery and weaponry based upon that aesthetic. Many of these stories center around the British Victorian era or the American Western, and are influenced by the work of Jules Vern, H.G. Wells. This is commonly used in works of speculative fiction about alternative histories and those that depict an amalgam of cultures and technology.

Miyazaki’s Castle in the Sky has become a staple of the Steam Punk genre. Its creation and design of airships, weapons, clothing and propulsive devices become standard since its release. Released in 1986, Castle in the Sky specifically gave steampunk such a foothold in popular culture one could argue that the entire subgenre was built around the work of Miyazaki and a few other creators.




The popularity of steam punk lead to the development of several categorical derivatives. Chief among these byproducts is Cyber Punk This sub-genre began based on the work of science fiction writers like Philip K. Dick, Rodger Zelensky and J. G. Ballard with the difference being that opposed to Steam Punk, Cyber Punk usually is set in some form of futuristic dystopia juxtaposed with radical changes to the social order. A lot of the cyber punk sub genre also incorporates noir fiction with hard boiled detective stories and aspects of postmodernism. In the United States, this was encompassed by films like Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner and its sequel. This was not popularized Japan until the Manga release of Katsuhiro Otomo’s Akira,[9] which has since become a phenomena.    




SOCIAL ANALYSIS
Considering that Miyazaki has consistent and similar themes throughout all his films, it is difficult in this retrospective to not be repetitive. Castle in the Sky  like Nausicaa before it tackles a lot of the same issues, specifically the issues of industrialization and environmentalism. Yet, the locus of how this is achieved is quite different. With Castle, the approach is far more optimistic, which is a result of the age of the protagonists. Miyazaki has mentioned that he often uses younger protagonists because of their youthful zeal and because they always inspire hope rather than adults who often inspire dread. Castle in the Sky is a perfect example of this ideological juxtaposition in the character differences of Sheeta, Pazu and Muska. Whereas Sheeta and Pazu want to locate Lapita for answers to questions that they have, Muska is just looking for a world ending weapon.[10]   




Industrialization
The industrial revolutions that span from 1760-1850 transformed society from a pre-modern society to one of modernity. Modernity is characterized by changing society in the following ways:
1.      The development of Capitalism as an economic system
2.      The increase in technology
3.      Urbanization
4.      Population growth
5.      And increased rates of secularization


These components of modernity fundamentally shifted the way that people lived. In the film, when we first meet Pazu he is an apprentice to a mine worker who is using steam power to help operate elevators and a plethora of digging equipment. As we travel through the town, we see the economic stability that the ore mining has created and the way in which their village was created around the labor available in the mine. However, since little time is spent in the village’s ecosystem; it cannot be determined which common Sociological organizational model this village will eventually take on, whether that be the Burgess Zone model, Hoyt’s sector model, or Ullman’s Multiple Nuclei model.





             
              Environmentalism
            As urbanization continues (in whatever form that it takes), Miyazaki is always interested in the conflict between industrialization and the environment. In many of his films, as we will see throughout this retrospective, there is a common notion that industrialization is a cost to the environment with many films depicting it as toxic and in one specific case (Princess Mononoke) the source of demonic possession. However, in Castle in the Sky, the focus on the environment is not in opposition to industry, but illustrates how the environment can recover, after industrialization stops.
           
             When Sheeta and Pazu are approaching Lapita there is an all-encompassing storm that surrounds it called “The Dragon’s Lair.” This acts as a deterrent and has hindered any human contact with Lapita allowing the environment to begin to reclaim the land from the man made industrialized structures. The state of Lapita that Sheeta and Pazu find is not one of lavish opulence with ornate structures, and glistening towers of stone and steel. Instead, they bear witness to an image of the earth, after civilization. There's intense vegetation, and deep roots have begun to strangle and consume advanced technology. Much of the technology that is left has rusted and is inoperable. The technology that is still working (without human intervention) has been co-opted by the environment to sustain itself, in the form of a single mossy robot that feeds birds. Here Miyazaki shows that even an immense weapon of mass destruction can be transformed into a horticultural tool.  




Towards the end of the film, it is revealed that the entire floating island is the shell for a gigantic tree with an integrated root system. Miyazaki dramatically preserves this tree by sending it into the upper atmosphere. Thus, symbolically displaying that the environment will only survive outside of human intervention; a jewel in need of protection. It is unclear whether he did this to literally show that the environment needs to be sustained in isolation from human contact, or that as a concept, environmentalism needs to be an ideal loftier than civilization itself.

In human civilization, environmental rebirth usually happens after period of drastic social change that result in the removal of humans from a specific geographic space. In some cases, this is due to industrial or environmental disasters which have caused humans to flee uninhabitable areas which years later are taken back by ecosystem surrounding it.  One of the clearest and best examples of this rebirth is at the site of the Chernobyl disaster in Russia.  In the thirty plus years since the disaster caused the abandoning of structures, businesses playgrounds and buildings. The forest has begun to take it back.



 A second, and far more recent example of this is the reports of air and water quality improvements around major cities in the United States, China and Italy after the quarantining of the population, and the mandatory practices of physical distancing   The revealing reality is the clear impact human effected climate change has on the environment, and what happens to the earth when we are not there to destroy it.





CONCLUSION   
            Castle in the Sky is often passed over for some of Miyazaki’s more bombastic and frenetic films (like the aforementioned Princess Mononoke or Ponyo), or even those films that are more soulful and contemplative (such as The Wind Rises or Spirited Away). It has not helped that Castle in the Sky  was one of two films by Miyazaki that was edited the most for an international release.  These changes altered character motivation, and eliminated the importance of the source material[11]. The biggest atrocity of this was the English language dub. The voice cast (which often is a who’s who of popular actors of the moment) aged up the characters in the story from pre-teens to teenagers which changes a lot of the emotional beats and the context of the film.  The English dub also creates a romantic subplot between Sheeta and one of the pirates which is especially grating. These changes have limited the notoriety of this film in popular culture even among Miyazaki fans. Many Miyazaki fans forget about Castle in the Sky, it is not one we often go back to. But when we do, we still realize that it is the work of a Master just about to hit his stride.



Viewing Recommendation:  Watch this film in the original Japanese (which is generally a foundational rule) using the blu-ray re-release distributed by GKIDS instead of Disney if possible.




[2] Interview with Suzuki on the Castle in the Sky GKids blu-ray release
[4] This is regardless of the type of distribution whether that be home video release or a theatrical run. Additionally, Ghibli films make of the majority of films on this list that is not based on Manga or a preexisting franchise or property.
[5] Griffin Newman 2019 The Blank Check Podcast
[6] Although, Miyazaki acquiesces to the licensing of their characters for merchandise in order to keep the lights in the studio on.
[7] The question I have is why now? Are things in that dire straits that the studio could not resist anymore? While, as an animation cinephile, I want these films to retain their quality and formatting and not have to be zipped or compressed that which will ultimately flatten out the images, I also want the distribution to be presented in its premiere format ala I would prefer no one watch a Miyazaki film on their phone.
[9] Which I will be covering in an upcoming post
[10] I will talk about the way in which Miyazaki tackles militarization during my review of The Wind Rises and the importance of Atomic imagery is my review of Akira
[11] Gulliver’s Travels and Treasure Island