

It’s in the character detail, the cuts to shots of nature to link episodic memories, the color choices, and more. It’s incredibly subtle here-there’s no fantastical creature design or world creation to make it obvious-but it’s still there. Of course, the Ghibli team also brings a gentle, graceful visual sense to the film that others wouldn’t even consider. Shigeru Nagata’s score is constant, sometimes to a distracting degree in the first half, but it becomes a part of the fabric of the piece overall, and the film wouldn’t work without it.

Music is often key in their films-it sets a tone and helps guide the audience. And “Ocean Waves” is worth watching to see just how much a company like Ghibli can bring to a relatively simple tale. An argument could be made that if “Ocean Waves” weren’t animated and starred three CW stars it would be a dull mess.īut it’s not. There’s a fateful trip to Tokyo in which Rikako tries to find her father, and Taku ends up tagging along. There’s a school trip to Hawaii during which Rikako loses her money and asks to borrow some. It’s an episodic tale of encounters between Rikako and Taku.

It’s an even more gentle and often uneventful film than its description might lead you to believe. Yes, the people known for masterful fantasies like “ Princess Mononoke” and “ Spirited Away” made a love triangle drama. He’s immediately seeing this person through the eyes of his friend, which makes it even harder for him to later admit he has feelings for Rikako, for fear that it will break his friendship with Yutaka. Her back is to the window now and so Taku has to take his friend’s opinion of her as fact. Taku first spots Rikako through the eyes of his friend Yutaka, who spotted the alluring young woman through a window. Could it be Rikako, the young woman who changed his life in school just a few years prior? The film then flashes back to Taku’s time in school, focusing on the new girl who shakes everyone up. Taku is a young man at a train station in Tokyo when he spots a familiar face on another platform. It’s a delicate, well-told drama that may lack the depth of something like “Only Yesterday” but proves that Miyazaki and Takahata’s students were listening to their teachers.ĭirected by Tomomi Mochizuki and written by Kaori Nakamura (from a novel by Saeko Himuro), “Ocean Waves” is a story of memory and love. With an incredibly short running time (72 minutes) and deceptively simple story, “Ocean Waves” could feel like a footnote in the Ghibli story but it features qualities of its own as well. Reportedly sprung to life as an opportunity for some of the younger animators at Ghibli to spread their wings, “Ocean Waves” is the first Ghibli film not directed by Hayao Miyazaki or Isao Takahata, although one can see the fingerprints of both gentlemen on the final product. “Ocean Waves” was broadcast on Japanese television in the early ‘90s, but has been hard to find in the United States since then. viewers with an animated drama from one of the most important film companies in history (now in limited release in NY). The films will be subtitled in 28 languages, and dubbed in up to 20 languages.Earlier this year, GKIDS released a restored version of Studio Ghibli’s rarely-seen and masterful “ Only Yesterday,” and they end the year in a similar fashion, digging into the vaults to present U.S. We are excited and humbled to help make this catalogue of films easier to discover and access, and believe that these masterpieces will resonate with even more fans around the world now that they are available in more languages,” Aram Yacoubian, Director of Original Animation at Netflix, said in a statement. “Studio Ghibli is world-renowned for creating visually stunning, original animated films that have enthralled fans for over 35 years.

Studio Ghibli films will now be available on Netflix starting February, the streaming giant announced on Monday.īuckle down, prepare the popcorn, and add My Neighbor Totoro, Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, Howl's Moving Castle, and many other classics on your to-watch list!Īccording to Netflix, 21 Studio Ghibli films will be made available starting February 1, through distribution partner Wild Bunch International.
