Saturday, 13 September 2014

Sydney Film Festival 2014 - Film Review - The Tale of Princess Kaguya

Princess Kaguya with her attendants
The Tale of Princess Kaguya is an exquisite animation mixing simple watercolour and coal drawings with soft hues, delicate lines, and minimalist storybook imagery. The masterpiece of 78-year-old Isao Takahata, co-founder of the renowned Studio Ghibli, this film once again demonstrates the supremacy of Japanese animation in this art form and fable-telling, often overlooked due to the populist anime genre. The story is based on the 10th Century folklore story 'The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter' and follows the life of a mysterious golden princess discovered as a baby by a woodcutter within a random bamboo shoot. Kaguya, as she is named, revels in the natural beauty of the world around her in the isolated wood where she is raised by the woodcutter and his wife. The woodcutter is again gifted by the bamboo with an abundance of gold and fine silks which he interprets as being a sign of Kaguya's 'divine royalty'. With this wealth her adoptive parents proceed to transform her into a princess and provide the life for which they feel she is destined. Many suitors including the Emperor himself try to win Kaguya's hand but she is interested in none of them, thinking only of her childhood sweetheart back in the woods.

Princess Kaguya's time on Earth is limited and in her despondency she sings to the Moon and thus summons the celestial host of which she is a part realising only too late that her attachment to Earth and her adoptive parents is strong. Alas on the fifteenth night of the lunar month, the celestial delegation descends from the Moon to collect her. The Tale of Princess Kaguya has a moral lesson which transcends time, culture and society and is effectively portrayed in a emotionally evocative animation.

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