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Gedo Senki Anime Review

December 10th 2010 23:01

Gedo Senki - Tales from Earthsea - Anime Review






Information:

Alternate Title: Tales from Earthsea

Studio: Studio Ghibli
Length: 1 Movie
Year: 2006
Genre: Adventure, Drama, Fantasy




Synopsis:


Something bizarre has come over the land. The kingdom is deteriorating. People are beginning to act strange... What's even more strange is that people are beginning to see dragons, which shouldn't enter the world of humans. Due to all these bizarre events, Ged, a wandering wizard, is investigating the cause. During his journey, he meets Prince Arren, a young distraught teenage boy. While Arren may look like a shy young teen, he has a severe dark side, which grants him strength, hatred, ruthlessness and has no mercy, especially when it comes to protecting Teru. For the witch Kumo this is a perfect opportunity. She can use the boy's "fears" against the very one who would help him, Gedo.



Review:


So huge are the themes and so expansive the scale of the childishly animated Japanese feature "Tales From Earthsea" that the effect is somewhat as if "Ben-Hur" were re-enacted with finger puppets.

The film, from Goro Miyazaki, scion of the garlanded director Hayao ("Spirited Away"), is nominally an adventure about a runaway prince who is taught about magic by a roaming wizard. Yet its deliberate pace and heavy themes about rejecting immortality make it unsuitable for all but the most intellectually voracious children. At the outset, an imbalance of nature poisons the land and corrupts minds. Young Prince Arren inexplicably kills his father the king and flees with the old man's Excalibur-like sword into the wild, where he is aided by a Ben Kenobi-ish sorcerer named Sparrowhawk (Timothy Dalton) and rescues a sullen girl from slavery. In a farmhouse, Arren learns to labor like a field hand as the wizard eases him into maturity. Arren turns out to be prey to a dark side that may prove useful to the wizard's archenemy, Cob (Willem Dafoe). Dafoe's creepy hushed readings and scorched baritone maximize the bone-chilling terror of this villain, who sports a bizarrely feminine look -- he has a lithe glam-rock aspect in white clown face paint with vertical dashes below the eyes. But he's the only interesting-looking character in the piece. Based on a series of books by Ursula K. Le Guin, this utterly earnest, philosophy-drenched story recombines its borrowed elements in imaginative ways to create a frequently gripping effect that builds to a rich climax. Thanks in part to a generous, Irish-tinged score, even scenes in which characters merely stand quietly in rustling fields seem fraught with somber majesty.




Grade - C (plus) - The Miyazaki legacy is in good hands.
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