Isao Takahata

  • Isao Takahata – Taiyo no oji: Horusu no daiboken AKA Horus, Prince of the Sun AKA Little Norse Prince (1968)

    Isao Takahata1961-1970AnimationJapan
    Taiyo no oji Horusu no daiboken (1968)
    Taiyo no oji Horusu no daiboken (1968)

    Synopsis:
    Horus, a kid living in an unnamed Scandinavian/Eastern Europe culture of the Iron Age, recovers the Sword of the Sun from the rock giant Moog and learns from his dying father that he must returns to his ancestral territory. In the process, he defends a village from the attacks of Grundewald, a warlord/ice demon and befriends the enigmatic Hilda, a lonely and beautiful girl who sings haunting songs (and who hides a terrible secret).Read More »

  • Isao Takahata – Sero hiki no Gôshu AKA Goshu the Cellist (1982)

    1981-1990AnimationFantasyIsao TakahataJapan
    Sero hiki no Gôshu (1982)
    Sero hiki no Gôshu (1982)

    Gauche, a struggling cellist in a small orchestra, is inspired by his interactions with animals to gain insight into music.Read More »

  • Isao Takahata – Omohide poro poro AKA Only Yesterday (1991)

    1991-2000AnimationDramaIsao TakahataJapan

    Synopsis:
    Legendary animators Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata team up to create this nostalgic animated work aimed at adult women, based on a manga by Yuko Tone and Kei Okamoto. The film centers on Taeko, a 27-year-old office worker who is sick of her job and ready for a change. She suddenly recalls the year 1966, when she was young and full of hope. She ventures to rural Yamagata prefecture to visit her sister and her brother-in-law. There she helps with the family farm where they turn saffron flowers into pigment for lipstick. While there she meets a hunky young farmer who’s the cousin of her brother-in-law. She is immediately taken with his hard-working, salt-of-the-earth ways.Read More »

  • Isao Takahata – Hotaru no haka AKA Grave of the Fireflies (1988)

    Isao Takahata1981-1990AnimationDramaJapan

    Quote:
    Isao Takahata‘s Hotaru no Haka (The Grave of the Fireflies, 1988) is a brilliant piece of cinema. Set in Kobe, Japan, in 1945, the film focuses on a brother and sister who are left orphaned and homeless by the American firebombing of the city. It is unflinching in its portrayal of the realities of the war, a harrowing account of what such attacks meant for the ordinary people living in the target area. The children’s innocence and love for each other is no defence against the trials they face: their suffering is very real, their story a classic tragedy. That The Grave of the Fireflies is animated rather than live-action does not distract from its power to move, to provoke thought, to draw tears from the eyes. It is a masterpiece.Read More »

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