Oh, Porco's up there, probably second, on both our lists.
My list:
Totoro,
Porco Rosso,
Whisper of the Heart,
Spirited Away,
Howl's Moving Castle,
Kiki's Delivery Service,
Nausicaa,
Mononoke,
Castle Cagliostro,
Castle in the Sky,
The Cat Returns
DH's list:
Totoro (these two had a terrible tussle for first place),
Porco Rosso,
Spirited Away,
Whisper of the Heart,
Howl's Moving Castle,
Nausicaa,
Princess Mononoke,
Castle in the Sky,
Castle Cagliostro,
Kiki's Delivery Service,
The Cat Returns,
There are things I really love about Castle in the Sky--especially the robots, and the pigeons. But the pedophile vibe just shoots it way down to second from the bottom of the list. Plus, Anna Paquin's voice (yes, we usually watch the dubbed version, to accomodate the five-year-old) grates, after a while. Even though Castle Cagliostro has some strange and silly moments, much of it is quite beautiful. At the bottom of the list is The Cat Returns, which does have some pretty moments, and I do love the miniature building where the Cat waits. But again, little girl as sex object squicks me severely. Third from the top on my list is Whispers from the Heart, and it's because of the glimpse of modern life in Japan(nevermindthatIwasandamaconfirmedJohnDenverfan).
You'd think a confirmed environmentalist like me would love Nausicaa, and I do, but the robot-monster menace at the end sort of ruins the rest of it for me. I love the first half of Mononoke, the second half, not so much. The town Kiki settles in is so like all the pretty little medieval German towns I knew when we lived there, and because of the familiarity, I'm fond of the movie, even though I think the plot is weaker than some of the others.
And Spirited Away is just perfect. It should be my favorite, but there's Totoro, and Porco. And for all its flaws, I heart Howl's Moving Castle beyond all reason.
edited for frelling punctuation.
the script is just so convoluted that we both gave up trying to follow the mystery after a while.
I've had the book for five years now on my To Be Read shelf--I think I'll read it before seeing the movie (which now might end up being Netflixed rather than viewed in the theater).
To bring up a similarly titled film, I saw a trailer for The Good Shepherd when I saw The Queen last week, and that looks like it might be a decent film.
We watched Over the Hedge with Owen last night. The casting is FABULOUS. I expected better writing but it was an ok, funny time.
I want to take Owen to see Flushed Away. He's got a Rita doll in a Happy Meal and won't let go of her.
I saw The Return today. It's quite good, but not at all the movie the trailers would leadone to expect.
Fans of Hawkgirl will find the denoument very familiar
...
I want to take Owen to see Flushed Away. He's got a Rita doll in a Happy Meal and won't let go of her.
We just saw Flushed Away - very funny and fun. Recommended. Probably the funniest animated movie we saw this year. Rita rocks.
How would Flushed Away play to the 3-year-old set? It looks a little older to me than Cars or Were-Rabbit, but we're due for a daddy-daughter movie date...
How would Flushed Away play to the 3-year-old set? It looks a little older to me than Cars or Were-Rabbit, but we're due for a daddy-daughter movie date...
Many jokes would go over the head of a 3-year old but nothing is scary in it. Thrilling, yes. Scary, no. So I think it would keep a 3 y.o. entertained (and Dad as well). It's definitely not older than Were-Rabbit. Pitched about the same for humor. Very Aardman, really.
Well, they've gone off. We'll have a report in a couple of hours...
Spidey 3 trailer from Comic-Con.
It's full of unfinished CGI, but the very last shot is awesome.
Flushed Away review, by Casper, age 3.
"He was flushed AWAY...and he met someBODY...and she didn't TALK good...and she didn't DO good...and she had a DIAMOND...and it BROKE..."
mr. flea reports she sat on his lap and sucked her finger, and it was maybe a little too much for her - too exciting and fast-paced.