June
3, 2006
Wonderful
news, everybody! Puss in Boots has finally been released on DVD
in America! For fans of animation and Hayao Miyazaki, this will
certainly become one of the most cherished releases of the year.
Puss
in Boots is one of the great slapstick cartoons, a freewheeling
joyride that stays in your head and sticks to your bones. It's probably
the best animated comedy ever made in Japan (although I'm often
torn between this and Animal Treasure Island). The comedy will remind
Westerners of their favorite Tom and Jerry or Road Runner cartoons,
and the action scenes are endlessly inventive and thrilling. This
movie was released in 1969 at Toei Doga, and was a tremendous rush
of freedom for the animators; after three years of battling the
studio over Horus, Prince of the Sun, everyone
was set loose like children in a candy store.
All
the major Toei talent is on display: Yasuji Mori, Yoichi Kotabe,
Yasuo Otsuka, Hayao Miyazaki, Akemi Ota, Reiko Okuyama. The director,
Kimio Yabuki, gave everyone free reign, letting ideas flow freely;
this is very much an animators' movie, and is an excellent example
of Japan's cutting edge.
The
story is fairly standard fairy-tale fare, with Pero, the title hero,
helping a shy peasant win the heart of a beautiful princess, rescue
her from a towering villain, and avoid pursuit from cat assasins.
There are a number of song-and-dance numbers, which were standard
in Japan's post-war years, but was now headed for extinction thanks
to Horus. Sounds a little Disney-fied, but thankfully, everything
moves at such a clip, and the gags keep flying at you so fast, that
the plot barely has a chance to keep up. It's really just a bare
framework to setup all the jokes and chase scenes, which is what
a comedy cartoon should be, anyway.
The
final act of Puss in Boots, the assault on Lucifer's castle, is
one of the most famous segments in all of anime. It was animated
by Otsuka and Miyazaki in tag-team fashion; the castle chase is
practically its own self-contained movie, and you soon feel as though
the rest of the movie is just a grand set-up, just to get to this
moment. This is one of Miyazaki's greatest achievements as an animator,
as an emerging master of comedy and action. If you're observant,
you'll start spotting endless Puss in Boots riffs nearly everywhere.
Animal Treasure Island, Castle of Cagliostro,
Nausicaa, The
Cat Returns. That's just a few titles off the top of my head.
So,
in case you haven't figured out, this is a beloved movie. Toei reached
its peak with Horus (although they didn't know it yet), and Puss
in Boots was still riding on that wave. But it was the beginning
of the end; by the time Animal Treasure Island was released in 1971,
Otsuka had already jumped ship, and soon everyone would follow,
carrying the Toei tradition to A Pro, Zuiyo, Nippon Animation, Telecom,
and then finally Ghibli.
Discotek
did a great job with the DVD. The original Japanese movie poster
is on the cover, which is a great plus for me. There are a couple
extras on the disc, which is an improvement from earlier releases,
the subtitles are good, and the original soundtrack-with-subs is
the default option, which is really nice. This is a new company,
and they're fairly small, so they deserve our support. Show 'em
some love. |