May. 6, 11

18


feedthewanderlust:

peter, i’m bored.
yes audrey, i am as well.

feedthewanderlust:

peter, i’m bored.

yes audrey, i am as well.




Apr. 28, 11

43436


myroseate:

islamabad, pakistan.
most mesmerizing pairs of eyes i have ever laid my eyes upon. subhanAllah.

myroseate:

islamabad, pakistan.

most mesmerizing pairs of eyes i have ever laid my eyes upon. subhanAllah.




Feb. 8, 11

1660





Feb. 3, 11

16496





Jan. 30, 11

477


"

I haven’t chosen to just make the character of Chihiro like this, it’s because there are many young girls in Japan right now who are like that. They are more and more insensitive to the efforts that their parents are making to keep them happy. There’s a scene in which Chihiro doesn’t react when her father calls her name. It’s only after the second time he calls that she replies. Many of my staff told me to make it three times instead of two, because that’s what many girls are like these days. They don’t immediately react to the call of the parents. What made me decide to make this film was the realisation that there are no films made for that age group of ten-year old girls. It was through observing the daughter of a friend that I realised there were no films out there for her, no films that directly spoke to her. Certainly, girls like her see films that contain characters their age, but they can’t identify with them, because they are imaginary characters that don’t resemble them at all.



With Spirited Away I wanted to say to them “don’t worry, it will be alright in the end, there will be something for you”, not just in cinema, but also in everyday life. For that it was necessary to have a heroine who was an ordinary girl, not someone who could fly or do something impossible. Just a girl you can encounter everywhere in Japan. Every time I wrote or drew something concerning the character of Chihiro and her actions, I asked myself the question whether my friend’s daughter or her friends would be capable of doing it. That was my criteria for every scene in which I gave Chihiro another task or challenge. Because it’s through surmounting these challenges that this little Japanese girl becomes a capable person. It took me three years to make this film, so now my friend’s daughter is thirteen years old rather than ten, but she still loved the film and that made me very happy.

"  - Miyazaki Hayao (via hayao-miyazaki)