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Howl's Moving Castle - Treating the Audience as Intelligent 

Fiction Applied
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Howl's Moving Castle throws the audience into a new fantastical world. We open with Sophie Hatter as she's living her normal life, minding the hat shop, while her country is in the middle of war. She's accosted by two soldier's then saved by a mysterious wizard who seems to know her. They fly off into the air, chased by strange ink squid monsters, and then she arrives back at home only to be cursed by the Wicked Witch of the Waste.
All this happens with very little explanation. There is not 'how did we get here' moment. The story and author expect the audience to pay attention and see the little details, hints, and breadcrumbs and piece it together ourselves. Think of inception or any other movie, where the characters spend most of their dialogue explaining to each other (aka the audience) what is happening at each step. Rather than relying on the audience to follow, or simply letting them figure it out.
The characters do a great job of leading the audience through the story. Sophie is a very strong character, and we see after she is cursed she simply wonders off to the waste and makes a deal with Calcifer and lies to Howl to ensure she can stay and work for him. She's a dynamic character who does not simply sit by. It's a fantastic story and one where the writer has high confidence in the audience following the little details in the story and it works to intrigue the audience into seeing the tale to it's end.
Music by Simon Swerwer,
Cuggin's Cove,
Emergence,
Inith and Od Travel North

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25 май 2024

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Комментарии : 13   
@ramonsamudio01
@ramonsamudio01 Месяц назад
It should be noted, that from the book, Sophie and her sister are supposed to look almost identical. So Sophie is also very pretty, but she's not interested in that type of thing.
@geoffcassidy9981
@geoffcassidy9981 Месяц назад
Interesting! I really need to read the book, but haven't gotten around to it. I'm curious to see all the differences between the two. From what I understand they are quite different.
@emilyrln
@emilyrln Месяц назад
@@geoffcassidy9981they're very different, particularly in tone. The book is good and extremely funny, highly recommend bumping it up in your reading queue!
@epicninjabunnies
@epicninjabunnies 9 дней назад
Wait, Lettie or Martha?? In the book they always said Lettie was by far the prettier one. I know Martha was just her half-sister but I can’t remember if it said who was prettier
@emilyrln
@emilyrln 8 дней назад
@@epicninjabunnies I re-read it after watching this video, lol! "All three girls grew up very pretty indeed, though Lettie was the one everyone said was the most beautiful." (Page 1 in my edition.) Lettie has dark hair, Martha's is fair (I assume blond like Fanny), and Sophie's is fair and reddish.
@booksnotlooks9375
@booksnotlooks9375 Месяц назад
The book obviously goes into the story a lot more but I find it interesting the parts that Studio Ghibli chose to use and which they left out in order to create the film style that they're famous for. I especially like the 'steampunk' take on the world that Sophie and Howl inhabit. However, In the book, our own world bleeds into theirs on occasion and that could've actually ruined the feel of the movie had they chosen to keep it in the story. I love Ghibli films, and actually like the movie more than the book. Having said that, if you're a fan of the storyline it's worth reading if you want to fill in some of the gaps.
@geoffcassidy9981
@geoffcassidy9981 Месяц назад
The steampunk take is something I really enjoyed. I loved how they introduced it into the world, but at the same time kept a strong countryside and scenic quality. Thanks for the thoughts.
@pemo2676
@pemo2676 Месяц назад
just stumbled on this, and loved this film so i checked it out. i love your natural exploration of the story, this conversational-style analysis is great! keep it up. i love softer story-telling and magic systems like what studio ghibli produces - it's why i like adventure time so much, and tolkien's works. expansive worlds and great story-telling that you can fill in the gaps very naturally or realistically; such as how historians hypothesise. super engaging writing! the audience gets to react and marvel and delve into the story/history, instead of being spoon-fed exposition and magic systems and how you should be reacting through a character.
@geoffcassidy9981
@geoffcassidy9981 Месяц назад
Thank you! I really appreciate it. And yes, I love stories where it trusts the audience to figure it out and even if they miss it the first time, if you watch/read it a second time catching all the little references makes it so rewarding.
@pemo2676
@pemo2676 Месяц назад
@@geoffcassidy9981 i immediately rewatched howl after this and. wow. always good watching something after hearing someone's thought analysis of it!
@geoffcassidy9981
@geoffcassidy9981 Месяц назад
Awesome! I love doing that after watching analysis. It helps me pick up so many more little details.
@emilyrln
@emilyrln Месяц назад
I was sold as soon as you drew that stunning portrait of Howl 😂 and then the solid analysis clinched it for me.
@geoffcassidy9981
@geoffcassidy9981 Месяц назад
Haha thank you!
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