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Profile:
Takahata Isao
Outside of anime circles,
Takahata Isao is a relative unknown. All he has done to get
his name out there is collaborate for nearly half a century
with the great Miyazaki
Hayao in producing and directing some of the finest
anime known to man. He's also the only person in the world
that can say with any confidence that he is Miyazaki's
equal, if not even senpai. He was also the man behind the
helm of what many consider to be the greatest anime of all
time, Grave of the
Fireflies. If those aren't solid credentials, then
I don't know what are.
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The
other half of Ghibli
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Born in 1935, Takahata
Isao seemed to possess a director's megaphone in his hands
as an infant. Having graduated from the elite Tokyo University,
the young Takahata joined the newly-formed anime production
company Toei Douga in 1959, which would eventually become
one of the largest such companies in Japan. Shortly after
the arrival of a young, brash animator named Miyazaki
Hayao, the two worked together (Takahata made his directorial
debut) on The Adventure of Hols, Prince of the Sun.
Though a critical success, Hols was the lowest grossing
film Toei Douga has ever produced, and subsequently Takahata
was banned from ever directing another Toei production. Hurt
by being made the scapegoat for financial matters beyond his
control, he and Miyazaki
took their talents elsewhere.
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Anime
at its best
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This legendary director/animator
tandem would provide the backbone behind many anime classics:
Lupin III
(co-directed by both), Heidi,
Girl of the Alps, Panda!
Go Panda and 3000 Leagues in Search of Mother.
Proving he doesn't need his prodigious colleague to create
exceptional anime, Takahata directed solo on Gauche
the Cellist and Chie the Brat. The two would
be linked again when Miyazaki
was offered the directorial position for a new movie titled
Nausicaä of the
Valley of Wind. He accepted the job on one condition:
Takahata Isao be made the producer. The unmitigated success
of Nausicaä
would catapult the two as leading men in a fledgling anime
company known as Studio Ghibli.
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Trying
something new
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Their first Ghibli conglomeration
would be in the form of Laputa:
Castle in the Sky (which also reunited them with Nausicaä
composer Hisaishi Jo).
With a burning desire to return to the director's chair, Takahata
dealt the entire anime community a stunning blow by releasing
Grave of the Fireflies,
an unabashed look at the victims of World War II based on
Nosaka Akiyuki's book "Hotaru no Haka". From then
his name would become synonymous with personable anime based
strongly in realism: Only
Yesterday, Pom
Poko, Ocean
Waves and My
Neighbors the Yamadas.
Today, the old man is
taking it easy. Don't take that as a sign of the end to his
anime career; if history is any indication, he is too versatile
to not find other avenues through which he can express himself.
Even if his career were to end today, there would be
no argument as to where he stands in the grand scheme of things:
among the most influential people in anime history.
Production Credits
3000 Leagues in Search
of Mother
The Adventures of Hols, Prince of the Sun
Anne of Green Gables
Apache Baseball Team
Chie the Brat
Dog of Flanders
Future Boy Conan
Gauche the Cellist
Grave of the Fireflies
Heidi, Girl of the Alps
Himitsu no Akko-chan
Hustle Punch
Ken the Wolf Boy
Kiki's Delivery Service
Kouya no Shounen Isamu
Laputa: Castle in the
Sky
Lupin III
Mooretsu Atarou
My Neighbors the Yamadas
Nausicaä of the
Valley of Wind
New Spooky Kitaro
Ocean Waves
Only Yesterday
Panda! Go Panda
Panda! Go Panda: The
Circus in the Rain
Pom Poko
Spooky Kitaro
Whisper of the Heart
The Wicked Prince's Hunt of the Big Snake
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