Studio Ghibli's Adventures
What’s
up people! This week is going to be one of those random ones that has nothing
to do with any particular album or artist. Today I wanted to talk about
soundtracks in movies and how powerful a sound can be in creating a moment in
films. For this post, I’m gonna focus particularly on animation since I decided
to watch a bunch of Studio Ghibli movies. (By the way, for the love of god do
NOT watch Grave of the Fireflies unless you want an excuse to buy a shit
ton of tissues.) I decided to watch the studio’s movies in order of release
date because I wanted to see how the animation style changes and evolves over
time. So, the first movie I watched was A Castle in the Sky. And my oh
my is that a fun movie. It literally felt like a video game except you’re watching
one huge cinematic. The plot was so fun and interesting having it be about a
kid who thinks there’s a castle floating in the sky, but nobody believes him
until he randomly meets the princess of that sky castle and they both go on a
journey to get there. As they try getting there, they run into military forces,
thieves, and other competitors as they race to get to the castle and obtain the
treasure it holds for them. The plot was very colorful, and the animation did a
great job at matching that brightness. It was while watching this that the idea
of this movie being once a single idea came into my head and blew my mind. I
can’t believe that this great adventure tale was at one point just a random
idea that got time to be brought into the real world. And of course, as I
followed that train of thought, I ended up being more amazed as I focused in on
the soundtrack that helps bring the fictional world of A Castle in the Sky
to life.
And
yeah, the soundtrack did a great job at carrying the tale in this movie. The
sounds you hear from the orchestra is so complimentary to the emotions being
shown on screen. Princess having a existential crisis on whether or not she
wants to be princess? Soft, melodic music that ramps up as she gets more
frustrated with herself. Thieves chasing after the princess? Have crazy fanfare
of string and flute instruments dancing with each other as the pace just keeps
going faster and faster until BAM! THE PRINCESS MAKES IT OUT AND LIVES LETS
GOO!! But wait, we end up getting to the castle and it’s not what we take it to
be? Play saddening music but not too sad because we want the audience to know
that it was never about the end destination, the true reward of this story was
the journey between the princess and the boy she friends. WHAT A VIBE! But
that’s not it… let’s end the credits with... you guessed it. A classic Japanese
song with a wonderful voice from Azumi
Inoue with the man behind it all... Joe Hisiashi. I know this is a random topic,
but I’ve always wanted to talk about how the sounds of music can be implemented
in other forms of media. For movies, music has the power to make anything feel
just that much better as you either wipe a tear from your eyes or have your
heart racing for the next scene. The reason I chose to use Studio Ghibli’s
movie was because recently, I haven’t felt the magic that I used to in modern
movies I go watch. I don’t know if it’s because I’m growing up or I’m just not
feeling the movies I’ve been watching, but Studio Ghibli made me feel like a
kid all over it and I’m glad I had the experience I had this past weekend. I
highly recommend you guys check out their movies if you haven’t already but I’m
sure I’m the only dude that hasn’t watched anything from them yet. Hope you
guys enjoyed reading this one, have a great week and I’ll see you all soon!
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