IFC Center to Run Complete Studio Ghibli Retrospective Beginning December 16th; Limited Theatrical Debuts Planned for 2012
by Matt Goldberg Posted:November 14th, 2011 at 11:26 am
|
|
|

Earlier this year I was able to do a Hayao Miyazaki retrospective through Netflix DVD rentals, but his films lose their cinematic scope on the small screen. Characters in My Neighbor Totoro (tied with Spirited Away as my favorite Miyazaki film), Castle in the Sky, and Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind soar through the air through massive landscapes and it would be wonderful to see these movies in theaters. Thankfully, that opportunity will come to New York’s IFC Center beginning December 16th when Studio Ghibli and distributor GKIDS do a 15-film retrospective, which will include Miyazaki’s films. The retrospective will run until January 12th, feature new 35mm prints, and will run both subtitled and English-dubbed versions.
But it gets even better. GKIDS plans to bring the retrospective to Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington D.C., Toronto, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle, and other major markets in early 2012. Fingers crossed one of those markets is Atlanta. And even if it isn’t, GKIDS is also planning limited releases of select Studio Ghibli titles, many of which have never been released theatrically in the US. If these movies swing by your city, make sure you check them out. Hit the jump for the full press release and list of movies playing in the retrospective. Advance tickets can be purchased at gkids.com.
Here’s the press release, which includes a list of movies playing in the retrospective and whether they’re subtitled and/or dubbed.
GKIDS BRINGS COMPLETE STUDIO GHIBLI FILM RETROSPECTIVE TO IFC CENTER
15 TITLES FROM 1984 TO 2008
INCLUDING HAYAO MIYAZAKI MASTERPIECES
“SPIRITED AWAY” “PRINCESS MONONOKE” “MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO”
“CASTLE IN THE SKY” “NAUSICAA OF THE VALLEY OF THE WIND”
***NEW 35MM PRINTS***
DEC 16 TO JAN 12 AT IFC CENTER
ADVANCE TICKETS AT WWW.GKIDS.COM
RETROSPECTIVE TO VISIT LA, CHICAGO, DC, TORONTO, BOSTON,
SF, SEATTLE AND OTHER MAJOR MARKETS
New York, New York – November 14, 2011 – GKIDS, a distributor of award winning animation for both adults and family audiences, is bringing a complete retrospective of films from Japan’s renowned Studio Ghibli to the IFC Center in New York from Friday, December 16 to Thursday, January 12. The run will include US premiere theatrical engagements for several titles.
All fifteen Studio Ghibli feature films produced between 1984 and 2008 will be presented, including Hayao Miyazaki’s Academy Award® winning Spirited Away, Princess Mononoke, My Neighbor Totoro, Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Castle in the Sky, Ponyo, Howl’s Moving Castle, and Kiki’s Delivery Service. Films will be shown in both the subtitled and English dubbed versions. (See below for a complete list of titles.)
GKIDS recently entered into agreement with Studio Ghibli to handle North American theatrical distribution for their library of animated features. As the first engagements announced under the agreement, New York Film Festival presented a 25 year anniversary screening of Castle in the Sky and 10 year anniversary screenings of Spirited Away. LA County Museum of Art and Film Independent will be presenting these same anniversary titles in a special preview screening on November 26.
Following the IFC Center engagement, the retrospective will tour to major US and Canadian markets, including Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, Toronto, Boston, San Francisco, Seattle, and other cities, throughout the first half of 2012. GKIDS is also planning limited releases of select Studio Ghibli titles, many of which have never been released theatrically in the US, beginning late 2012.
Eric Beckman, GKIDS president, said, “I am both excited and deeply honored to be working with Studio Ghibli to bring this amazing slate of films to theaters across North America. I am in continual awe of the brilliance of the animation, the depth and humanity of the storytelling, and of the filmmakers’ understanding that even the youngest audiences are capable of appreciating all the subtlety and nuance that cinema has to offer. As Miyazaki has said ‘Children understand the complexity and uncertainty of things almost with their skin. They cannot be underestimated.’ ”
The Studio Ghibli agreement further solidifies GKIDS position as a home for award-winning animation. GKIDS began as a spin-off of New York International Children’s Film Festival and found early success securing a Best Animated Feature Oscar® nomination for The Secret of Kells in 2010. GKIDS has two films competing in the animated feature category for the upcoming Academy Awards®, European Film Award nominee A Cat in Paris, and Oscar®-winner Fernando Trueba’s Chico & Rita, also an EFA nominee. Chico & Rita is being released under GKIDS’ newly formed LumaFilms banner, due to the adult subject matter of the film.
ABOUT STUDIO GHIBLI
Studio Ghibli was founded in 1985 by animation directors Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata and is one of the most successful and well-respected animation studios in the world. Cultivating a creative force of talented directors, animators, and storytellers under the revered brilliance of Miyazaki and Takahata, Studio Ghibli’s films have been praised for their originality, dazzling animation, and epic storytelling. The films have become a beloved part of Japanese popular culture, and have garnered worldwide acclaim from audiences and critics alike. Hayao Miyazaki’s Spirited Away won the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature in 2002 and in 2005 Miyazaki was named one of “the most influential people” by TIME Magazine.
ABOUT GKIDS
GKIDS is a distributor of award-winning animation for both adult and family audiences. Theatrical releases include Tomm Moore’s Oscar nominated The Secret of Kells, Michel Ocelot’s acclaimed Azur & Asmar, European Film Award Best Animated Feature winner Mia and the Migoo, Nina Paley’s multiple-award-winning Sita Sings the Blues, and Japan Academy Prize winner Summer Wars by Mamoru Hosoda. Upcoming GKIDS releases include 2011 Berlin official selection A Cat in Paris and Annecy winner Eleanor’s Secret. GKIDS is also producer of New York Int’l Children’s Film Festival, North America’s largest festival of film for children and teens. NYICFF is an Oscar®-qualifying event and jury members include Uma Thurman, Susan Sarandon, Gus van Sant, Matthew Modine, James Schamus, Michel Ocelot, and Christine Vachon.
STUDIO GHIBLI FILMS – IFC CENTER – DEC 16 TO JAN 12
| Title | Director (Producer) | Versions | Year | RT | ||
| Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind | Hayao Miyazaki (Isao Takahata) | Subtitled and dubbed (Uma Thurman, Shia LeBouf, Edward James Olmos, Mark Hamill) | 1984 | 116 min | ||
| Castle in the Sky | Hayao Miyazaki (Isao Takahata) | Subtitled only | 1986 | 126 min | ||
| My Neighbor Totoro | Hayao Miyazaki (Toru Hara) | Subtitled and dubbed (Dakota Fanning, Elle Fanning, Tim Daly, Frank Welker) | 1988 | 86 min | ||
| Kiki’s Delivery Service | Hayao Miyazaki (Hayao Miyazaki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Kirsten Dunst, Phil Hartman, Janeane Garofalo, Debbie Reynolds) | 1989 | 102 min | ||
| Only Yesterday | Isao Takahata (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled only | 1991 | 118 min | ||
| The Ocean Waves | Tomomi Mochizuki (Nozomu Takahashi) | Subtitled only, digital only | 1993 | 72 min | ||
| Porco Rosso | Hayao Miyazaki (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Michael Keaton, Cary Elwes, Brad Garrett, David Ogden Stiers) | 1992 | 94 min | ||
| Pom Poko | Isao Takahata (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (J.K. Simmons, Brian Posehn, Tress MacNeille, John DiMaggio) | 1994 | 119 min | ||
| Whisper of the Heart | Yoshifumi Kondo (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Ashley Tisdale, Cary Elwes, Harold Gould, Brittany Snow) | 1995 | 111 min | ||
| Princess Mononoke | Hayao Miyazaki (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Billy Crudup, Claire Danes, Gillian Anderson, Minnie Driver, Billy Bob Thornton, Jada Pinkett Smith, John DiMaggio) | 1997 | 134 min | ||
| My Neighbors the Yamadas | Isao Takahata (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (James Belushi, Molly Shannon, Tress MacNeille) | 1999 | 111 min | ||
| Spirited Away | Hayao Miyazaki (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Daveigh Chase, Jason Marsden, Michael Chiklis, Susan Egan) | 2001 | 125 min | ||
| The Cat Returns | Hiroyuki Morita (Toshio Suzuki) | Subtitled and dubbed (Anne Hathaway, Cary Elwes, Peter Boyle, Elliott Gould, Tim Curry, Andy Richter, Kristen Bell, Avril Lavigne) | 2002 | 75 min | ||
| Howl’s Moving Castle | Hayao Miyazaki (Toshio Suzuki) | Dubbed (Christian Bale, Lauren Bacall, Billy Crystal) | 2004 | 119 min | ||
| Ponyo | Hiroyuki Morita (Toshio Suzuki) | Dubbed (Cate Blanchett, Matt Damon, Liam Neeson, Tina Fey) | 2008 | 101 min |
Please Like Collider on Facebook
|
|
|
Related Links
- Mondo to Release MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO Posters by Olly Moss
- Collider Goes to the STUDIO GHIBLI Museum in Tokyo! Images and Recap Here
- KIKI’S DELIVERY SERVICE 2-Disc Special Edition DVD Review
- MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO Two-Disc Special Edition DVD Review
- Studio Ghibli Announces New Films from Co-Founders Hayao Miyazaki and Isao Takahata

Would love to see Nausicaa and Totoro in 35mm. I’ve been fortunate enough to see Princess Mononoke, Sprited Away, Howl’s Moving Castle, and Ponyo in theaters which amazes me. Never thought Miyazaki’s movies would get proper respect in the US. Thank you, John Lasseter.
As a kid, I remember watching the butchered version of Nausicaa, named Warriors of the Wind, over and over after renting it and then taping it from the Disney Channel. Had a great dub actually, just the writing and editing really chopped out a big chunk of the heart. The new dub is excellent, thankfully. If I’m going to watch it on the big screen, I don’t want to be reading text, lol.
Although it’s not my favorite, I’ve always wanted to watch Castle in the Sky (Laputa) in the theater because it was advertised in front of the theatrical release of Akira.
Watching these with my kids has made me really enjoy Totoro and Ponyo the most over time. I think I even like Ponyo better.
Not a complete feature retrospectove. I’m not going to make a fuss about Tales From Earthsea, but why oh why is Grave of the Fireflies being snubbed?!
Now that that’s out of the way: this is totally awesome. And I am so impressed that they are going to be offering a choice between subtitled and dubbed versions of almost all the films! And what an opportunity to see the rarely screened (in America) films of Ghibli not directed by Hayao Miyazaki! I am absolutely stoked. I’ve never seen Grave of the Fireflies, so I can’t help but be a little disappointed at the one major omission of the retrospective. But of course I am totally stoked about this. This lineup is just classic after classic. You can’t go wrong with any of these films. I’m fine that they’re not showing the dub for Castle in the Sky, as that’s the one Disney dub that fans dislike. Hayao Miyazaki is arguably the greatest animator who ever lived, and in my opinion the finest filmmaker living today. I want to see every program in this retrospective. Now, if they would show Ghibli shorts before each feature, I would be ecstatic…
Miyazaki didn’t direct Grave Of The Fireflies.
Not every Ghibli movie is a Miyazaki film.
“Castle in the Sky” is not the only dub that fans have hated; even “My Neighbor Totoro” has gotten scathing reviews.
But as someone who really loves the LAPUTA dub and frankly, doesn’t think it deserves the backlash, I find it baffling they’re not screening it. GKids HAS screened the film in English before so why not now?
Personally, I am not fine with this decision. Yes, there ARE detractors of the LAPUTA dub, but it also has its share of fans who actually like the film in English and it’s not just me. Something is clearly not right here.
UPDATE: Here’s why they’re not showing LAPUTA’s dub at this screening: it’s because the elements in the 35mm print they showed VS the DVD mix differ, and so they’re trying to get the elements ready for a brand new print. IOW, it’s not because of how fans feel about the dub. GKids actually loves the dub and recognize it has its share of fans. The real reason is because they were not able to get a revised print of the dub ready in time for the NYC screenings. It has nothing to do with purist backlash.