slowtiger wrote:Compare this with the state of contemporary animation design. Sadly, 95% of feature animation haven't stepped any further from 19th century landscape painting, and Ghibli is one of those. Not that they do bad landscapes, mind you. But I'm a bit fed up with critics who predictably praise every new Ghibli film as the top of the art of animation. It's not. They're all nice, and of course above average, but they're by no means artistic revelations, especially not in the visuals.
I agree (I join in discussion late).
Visually, Ghibli films are nothing to take a second look at. They are pretty, but in just the same way that Disney work is something that you can drink up with thirst if you are a fan of such stuff, and if you are not - you dismiss it along with the zillion other background works that left their factory. Such visuals are nothing to inspire but your classic fancies, and even then only if you are used to drink your drinks with quite many spoons of sugar.
But I do understand the purpose of them - they are there to be transparent to our cognition. They intend for your viewer eyes to not spend a moment of thought that might deviate you from the flow of the film, namely, the story. Those film are rendered in the way that shall not visually challenge you - contrary, you are supposed to unobtrusively confirm that the art in the image is aesthetically pleasant, and henceforth contributes to driving the story forward. Such aesthetics have been standardized and are now a ready made.
Considering what ART in the animation world is comprised of, these films are closer to the bottom of the ladder than to top of it. Indeed they are achievements of magnitude in themselves, and are well crafted entertainment gems, but they rape the majority of the audiences to believe that this is mainly what animation has to offer. Under the squeeze of the entertainment and mass media pipes, the potential of artistic animation is being shunned away, even (and more frighteningly) from the visions of new animators.