Ce qui est déjà le cas , il doit y avoir plusieurs projets de côté qu'ils peuvent ressortir à tout moment .
( pour Arrietty par exemple, c'était le genre de projet datant depuis belles lurettes )
Quid du projet " l'ancre " , projet Ghibli où Oshii devait faire office de réalisateur mais qui ne s'est jamais fait .
Purée, j'aimerais en savoir plus sur ces histoires " bruits de couloir " .
A propos de Goro, début 2012 ( ou fin 2011 ) Suzuki avait dit que le prochain film de Goro serait un chanbara .
Toshio Suzuki revealed during a conversation with Shunji Iwai on a TV show that Goro Miyazaki's next film is a Chanbara film (samurai sword fight movie) set in Tohoku (East Japan) of the Middle Ages and is currently in the planning stage. According to Suzuki, it mixes historical fact with fiction.Depuis un certain temps, IMDB s'avance sur ce film en le nommant " Hôjôkishiki " d'après l'écrivain Yoshie Hotta .
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1707786/ Je pense que IMDB s'appuie sur une exposition sur Yoshie Hotta où Goro Miyazaki et son équipe avait présenté un stand où le studio s'imaginait comment réaliser un film d'animation adaptant différentes oeuvres de Yoshie Hotta .
400 images boards ont été dessinées par le studio dont beaucoup dessinées par Goro Miyazaki .
C'est un projet qu'il rêverait de réaliser et c'est aussi un vieux projet de Miyazaki père .
Bref, 400 images boards on peut dire que le projet serait bien avancé au cas où ils veulent s'y remettre .
Voici quelques images :
http://www.ghibliworld.com/images/hotta ... ion_1b.jpghttp://www.ghibliworld.com/images/hotta ... ion_2b.jpghttp://www.ghibliworld.com/images/goro_ ... t08_1b.jpgUn texte provient de
Ghibli World avec des passages en rouge à lire si vous avez la flemme de tout lire .
" At Kanagawa Museum of Modern Literature
Ghibli staff and Goro are currently exhibiting your tries on making an animation film based on Hotta's works.
Ghibli are a movie company. And so they made a plan on how it would be if we make Hotta's into movie by image boards.The exhibition marks the 10th anniversary of Hotta’s death and, as Miyazaki Hayao and Suzuki Toshio have respected Hotta and had a relationship with him, Studio Ghibli has joined the exhibition
. Based on Hotta's works the studio showcases about 400 image boards of Teika to Chomei (定家と長明, Teika and Chomei), the Studio Ghibli film by Miyazaki Goro that eventually did NOT get realized.Studio Ghibli made it up as a theme Making a try to the Filmization of Hotta's Work directed by Miyazaki Goro. Suzuki was considering about Studio Ghibli’s next movie and decided Goro to be its director. Asking him what he wanted, Goro replied that he wanted to make a story of Teika to Chomei (定家と長明, Teika and Chomei) that was inspired from Hotta's books. Goro has read Hotta’s works since he was a university student in effecting by his father. Having read them again after he was offered this exhibition a year ago, his film plan became "How would it become if Hotta's work is animated?". However, Suzuki immediately rejected it to be made into a movie, "Crazy!".
Note: Teika, a noble and a poet, and Chomei, a monk and an essayist, are not even that well known in Japan. Only intellectuals would be interested in them. Hence there would be no capability of making Goro’s film plan into a box office hit.
When Suzuki told Miyazaki Hayao about the kind of movie Goro was planning, he was much surprised and said, "No joking!!". Actually, Miyazaki also has had a big interest in Houjoki Shiki and tried to make a conception of it in the past, but later gave up on it. He was really surprised to hear his son had the same plan.Still, Suzuki allowed Goro to study it and the result is currently being showed at the exhibition.
Goro selected three of Hotta's works: Houjouki Shiki, Teika Meigetsuki Shisyou and Rojo no Hito. On the first two, he focuses on Fujiwara Teika and Kamono Chomei during the time that they were young and weren't famous yet. What did they see and feel to see turbulent times and disasters?
Mixing fiction, he made a story and painted sketches and image boards. About 400 pictures are exhibited. "