“He is currently working on ideas for a new film.”
The Boy and the Heron, Hayao Miyazaki’s first feature film in a decade, probably won’t be his last after all. Studio Ghibli executive Junichi Nishioka told CBC News that not only does he not feel like retiring anymore, he’s actively coming into work to create yet another film.
@Zehzin Usually people have to work around Japanese and they want to leave, https://vimeo.com/637935414 I think this is racist Japanese are polite and clean
He probably feels tired and the pains of old age and thinks “this can’t last much longer. Better stop now and not leave unfinished work. “
But it then goes for long enough for him to get bored and feel he’s wasting time, so off he goes.
Can’t be easy. We never know when we actually have to stop. Probably better to just keep going until the end.
The Boy and the Heron, Hayao Miyazaki’s first feature film in a decade, probably won’t be his last after all.
Studio Ghibli executive Junichi Nishioka told CBC News that not only does he not feel like retiring anymore, he’s actively coming into work to create yet another film.
“Other people say that [The Boy and the Heron] might be his last film, but he doesn’t feel that way at all,” Nishioka told CBC, through a translator, at the Toronto International Film Festival (via Gizmodo).
I will leave you with the epic first three paragraphs that Alicia Haddick wrote for us on this very topic last month:
“I have caused a stir in the past by saying I was quitting,” Miyazaki said a decade ago.
There are things that I have always wanted to do, but it does not involve animation.”
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