Howl's Moving Castle | 'CASTLE' CHARACTERS HOWL AND YOUNG SOPHIE
Image credit: Howl's Moving Castle: © 2004 Nabariki TNGDDDT
'CASTLE' CHARACTERS HOWL AND YOUNG SOPHIE
Movie Preview

Howl's Moving Castle (2005)

Details Limited Release: Jun 10, 2005; Rated: PG; Length: 119 Minutes; Genre: Animation; With: Emily Mortimer and Jean Simmons; Distributor: Buena Vista Pictures

A few years back, Japanese animation kingpin Hayao Miyazaki got Pixar's John Lasseter (the Toy Story mastermind) to supervise the redubbing of his surrealistic fable Spirited Away into English. (It won the Best Animated Feature Academy Award in 2002 after a U.S. release by Disney.) But for this latest fairy tale, built around a bizarre homestead that walks around on chicken-like legs, Lasseter was busy directing his next movie, Cars, so Pixar's Pete Docter (Monsters, Inc.) stepped in. He says Lauren Bacall's line readings as a mean witch have been a treat — and a relief. ''We were a little worried she'd see the character with these rolls of fat — in one scene she's all dripping with sweat and goo — and say, 'What am I doing?' But she just laughed hysterically.''

Jean Simmons, who knew nothing about Miyazaki — a virtual legend in the animation community and one of Japan's highest-grossing filmmakers (''I'm learning,'' she says) — voices the elder version of Sophie, a young woman magically turned into a 90-year-old. ''I think I need to go get my back straightened,'' Simmons reports. ''I did a lot of hunching over to get the lack of lung power some old folks have.'' Disney's probably not holding its breath on this as a big theatrical moneymaker, but it's a virtual lock to be a front-runner in the 2006 Oscar race...chicken legs and all.

Originally posted Apr 18, 2005
You Might Also Like

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement