![]() I don't know which one is true, however I would note that Miyazaki's manga continued to run long after the movie was created. However, other sources such as the famous (Ghibli's #1 English Fansite), say that Miyazaki intended this to be a manga originally, and that the anime was almost forced upon him. On the Nausicaa DVD bonus features it says that Miyazaki, who had intended to make an anime from the get go, was denied because he did not have a comic to back the feature up, and that the manga was created because of this. Now, I have heard two versions of what happened next. Miyazaki began talking more with Suzuki and told him ideas that would eventually become two of his greatest stories Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind and Princess Mononoke (1997). I'm a Miyazaki fanatic, so take that into account if you must.īACKGROUND: The most important thing to know when watching this is that this anime is from 1984 (ironic, right?) and that this is Miyazaki Hayao's second time directing (the first being Lupin III The Castle of Cagliostro, arguably the best Lupin film ever created.) Miyazaki and his producer Suzuki Toshio first met up because Suzuki, the editor of the magazine Animage, wanted some comments from Miyazaki about Lupin and Miyazaki basically told him to stop bothering him. Okay, so this is my first review, and my second favorite anime.
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