Miyazaki, Hayao ~ My Neighbour Totoro

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Miyazaki, Hayao (mēyä′zä″kē), is Japan's preeminent maker of animated films (anime), and  is thought by many to be the world's finest living animator. He draws, writes, and directs magical motion pictures filled with a wide array of human characters (notably big-eyed adolescent girls), witches and wizards, amazing animals, and fantastical creatures interacting in plots that blend fantasy and reality into universally appealing fables.

During the 1970s he worked at various studios, collaborating on films and television series, made shorts, and released his first full-length animated film, Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro (1979).

In 1982 Miyazaki began writing a manga (a comic strip–text combination) called Nausicaä of the Valley of Wind, the saga of a princess struggling to live in an evil and environmentally toxic world, and in 1984 he released a film of the same name and theme—his first great success.

The following year he and fellow animators Isao Takahata and Toshio Suzuki founded Studio Ghibli, which has produced a string of Miyazaki's films, such as My Neighbor Tortoro (1988) and Porco Rosso (1992).

Miyazaki achieved broad critical and commercial acclaim with Princess Mononoke (1997), the first of his films to use some computer-generated imagery, and he continued to win nearly universal praise for Spirited Away (2001,Academy Award) and Howl's Moving Castle (2004). The Ghibli Museum in Tokyo is devoted to Miyazaki's work, which was also exhibited in a 2005 retrospective at New York's Museum of Modern Art.
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Links:  GhibliWorld;   Studio Ghibli (Japanese); Hayao Miyazaki Fan SiteHayao Miyazaki at the Internet Movie Database