Sophie is obviously trapped in a web of schemes that's too old and too deep for her to penetrate, and there comes a moment when defeat seems certain and even Calcifer despairs.Īll of this is presented, as only Miyazaki can, in animation of astonishing invention and detail. Howl cravenly sends old Sophie to represent him before King Sariman, and on her way there, she gets into a race with the Witch of the Waste, who haunts the hinterlands where the Castle roams. Howl is summoned to serve both of the warring kingdoms, which presents him with a problem, complicated by the intervention of Madame Suliman, a grotesque sorceress voiced by Blythe Danner, who reminds us of Yubaba, the sorceress who ran the floating bathhouse in "Spirited Away." These bloated old madame types seem to exert a fascination for Miyazaki scarcely less powerful than his fondness for young heroines. Sophie also meets Markl ( Josh Hutcherson), Howl's aide-de-camp, and sets about appointing herself the castle's housekeeper and maid of all work. So is his key assistant Calcifer ( Billy Crystal), a fiery being whose job is to supply the castle's energy. Howl is the real thing, a shape-shifter who sometimes becomes a winged bird of prey. Nor is the castle run by a fraudulent wizard behind a curtain. Sophie names the scarecrow Turniphead, and we think perhaps a lion and a tin man will be turning up before long, but no. Leaving town in shame and confusion, Sophie meets a scarecrow ( Crispin Freeman) who bounces around on his single wooden leg and leads her to Howl's castle. For most of the rest of the movie, the heroine will be this ancient crone we can remind ourselves that young Sophie is trapped inside, but the shape-switch slows things down, as if Grandmother were creeping through the woods to Red Riding Hood's house. This event calls Sophie's existence to the attention of Howl's enemy, the Witch of the Waste ( Lauren Bacall), who fancies Howl for herself, and in a fit of jealousy, turns Sophie into a wrinkled old woman, bent double, and voiced now by Jean Simmons. When she ventures out, she's attacked by obnoxious soldiers but saved by Howl (voice by Christian Bale), who is himself being chased by inky globs of shapeless hostility. The story opens with Sophie (voice by Emily Mortimer), a hatmaker who sits patiently at her workbench while smoke-belching trains roar past her window. The Castle roams the Waste Lands outside two warring kingdoms, which seem vaguely 19th-century European it is controlled by Howl himself, a young wizard much in demand but bedeviled with personal issues. Inside the castle are spaces that can change on a whim, and a room with a door that opens to - well, wherever it needs to open. Adapted from a British novel by Diana Wynne Jones, it resides halfway between the Brothers Grimm and " The Wizard of Oz," with shape-shifting that includes not merely beings but also objects and places.Ĭhief among the shape-shifters is the castle itself, which can swell with power and then shrivel in defeat. While the movie contains delights and inventions without pause and has undeniable charm, while it is always wonderful to watch, while it has the Miyazaki visual wonderment, it's a disappointment, compared to his recent work.
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