Can Love and Perfection Overcome earthquake, tuberculosis and the Evils of World War 2?
Are you sick of the same old computer generated violence
that Hollywood continues to serve up movie after movie? Even the Hobbit (a
children’s book) could not avoid Hollywood’s lust for violence. If so then you
should not go pass Hayao Miyazaki’s animated movie “The Wind Rises”. The Wind Rises is a fictionalised account of
Jiro Horikosh – the designer of the famous A6M Zero. The A6M is a fighter
aircraft. In the Second World War, a fighter plane serves two purposes: It can
defend ones territory from enemies’ bombers or to protect one own bombers in
their mission to bomb the enemy. As one
is drawn into Miyazaki’s story, one realises that this is an anti-war movie. I
do have more to say on this question but this is first and foremost a review of
Miyazaki’s creative ability. My concern for Miyazaki’s treatment of Japan’s
responsibility for the war will come later.
Right from the start Miyazaki uses one of Jiro’s many dream
sequences (the animation is vibrantly beautiful) to help the audience become
familiar with Jiro’s passion for flying and plane design. Not only that, Miyazaki
uses the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 (where Jiro rescues his future wife)
and the great depression of the early 1930s to bring out Jiro’s selfless
nature. Growing up with a diet of
Godzilla, Ultraman and Japanese animation it is really refreshing to see that Miyazaki’s
can use animation to weave together these historical events to build up Jiro’s
story. It would be so easy for Miyazaki
to simply dazzle his audience with more and more animation so as to turn his
movie into yet another Hollywood feel good cartoon. Instead Jiro the genius
aeroplane designer not only dreams of setback but is also plague by real
setback that nearly cost the life of one of his pilot. Just when the audience
think that life cannot get worse, we found that the love of Jiro’s life Naoko
suffers from tuberculosis and will soon die.
To be honest, my eyes were getting quite wet by this stage. However
Miyazaki wants his audience to see through all these failures, sadness, and
even the evils of World War 2. Why? It is because nothing was going to dampen
Jiro’s passion to build the prefect aeroplane. Naoko
rather than demanding Jiro’s complete attention instead left her sanatorium to
be with Jiro. Jiro in turn married Naoko even though he knew Naoko’s
tuberculosis would mean their time together would be short. It is this sacrificial love that Jiro and Naoko
have for one another that makes it all worthwhile.
It all sound so wonderful doesn’t it? Even though Miyazaki’s
Jiro is not the real Jiro, we do know love can do much more than even what
Miyazaki can imagine. Why? It is because we have seen the Cross.
Finally one question that I realise cannot be bypassed. Yes, Miyazaki did point to the futility of
war but did he do enough to question Japan’s responsibility? At the start of
the war, the Zero out manoeuvre all Allies fighters. In this way, Japan was able establish air
superiority wherever they went. In the city of Hong Kong (where I was born), the
Japanese bombers were able to drop bombs on the Kai Tak airport with impunity. Hong Kong had no hope of defending itself and
had to live under Japanese oppression for three years and eight months. As an
engineer, I realised that whatever I design or built, it too can be used for
evil. On the other hand even Mikhail Kalashnikov, the inventor of the AK47 also
had to ponder about the damage that his invention had caused. Kalashnikov was so troubled that he sought
spiritual advice from the Patriarch of the Orthodox Church.