Studio Ghibli’s next project is about tiny people…and more!
Studio Ghibli announced their next project…and it is all about tiny people…and more! The project is based on Mary Norton’s The Borrowers (Yukashita no Kobito-tachi) novel.
The official website for Studio Ghibli’s next project, an adaptation of Mary Norton’s The Borrowers (Yukashita no Kobito-tachi) novel, has launched on Thursday. Studio co-founder Hayao Miyazaki has been planning the Karigurashi no Arrietty (The Borrower Arrietty) film since July of 2008, but as previously revealed by producer Toshio Suzuki, Miyazaki is not directing the next film. 36-year-old animator Hiromasa Yonebayashi is making his directorial debut with this project. The film will open in the summer of 2010.
The original, Carnegie Medal-winning 1952 novel revolves around the “little people” — 10 centimeters (about 4 inches) tall — who live underneath the floorboards of an English country house. (The Japanese title literally means “the little people under the floor.”) 14-year-old Arrietty and the rest of the Clock family live in peaceful anonymity as they make their own home from items “borrowed” from the house’s human inhabitants. However, life changes for the Clocks when a human boy discovers Arrietty. Ghibli’s adaptation will transport the setting from 1950s England to the Tokyo neighborhood of Koganei in 2010.
Yonebayashi was an assistant animation director of Ghibli’s Gedo Senki, and he was an animation director on the Mei to Konekobasu theatrical short. He was also a key animator on Howl’s Moving Castle, Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea, and Spirited Away. Yonebayashi joined Ghibli in 1996, but Miyazaki and fellow Ghibli founder Isao Takahata had been contemplating an adaptation of The Borrowers for about 40 years.
Cecile Corbel co-wrote and performed the theme song “Arriety’s Song.” The song will be available on December 19 from several Japanese music distribution services, including Apple’s iTunes Store.
The novel has already been adapted into live-action in English three times — in 1973, 1992, and 1997.
Source: Mainichi Mantan via ANN / Official website
The story looks interesting and was adapted many times for live action movies…I think it was a wise move to adapt it into an anime…Studio Ghibli is behind it so We dont have to worry about its success!
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