Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Porco Rosso

 
Movies:

Porco Rosso

  • Director: Hayao Miyazaki
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure, Family-Oriented Adventure
  • Themes: Heroic Mission, Haunted By the Past, War in the Sky
  • Main Cast: Michael Keaton, Cary Elwes, Kimberly Williams, Susan Egan
  • Release Year: 1992
  • Country: JP
  • Run Time: 93 minutes

Plot

Master animator Hayao Miyazaki directs this tale about a former World War I flying ace who is also a pig. Slouching toward middle age, Porco Rosso makes his living by flying about in his bright red bi-plane and fighting sky bandits who prey on cruise ships sailing the Adriatic. When he's not engaging in dogfights, this porcine pilot lives on a deserted island retreat. Porco Rosso was once a strapping young man, but after his entire squadron was wiped out, he was mysteriously transformed into a pig. Rosso is defeated in a dogfight against a dashing American rival, who has been hired by the dastardly bandits. With his plane damaged, he finds a repair hangar near Milan run by an aging mechanic named Piccolo, and his spunky granddaughter Fio. Initially skeptical of her mechanical prowess, Rosso is amazed when she and a legion of local women fix his plane. Soon, Porco Rosso is ready to battle his rival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide

Review

Porco Rosso is that rare animated film that will be enjoyed more by adults than by children -- certainly more than by very young children, who will be entertained visually by Porco but probably not enraptured by the narrative. Nor should they be, for Porco, with its melancholy air, 1930s-era setting, sense of nostalgia, smoky bars, and mature concerns, is not aiming for them. Indeed, in some ways Porco feels like a 1940s Warner Bros. film -- or perhaps like a 1970s look back at a 1940s Warner Bros. film -- that just happens to be animated and happens to feature a hero who has been turned into a pig through some strange enchantment. Visually, Porco is nothing short of splendid, featuring a vibrant palette that never turns garish, beautiful backgrounds and settings, delicate but forceful linework, and forceful character design. Indeed, director Hayao Miyazaki's characters seem influenced by a whole host of cartoon/comic strip artists, including Herge and E.C. Segar. The animation is not without flaws; occasionally the movement is stretched out a tad too long, and facial expressions are sometimes a little lacking. But none of this seriously detracts from the beauty of the film. Miyazaki's screenplay is a marvelous blend of the romantic and the adventurous, making good use of stock situations but finding the truth beneath them and allowing for a generous amount of deadpan dialogue. That dialogue is handled marvelously by the English-language cast, from Michael Keaton's weary Porco to Kimberly Williams' utterly engaging Fio. To sum it up, Porco is a treasure. ~ Craig Butler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Credit

Hayao Miyazaki - Director, Takeshi Seyama - Editor, Hayao Miyazaki - Editor, Joe Hisaishi - Composer (Music Score), Joe Hisaishi - Songwriter, Naoko Asari - Sound/Sound Designer, Hayao Miyazaki - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

The Gnomes' Great Adventure; James and the Giant Peach; Princess Mononoke; C.S. Lewis: Through the Shadowlands; Ladyhawke
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Porco Rosso
Top
Porco Rosso

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Hayao Miyazaki
Produced by Toshio Suzuki
Written by Hayao Miyazaki
Starring Shūichirō Moriyama
Tokiko Kato
Akemi Okamura
Michael Keaton as Porco Rosso american version
Music by Joe Hisaishi
Cinematography Atsushi Okui
Editing by Takeshi Seyama
Distributed by Buena Vista Home Video
Release date(s) Japan July 18, 1992
United States February 22, 2005
Running time 94 min.
Country  Japan
Language Japanese

Porco Rosso, known in Japan as Crimson Pig (紅の豚 Kurenai no Buta?) is the sixth anime film by Hayao Miyazaki, produced by Studio Ghibli, released in 1992, about an Italian World War I fighter ace, now living as a freelance bounty hunter chasing "air pirates" in the Adriatic Sea. The man has been cursed, and has been transformed into a pig. Once called Marco Pagot, he is now known to the world as "Porco Rosso", Italian for "Red Pig."

The animation is loosely based on Miyazaki's manga Hikōtei Jidai.

Contents

Plot

The film tells of the story of Porco and his would-be romance with Gina, who runs a sea pilots' club and hotel in the Adriatic Sea. The plot revolves around Porco's friendship with a girl named Fio, who is a talented aircraft engineer, and his rivalry with a hotshot American pilot named Curtis. Porco has been cursed with the face of a pig, though the origin and nature of the curse is never fully explained.

Originally a World War I ace pilot in the Italian Air Force, Porco has grown disillusioned and now makes his living as a bounty hunter guarding ships in the Adriatic sea from pirate gangs with planes. Though rivals, Porco and the pirates manage to coexist with a minimum of bloodshed. For relaxation, he and other pilots spend their evenings on neutral ground at the Hotel Adriano, the establishment run by Gina.

Synopsis

The opening scene shows Porco in his flight suit, resting on the beach of a tiny island. After he finishes negotiating the price of his services by telephone, he leisurely takes off in his red sea plane to rescue a kidnapped group of girls. Afterward, he flies to the Hotel Adriano for dinner and spends some time with Gina, one of his closest friends and the owner of the only picture of Porco in human form (although Porco scribbled over his face so we cant really see it) While at the hotel, Porco also meets Curtis, a crack American pilot who is negotiating an employment contract with a band of pirates.

Some time later, as Porco flies his plane into Milan for repairs, Curtis attempts to shoot him and Porco's engine breaks down and he crashes. Curtis claims to have shot the plane down, and believes Porco to be dead. Porco lands his damaged plane on an island, saving himself. Porco finishes his journey to Milan and has his plane repaired by Piccolo S.p.A., an aircraft design shop owned by an old mechanic and friend of Porco's. Because of the Great Depression, men have left in droves to find work abroad, and the company enlists the aid of the owner's granddaughter, Fio, along with a workforce of female relatives to work on redesign and repair of the plane. Despite his initial misgivings, Porco soon realizes that Fio, in spite of her age and gender, is a mechanical genius. His plane is completed, and she insists on flying with him in case adjustments need to be made to the plane (and also to make sure he pays his large bill) At first he is resolutely against it, but she talks him into letting her on, and Fio flies off with him, barely avoiding an ambush by the secret police.

Meanwhile, Curtis has found his way into Gina's private garden and invites her to a glamorous life back in America. Gina laughs and refuses (later telling him "love here is more complicated than in America"). Stunned, he asks who she is waiting for, and Gina tells him she has bet with herself that a certain man will one day come into her garden to take her away. Just then Porco's plane appears and circles Gina's garden, and Gina rushes off to see if he will land. He does some spins and tricks in the air, but Porco does not land. Curtis is amazed that she would choose "that pig!" over him.

Upon landing at his island hideaway, Porco discovers that it has been infiltrated by pirates. Fio talks them out of killing Porco or destroying his plane and appeals to their honor as seaplane pilots. Curtis then reveals himself and challenges Porco to a duel. The terms of the duel are agreed upon: If Porco wins, Curtis will pay off his airplane repairs; if Curtis wins, Fio will marry him.

Later that night, Fio wakes up and thinks she has glimpsed the famous Marco Rossolini (Porco in human form). She asks him to tell her a story and he tells her about a strange incident that happened to him in the last summer of the war, when Porco was still in the air force (and still a human). Porco's best friend and fellow fighter Bellini had married Gina and, immediately after, he and Porco had returned to the skies, where their seaplanes were attacked by an Austrian squadron. Exhausted and struggling to operate his plane, he realized he was too weak to control it, and gave up. His plane then piloted itself into a cloud of startling brightness and purity and he imagined himself to be in heaven. Emerging at the top of the cloud, he spotted a white band high above him. The other squadron pilots from the battle, including Bellini, emerged from the cloud in their planes and climbed to the white band, which is revealed to the viewer to be a vast procession of planes downed in battle. Porco shouted to Bellini that he must not leave Gina, that he would go insted. Bellini, apparently deaf to Porco's cry, did not turn. Porco admits that this incident is a great source of guilt for him. It is unclear as to whether this caused his transformation. (Note that Porco's story is very similar to Roald Dahl's "They Shall Not Grow Old" in his collection of short stories Over to You: Ten Stories of Flyers and Flying, first published in 1946.)

The next day, Porco and Curtis meet for the dogfight. The duel is organized by the pirates and held on a secluded island. The outcome is heavily bet on by the criminals and seaplane pilots alike. At the fight's beginning, Porco merely avoids Curtis, baiting him into wasting bullets. However, as the fight progresses, Curtis realizes Porco's strategy and starts conserving his ammo. Porco outflies him and gains a superior firing position by using the loop maneuver that made him Ace of the Adriatic during the war, but still he does not shoot at Curtis. Curtis thinks that his enemy's guns are jammed, but the real reason is revealed to Fio by one of the pirate bosses: Porco will not take a shot at an enemy if there is a risk of hitting the pilot. Curtis taunts the pig that his guns are jammed but is quickly shut up by a short burst of fire from the red seaplane. This is the start of a stalemate, with each pilot attempting to gain the advantage over the other.

Meanwhile, Gina has received a message from a friend that the Italian Air Force are rushing toward the fight with an arrest warrant out for Porco, and she takes it upon herself to warn him.

Back at the fight, both pilots are extraordinarily tired and beginning to fade. Porco finally gains an angle for a clear shot at Curtis' engine but is dismayed to find that his machine gun is jammed and he cannot fire. Curtis sees this vulnerability, and attempts to shoot Porco but discovers he has run out of bullets. Both eventually settle on throwing debris from their planes at each other, until they land in the bay and the duel degenerates into a fistfight. Both are exhausted from the air combat but go on for fio. The duel goes on for several rounds, both Curtis and Porco develop many bumps and bruises, but no one will give up. The two hit one another in the face with equal strength and both fall into the water. The first one to come up wins the fight. Just then, Gina's plane arrives. She calls to Porco from above and tells him to get up, that "[She] dosn't want to see him breaking any more hearts". When Porco hears Gina, his strength is returned and he gets up from under the water. In doing so, he wins the duel with Curtis. Gina then warns the island's inhabitants of the approaching Italian Air Force and they promptly flee. Curtis holds up his end of the deal and pays Fio. Porco sends Fio away with Gina to keep her safe, and as Fio glides away with Gina she kisses Porco. He falls into the water, knocked over by the wing of Gina's plane. Porco tells Curtis that he is going to draw the Air Force away from the others, and asks if Curtis wants to join him. Curtis agrees and then exclaims, "Hey! Your face!" and demands that Porco give him a closer look, but Porco resolutely continues to walk toward his plane.

The film ends with a voice-over narration by Fio describing the years that follow, in which she inherits the Piccolo company, Curtis becomes a Hollywood star, and the pirate pilots spend their old age reminiscing at Gina's club. She reveals that Porco "flew circles around the Italian Air Force" and remains at large. In reference to Gina's bet with herself regarding Porco, she says that it's "their secret". However, a red plane can be seen at the other end of Gina's island.

Original Soundtrack

Porco Rosso
Soundtrack by Joe Hisaishi
Released 22 July, 1992
Label Tokuma

All compositions by Joe Hisaishi.

  1. "The Wind of Time (When a Human Can Be a Human)" 2:50
  2. "MAMMAIUTO" 1:21
  3. "Addio!" 0:37
  4. "The Bygone Days" 2:16
  5. "A Sepia-Coloured Picture" 0:47
  6. "Serbia March" 1:03
  7. "Flying Boatmen" 2:36
  8. "Doom (Cloud Trap)" 1:23
  9. "Porco e Bella" 1:06
  10. "Fio-Seventeen" 2:04
  11. "The Women of Piccolo" 2:04
  12. "Friend" 3:04
  13. "Partnership" 2:28
  14. "Madness (Flight)" 2:39
  15. "To the Adriatic Sea" 1:50
  16. "In Search of the Distant Era" 2:18
  17. "Love at First Sight in the Wildness" 1:11
  18. "At the End of Summer" 1:26
  19. "Lost Spirit" 4:11
  20. "Dog Fight" 2:10
  21. "Porco e Bella (Ending)" 2:35
  22. "The Time of Cherries"(sung by Tokiko Kato) 2:52
  23. "Once in a While, Talk of the Old Days" (sung by Tokiko Kato) 3:56

History and politics

Porco Rosso is one of the few movies directed by Hayao Miyazaki in which the historical and geographical settings are clearly defined and where most of the story could have happened in the real world. Marco is a hero from the first World War and is shown fighting against Austro-Hungarian fighter planes in a flashback sequence. The story is set in the Adriatic sea, most likely near Rijeka in Croatia and the surrounding Croatian islands.

The story takes place between the two World Wars. The fashion of women's clothing displayed and the references to the rise of fascism in Italy link the story to the late 1920s - early 1930s; the scenes in the Adriatic town suggest that the town is Fiume (today Rijeka. Since Italy, like many European countries, suffered severe economic hardship after the First World War, the economic crisis mentioned in the movie is probably the European 1920s post-war depression rather than the global depression of the 1930s. The manga from which the movie was derived specifically states that the story takes place in 1929 at an unspecified location in the general area of Rijeka/Fiume. The feature-length movie confirms this date: In an early scene, Porco is seen napping with a magazine titled Cinema with the date 1929 featured on the bottom of the cover.

A scene from the film.

The story takes place during the rising fascist era. Italian guards are portrayed in military parades with typical fascist uniforms ("blackshirts"), albeit with different colors (black, blue and green). When Porco is buying ammunition from his favorite tool shop, the owner states that "government is changing again", as fascism was rising in that period and was initially seen by some as a "firm answer" to political turmoil and instability in post-war Italy.

Porco also makes statements about his being anti-fascist. Although his transformation into a pig is never fully explained, it is hinted that it is due to him leaving the Italian Air Force (thus turning his back on his country) because of Italy turning toward fascism. At one point he says, "I'd much rather be a pig than a fascist".

Homage to early aviation

The fictional "Piccolo" aircraft company depicted in the film may be a reference to the Italian aircraft manufacturers Caproni and Piaggio: the jet shown in the last scene is very similar in concept to the Caproni C-22J, an aircraft designed by Carlo Ferrarin (a designer for Caproni, whose name is also notably used in the movie for Marco's Air Force pilot friend), but as a flying boat resembles most closely the Piaggio P-136 and later P-166 twin engined amphibians, in having a pusher/jet configuration, inverted gull-wing configuration, retractable wingtip floats that double as fuel tanks, side retractable wheels, and slotted flap surfaces. The Jet-amphibian is also reminiscent of the Fouga Zephyr glider which tested the Mabore Turbofan prior to the development of the more famous Magister jet trainer, and shares with both of these aircraft the inclusion of a V-tail.

Additionally, the light reconnaissance aircraft Caproni Ca.309 is known under the name "Ghibli", the same name as Miyazaki's and Takahata's animation studio.

In the early 1930s, Italian seaplane designers set world speed records (such as the Macchi M.C.72 designed by the Italian airplane designer Mario Castoldi). One of the test pilots killed during the attempt to set the speed record was named Bellini, the name given to Porco's pilot friend in the film.

Marco Pagot, the name of the main character, is also a homage to the Pagot brothers, pioneers of Italian animation (Nino Pagot was the author of the first Italian animated feature film, "I fratelli dinamite", and his sons Marco and Gi Pagot were Miyazaki's collaborators in the production of Sherlock Hound).

Meanwhile, the character of Curtiss is likely to have been named after the American aviation pioneer Glenn Hammond Curtiss who, along with the Wright Brothers, founded the Curtiss-Wright Corporation. His character is also an oblique reference to Ronald Reagan, in that his ambitions lie not only in Hollywood, but also the Presidency. In the 1930s this would indeed seem remarkably ridiculous (hence Gina laughing off his ambition), though modern viewers would gain a satisfied grin from Curtiss on this score. The rest of Curtiss' character appears to come from directly from the adventure movie heroes portrayed by Errol Flynn at this time - indeed, they share a jaw line - in terms of buccaneering derring do, willingness to fight, and overall demeanour combined with romantic ardour.

Production

Fio and Porco

The film was originally planned as a short in-flight movie for Japan Airlines based on Hayao Miyazaki's manga The Age of the Flying Boat, but grew into a feature-length film. The outbreak of war in Yugoslavia cast a shadow over production and prompted a more serious tone for the movie, which originally had been set in Croatia. The airline remained a major investor in the film, and showed it as an in-flight movie well before its theatrical release.

Technically, the film shows Studio Ghibli's exacting attention to details, both in the animation and in the historical Italian elements (although some Italian words are shown misspelled in the local newspaper of Milan).

Credits

Cast

Character Original cast English dub cast
Porco Rosso Shuichiro Moriyama Michael Keaton
Donald Curtis Akio Otsuka Cary Elwes
Madame Gina Tokiko Kato Susan Egan
Mamma Aiuto Gang Boss Tsunehiko Kamijo Brad Garrett
Mr. Piccolo Sanshi Katsura David Ogden Stiers
Fio Piccolo Akemi Okamura Kimberly Williams-Paisley

Reception

  • "Prix du long métrage (Feature movie) International Animation film festival - Annecy 1993
  • The movie received a "Tomatometer Rating" of 100 percent, on the website http://www.rottentomatoes.com.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Porco Rosso" Read more