The Wind Rises: A contextual review of a Miyazaki masterpieceMain MenuThe Wind RisesMiyazaki's Memorial MasterpieceThe Engineer and his DreamThe Spectre of WarHow the war machine drives the flying machineThe PlaneThe fighter that revolutionized Japan's presence in WWIIAn Entreaty for PeacePacifist underpinnings of a stunning celebration of the best in humanityMatthew Johnson43d9cd631c24de88870a848d2c5a6964ae4ed66aMatthew Johnson
Wind Rises Trailer
12017-10-31T10:04:01-07:00Matthew Johnson43d9cd631c24de88870a848d2c5a6964ae4ed66a254021Trailer for The Wind Risesplain2017-10-31T10:04:01-07:00Matthew Johnson43d9cd631c24de88870a848d2c5a6964ae4ed66a
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1media/the-wind-rises07.jpg2017-10-31T09:48:55-07:00The Wind Rises11Miyazaki's Memorial Masterpieceimage_header5313492017-10-31T10:59:26-07:00What was presumed to be acclaimed director Hayao Miyazaki’s final film was seen as a magnum opus, a masterful capstone to a career filled with compassion, beauty, and activism. After announcing that it would be his final film before retiring (though he has since proven far too restless to retire), Miyazaki released The Wind Rises, a movie many readily considered to be the director’s swan song. Miyazaki’s films are known to be masterful not only for their visual splendor but for their transcendent storytelling and powerful streams of activism. Like the wind that rises in the film, the movie soars above many contemporary films whose focuses are fast cars and explosions in place of depth and contemplation. Miyazaki graces us with sheer purity of narrative and grounds a solid pacifist commentary within a visually striking and quintessentially human understanding of the best that we strive to be.