Ghibli co-founder Hayao Miyazaki recently saidthat his studioâs demise was âinevitable.â Today, there are quotes from Ghibli producer Toshio Suzuki that are causing people to freak out, believing that the beloved animation house has decided to stop making films. People, stop freaking out. For now.
Last night, Suzuki was profiled on MBS program
Jounetsu Tairiku (ć
çąĺ¤§é¸). In one segment on the show, Suzuki discussed the future of Studio Ghibli, and made comments that are causing Japanese blogs and foreign sites to report that Studio Ghibli is closing down its production department.
The source for the story in English is a Ghibli
fan Tumblr, which simply states that Toshio Suzuki âannouncesâ the closure of Studio Ghibli. The Tumblr site has a series of images, featuring Suzuki and his comments. These comments, however, were not translated.
So, letâs look at Suzukiâs comments and translate them. These images are from Japanese blog
Someone One One!! Kotaku has yet to see the full Jounetsu episode to confirm.
âStill, these words are somewhat harshâŚâ (in yellow â I assume this is the showâs announcer)
âWeâre thinking about disbanding the production department and..â
(Note: The language Suzuki uses here isnât definite.)
ââŚmaking a big change to the larger view of Studio Ghibli.â
ââRestructureâ is called saikouchiku (ĺć§çŻ) in Japanese.â (in yellow) Note that âsaikouchikuâ means âreconstruction.â
As pointed out on Excite News, Suzuki calls this âspring cleaningâ or a âmajor cleaningâ (大ćé¤ or ooshouji), using the restructuring to improve the environment for the next generation. Suzuki says this has been considered for a while.
âObviously, Miyazakiâs retiring was quite significant.â
âAfter that, what should Ghibli do?â
âWith that, continuing to endlessly create like thisâŚâ
âis not impossible, butâŚâ
âonce, right about now, we will take a short rest and think about whatâs next.â
Just a note: the wording Suzuki uses (
ĺ°äźć˘ or âshoukyuushiâ) can mean âpauseâ or âa breakâ or a âbreather.â He does not use the more definite word âkyuushiâ (äźć˘), which means either âstop, pause or suspend.â
Suzukiâs wording makes it sound like the studio is considering reorganization and regrouping. It
could mean that Studio Ghibli decides it wonât make anime films anymore. Though it could mean they do keep making anime films. It could mean a lot of things!
Realize that, at the time of writing, no major Japanese newspaper is running this story. Nor did any morning TV shows. Had Studio Ghibli â a national treasure â definitively ceased production of films, it would be headline news around the country, as it would be important in both the entertainment and business worlds.
Last month, Kotaku first reporteda Japanese rumor that claimed Studio Ghibli was shutting down itâs anime production department. Todayâs confusion could have stemmed from this older report.
ăć çąĺ¤§é¸ăă§é´ć¨ć复Păă¸ăăŞăŽâĺśä˝é¨éăč§Łä˝ăăâă¨çşč¨ [Someone One One!!]
To contact the author of this post, write to bashcraftATkotaku.com or find him on Twitter @Brian_Ashcraft
Kotaku East is your slice of Asian internet culture, bringing you the latest talking points from Japan, Korea, China and beyond. Tune in every morning from 4am to 8am.