China Naming Network - Naming consultation - What Japanese animations are very philosophical and can make people fall into meditation?

What Japanese animations are very philosophical and can make people fall into meditation?

I think, as the biggest rival of "Storm", Miyazaki Hayao went to see "Hui Ye Ji" as soon as it was released.

"This kind of movie is nothing like it!" At first glance, Miyazaki Hayao vomited indignantly.

But then he said—

This work represents the future of Japanese animation.

The Story of Hui Ye Ji cost 5 billion yen, and it took 9 years from project establishment to production, with 500,000 original papers.

Don't say that our "Big Fish Begonia" is an overview of animation history, and the production investment is unprecedented.

In addition to the "future of Japanese animation" in Gong Lao's population, some people praised it as "national treasure animation" and "important Japanese cultural relics".

In my opinion, it's no exaggeration.

In my opinion, if an animation is to be the ultimate, it is best to inject the unique cultural color of civilization, and it must not be imported.

Examples of failure, such as quidditch.

A group of young people in China made an original juvenile jump with great efforts.

Why don't I watch Naruto?

Successful examples, such as Spirited Away.

The texture from beginning to end is completely different from western magic, but more like an oriental epic like Shan Hai Jing.

Hui Ye Ji is undoubtedly the acme of animation, because it has strong cultural characteristics.

First of all, his painting style absorbed and integrated China's artistic conception, Japanese classical bird and beast drama painting and modern watercolor painting.

The brush used is a coarse pen and a cursive pen that only East Asian cultural circles can reuse. Although rough, it is full of charm.

Absorption is different from the pure ink painting style of Little Tadpole Looking for Mom. The above is purely personal!