7/10
Leave it to Toho
17 October 2023
Leave it to Toho to make a live-action adaptation of The Tale of Princess Kaguya starring the legendary Toshiro Mifune, which involves heavy usage of special effects and an alien origin for the titular Princess. It's a madcap concoction with a superficially silly story that honestly shouldn't have worked as well as it did.

A married couple of poor farmers has lost their only child, who recently passed away. The woman, Tayoshime, cries out loud to heaven. The father Taketori-no-Miyatsuko, goes into the forests and sees a strange kind of electric storm. He finds, in the centre of the burnt land, a strange blue cocoon. It opens up and a small child, with piercing blue eyes and an uncanny resemblance to their dead daughter, appears. Soon good fortune begins to favour them but good fortune brings jealousy from others...

A very out there adaptation of its basis, Princess from the Moon is an extremely heartfelt movie despite it being rather silly in places but the tone is consistently held which doesn't detract from the experience. It's simple in the best way possible, that it continues to uphold its glittery, fairytale and dream-like nature until the very end. Kudos to director Kon Ichikawa here despite the grey colour palette that populates the film, for the most part, it's his use of colour that truly pops but I could have done without the George Lucas-inspired screen wipes.

The final work of Special Effects Director Teruyoshi Nakano and honestly, he earned his Academy Award here, even if I find baby Kaya very uncanny valley. It's with the film's Close Encounters-styled spaceship that shows up in the final 20 minutes where Nakano's effects really impress. A gorgeous mix of the designs from Close Encounters and Spielberg's other alien movie, ET, it arrives to a glorious fanfare and looks utterly spellbinding.

The score by Kensaku Tanikawa is one of the weirder elements for me, it simply doesn't fit very well in many situations and is very sappy in its spirit. Although I will say the final piece that plays as Kaya's ship leaves Earth is truly beautiful and of course, I have to shout out the credits theme "Stay With Me" done by Chicago frontman Peter Cetera.

There's a very reserved and understated performance by Toshiro Mifune here, a drastic turn from his talkative nature we've come to see in other films. Yasuko Sawaguchi is the titular princess and delivers a lovely performance; Megumi Odaka's performance as the blind girl Akeno is most certainly an audition for her later role as Miki Saegusa in the later Heisei Godzilla entries. The rest of the cast all perform their roles well. It's just a very well-acted film all things considered.

Overall, while Princess from the Moon might be an oversimplified version of the original tale, it doesn't skimp on its storytelling and title; worth it for Toshiro Mifune all things considered.
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