The Castle of Cagliostro
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| The Castle of Cagliostro | |
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Special Edition DVD cover. |
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| Directed by | Hayao Miyazaki |
| Produced by | Tetsuo Katayama |
| Written by | Hayao Miyazaki (original story and script) Haruya Yamazaki (script) Based on comics by Monkey Punch |
| Starring | Yasuo Yamada, Kiyoshi Kobayashi, Goro Naya |
| Music by | Yuji Ohno |
| Cinematography | Hirokata Takahashi |
| Editing by | Mitsutoshi Tsurubuchi |
| Distributed by | Toho (Japan), Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (USA) |
| Running time | 100 min |
| Language | Japanese |
| Preceded by | Mystery of Mamo |
| Followed by | The Legend of the Gold of Babylon |
| All Movie Guide profile | |
| IMDb profile | |
The Castle of Cagliostro (ルパン三世 カリオストロの城 Rupan Sansei: Kariosutoro no Shiro?) is a 1979 anime film co-written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. It is one of the master thief Lupin III films.
The second animated Lupin III movie and arguably the most famous, Castle of Cagliostro was written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki (who also co-directed the first Lupin III TV series and directed two episodes of the second) before he formed Studio Ghibli. Cagliostro features gentleman thief Lupin III, grandson to Maurice Leblanc's French literary master thief Arsène Lupin.
Originally dubbed and released in 1991 by Streamline Pictures, a new dub was recorded by Manga Entertainment in 2000 and changed the tone of many characters.
The title alludes to La Comtesse de Cagliostro (The Countess of Cagliostro), the title of an original Arsène Lupin adventure by Maurice Leblanc).
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The action is set in the fictional Duchy of Cagliostro, a tiny country that appears to be a conglomeration of various old world European locales. The Duchy is a land of mountains and lakes, with a castle town and a still-functioning Roman aqueduct. The Royal Guard are the police of this nation but seem to behave more like an army than a police force. A group of assassins called the "Shadows" also works for the duke of the island.
The movie starts out with Arsene Lupin III and Daisuke Jigen escaping pursuit after having robbed the national casino of Monaco, only to discover that their entire haul is counterfeit. The bills are of a very high quality and could be none other than the legendary 'goat bills', perfect counterfeits that have been used to rock the economies of nations since the invention of paper money.
When Lupin was just getting started as a professional thief, he was almost killed while searching for the source of the goat bills. He decides that it is time to take another chance, and the two head off to the Duchy of Cagliostro.
Shortly after arriving, they rescue a young girl from a car full of thugs, only to let her get captured again when Lupin is knocked unconscious after tumbling down a cliff. They later discover that she is the late grand duke's daughter and is engaged to be married to the evil count. The count wants to recover the ancient treasure of the Cagliostro family, and needs the princess's ring in order to find it. Wackiness, chases and intrigue ensue.
Lupin's former lover, sometime enemy/friend Fujiko Mine shows up as an employee in the castle, and master swordsman Goemon Ishikawa XIII is called in to help the gang in their final assault on the castle, and Interpol agent Inspector Koichi Zenigata even finds himself allied with Lupin and company in order to expose the count.
Some fans of the original manga version of Lupin III dislike this movie as Lupin comes across as too good-natured where the original Lupin III was a cynical, playboy character. However, Monkey Punch mentioned he particularly liked the film, although he did not quite agree with Miyazaki's interpretation.
Both of Manga Entertainment's releases of The Castle of Cagliostro received DVD Talk Collector Series recommendation status, the highest status given by the review website DVDtalk.com.[1][2] Chris Beveridge of AnimeOnDVD.com gave the film a grade of "A+", although he disliked Manga Entertainment's use of PG-13 level language in the English dub.[3] The Castle of Cagliostro placed in 5th place on Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs's list of best anime.[4]
In 1979, Toho released the original theatrical version. In 1991, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer created a subtitled version for American theatres. MGM/UA Home Video released the film on VHS in 1992 (dubbed by Carl Macek's Streamline Pictures), and Best Film and Video Corp. released it on VHS in 1993 (again using the Streamline dub) Manga Entertainment in Australia and the UK purchased the license for the movie, using Streamline Pictures dub. Then Manga Entertainment purchased the license for the movie from MGM in 1995 and has been in Manga's North American, Australian and English catalogues ever since. But Manga Entertainment lost the license in Australia to Manga's Distributor in 2007 to Madman Entertainment, which featured all dubs with enhanced widescreen presentation with content exclusive to Australia. Manga's previous version of Castle of Cagliostro in Australia was rejected by most of the Animé critics there and was eventually pulled from Manga's and Madman's catalogues. In 2000, Manga Entertainment created an all-new dub.
Streamline's dub, while lauded for the overall acting talent of the voice cast, has been widely criticized for its picture cropping and retiming of the opening credits to remove all traces of Japanese writings, as well as for liberties taken with the translation of its dialogue.[citation needed]
Manga's new dub of Cagliostro has been praised for its overall faithfulness to the original Japanese dialogue, but criticized for its addition of profanity in some scenes.[citation needed] In addition, Manga's original DVD release has been criticized for lacking an anamorphic transfer or any extras apart from previews for other Manga Video releases, and in the way its English titles are hard-matted onto the film's video image, obscuring parts of the screen behind them.
Optimum Releasing re-released Cagliostro in the UK after Manga Entertainment lost its license in the UK. The new DVD features an anamorphic widescreen print with the original Japanese audio track as well as the Streamline dub, both in stereo.
As noted in DVD Aficionado and The Right Stuf, Manga released a new special edition DVD of Cagliostro with a release date of August 29, 2006. The disc is double-sided with the movie on side A and the extras on side B. It includes a new digital transfer; Manga's English dub in 2.0 and 5.1 surround plus Japanese, Spanish, and French language tracks in mono; the complete movie in storyboard format, accompanied by Japanese audio with English subtitles; an original Japanese trailer; a sketch and still gallery; a 26-minute interview with animation director Yasuo Ōtsuka, and animated menus. The movie is presented in 16:9 anamorphic widescreen; however, the opening credits, which feature Lupin and Jigen slowly making their way across Europe to the song "Fire Treasure", have been heavily re-edited to remove the Japanese credits, instead using selected still-frames of scenes that appear without Japanese writing. The English-translated names are superimposed over these stills. The DVD packaging of this special edition is strongly reminiscent of that of Disney's Studio Ghibli film releases.
| Trivia sections are discouraged under Wikipedia guidelines. The article could be improved by integrating relevant items and removing inappropriate ones. |
- Castle of Cagliostro along with its title, includes elements that were seen in other Arsène Lupin works. One Arsène Lupin tale involved the discovery of a tremendous stash of forged franc notes with which World War I-era Germany had planned to destabilize the French economy. Another featured a secret treasure hidden at the bottom of a lake.
- Gary Trousdale, co-director of Disney's Atlantis: The Lost Empire, has admitted that a scene at the end of Atlantis, where the waters receded from the sunken city, was directly inspired by a similar scene from Cagliostro.
- Footage from this movie along with the previous Lupin movie Secret of Mamo appear in the 1983 laser disk video game Cliff Hanger.
- Yasuo Yamada as Lupin III
- Kiyoshi Kobayashi as Daisuke Jigen
- Makio Inoue as Goemon Ishikawa XIII
- Eiko Masuyama as Fujiko Mine
- Gorō Naya as Inspector Zenigata
- Tarō Ishida as Count Cagliostro
- Sumi Shimamoto as Lady Clarisse d'Cagliostro
- Kōhei Miyauchi as the groundskeeper
- Ichirō Nagai as Jodo
- Tadamichi Tsuneizumi as Gustav
- Yoko Yamaoka as the waitress
- Bob Bergen as Lupin III/The Wolf
- Steve Bulen as Daisuke Jigen
- Steve Kramer as Ishikawa Goemon XIII
- Edie Mirman as Fujiko Mine
- David Povall as Inspector Zenigata
- Michael McConnohie as Count Cagliostro
- Joan-Carol O'Connell as Lady Clarisse d'Cagliostro
- Mike Reynolds as the groundskeeper and the German councilmember
- Jeff Winkless as Jodo and the Interpol chairman
- Kirk Thornton as Gustav and the archbishop
- Juliana Donald as the waitress
- Kerrigan Mahan as Sam
- Stephen Apostolina as an Interpol officer
- Tom Wyner as the forgerer and the Russian councilmember
- David Hayter as Arsene Lupin III (credited as "Sean Barker")
- John Snyder as Daisuke Jigen (credited as "Ivan Buckley")
- Richard Epcar as Ishikawa Goemon XIII
- Dorothy Elias-Fahn as Fujiko Mine (credited as "Dorothy Melendrez")
- Dougary Grant as Inspector Koichi Zenigata
- Kirk Thornton as Count Cagliostro (credited as "Sparky Thornton")
- Bridget Hoffman as Lady Clarisse d'Cagliostro (credited as "Ruby Marlowe")
- Barry Stigler as the groundskeeper (credited as "Gil Starberry")
- Milton James as Jodo (credited as "Richard Barnes")
- Joe Romersa as Gustav
- Bambi Darro as the waitress
- Jamieson K. Price as an Interpol officer (credited as "James Lyon")
- ^ Earl Cressey. Castle of Cagliostro Review. DVD Talk. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
- ^ Jamie S. Rich. The Castle of Cagliostro - Special Edition Review. DVD Talk. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
- ^ Chris Beveridge. The back of the dvd cover its self has a warning that says that parental guidance is suggested because of mild language. Castle of Cagliostro Review. AnimeOnDVD. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
- ^ Top Anime Rankings. Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved on 2007-07-08.
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| Pre Ghibli films | Hols: Prince of the Sun · Panda! Go, Panda! · Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro · Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind |
| Ghibli films | Castle in the Sky · My Neighbor Totoro · Grave of the Fireflies · Kiki's Delivery Service · Only Yesterday · Porco Rosso · I Can Hear the Sea · Pom Poko · Whisper of the Heart · Princess Mononoke · My Neighbors the Yamadas · Spirited Away · The Cat Returns · Howl's Moving Castle · Tales from Earthsea · Ponyo on a Cliff |
| Studio Ghibli short films | Nandarou · On Your Mark · Ghiblies · Ghiblies Episode II · Mei and the Kittenbus · The Night of Taneyamagahara · Mizugumo Monmon · Iblard Jikan |
| Related articles | Hayao Miyazaki · Ghibli Museum · Nausicaa.net |
Categories: Japanese-language films | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2007 | Articles with trivia sections from September 2007 | 1979 films | Anime films | Adventure anime and manga | Films directed by Hayao Miyazaki | Lupin III films | MGM films