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  1. Castles in the Sky is a British fact-based television drama first broadcast on BBC Two on 4 September 2014. The movie shows Robert Watson-Watt and other British scientists' struggle to invent radar in the years leading to World War II.

    • Castle in The Sky

      Castle in the Sky (Japanese: 天空の城ラピュタ, Hepburn: Tenkū no...

  2. Castle in the Sky (Japanese: 天空の城ラピュタ, Hepburn: Tenkū no Shiro Rapyuta), also known as Laputa: Castle in the Sky, is a 1986 Japanese animated fantasy adventure film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki.

  3. Castle in the Sky: Directed by Hayao Miyazaki. With Mayumi Tanaka, Keiko Yokozawa, Kotoe Hatsui, Minori Terada. Pazu's life changes when he meets Sheeta, a girl whom pirates are chasing for her crystal amulet, which has the potential to locate Laputa, a legendary castle floating in the sky.

    • Hayao Miyazaki
    • 1 min
  4. Laputa: Castle in the Sky, released as Castle in the Sky in North America, is a 1986 Japanese animated fantasy adventure movie. It was written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. It was produced by Isao Takahata, animated by Studio Ghibli, and distributed by the Toei Company.

    • Plot
    • Characters
    • Setting
    • Behind The Scenes
    • Release
    • Distribution and Reception
    • Music
    • Anniversary Campaign
    • Easter Eggs
    • Awards

    The Girl Who Fell From the Sky

    Late one night, the civilian airship Saturn travels swiftly through the clouds. Amongst the passengers aboard are Sheeta, the owner of a strange blue stone necklace, and Colonel Muska, the government's secret agent who has abducted her and seized her necklace. Without warning, a squadron of air pirates, led by Dola, attack the airship in search of Sheeta and her necklace. During the ensuing chaos caused by the intrusion, Sheeta manages to knock Muska unconscious and retrieve her necklace. The...

    Morning in the Slag Ravine

    The next morning, Sheeta awakens to the sound of Pazu playing his trumpet on the roof. After introducing each other, Pazu asks to see her stone. Believing that her necklace is the reason for her surviving the fall, he tries to levitate himself with it, only to crash through the roof of the old blast furnace that his house is built with. After making sure he is unhurt from the mishap, Sheeta notices a photograph of Laputa, otherwise believed to be a mere legend, on a wall in his home. Pazu exp...

    A Rowdy Brawl

    At that moment, however, the air pirates relocate Sheeta after having tracked her down since her falling from Saturn. Pazu disguises her as a male miner and, after narrowly avoiding a confrontation with Louis, leads her into town to find help. Meanwhile, Henri and Charles are in the middle of asking Mr. Duffi about Sheeta. They then spot the two unwittingly approach from down the street; Sheeta inadvertently stumbles and loses her hat, revealing her true identity. Just as Mr. Duffi and Pazu p...

    1. The main protagonist of this film. An apprentice machinist who works in a mine in Slag Ravine. Pazu is bright and energetic young boy with an overriding sense of justice. He lives a solitary life in his home which was left to him by his parents. His late father was known as a fraud after claiming to have seen Laputa. Pazu dreams of proving Laputa's existence by building his own ornithopter.

    World of Laputa

    The world in which the story takes place is Earth, but a slightly alternate version. The exact date and location of events are not specified, however, it is the period in which science fiction author Jules Verne (1825-1905) was active. This is confirmed by the photograph of Laputa inside Pazu's house, taken by his father, which is dated "1868.7," evidently meaning "July 1868". Generally, the story takes place somewhere in Europe, during an era of warring imperial powers wherein the military w...

    History

    The Kingdom of Laputariches, or "Laputa", was built when a great technological civilization over 700 years ago (the one in the story's present-time is the second, as depicted by the film's opening) thrived, by a people who fled to the sky out of hatred for the wars of the Earth. In this time, Laputa was a pinnacle of the civilization's technology, dominating the skies in a hegemony of other aerial kingdoms. Unlike these other kingdoms, which relied on rotors, Laputa maintained its airborne st...

    European Influence

    Laputa is credited by Colonel Muskawith having been behind Biblical events and sacred Hindu legends — thus tying the world of Laputa further to our Earth (and to western European civilization) — as do the medieval castle architecture of parts of Fort Tedus; the Gothic and half-timbered buildings in the village near the fort; the British mining-town architecture, clothing, and even ground vehicles of Pazu's homeland; and the Victorian ambiance of the pirate ship. However, most of the movie's a...

    Development

    Ever since he was in elementary school, Hayao Miyazaki dreamed of creating a film based on Jules Verne's seminal fantasy works, namely Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea(1872). After working on Heidi, Girl of the Alps (1974) for Nippon Animation, Miyazaki was approached by Toho to create story drafts and image boards to be used as a framework for possible television animated projects. Toho previously distributed Panda! Go, Panda! (1972) and Panda! Go, Panda! Rainy Day Circus (1973), two wo...

    Adventure King

    While it's been widely stated that Miyazaki took inspiration from Jules Verne and the Flying Island (空飛ぶ島”の名前) from Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels, his largest influence came from 1940's science fiction (SF) artist Tetsuji Fukushima. Fukushima's adventure serials were serialized on Adventure King, a comic magazine published by Akita Shoten. Miyazaki had read many of Fukushima's works as a child, particularly Desert of the Devil (砂漠の魔王). The concept was very similar to Aladdin and the Mag...

    Funding Issue

    After the success of Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Yasuyoshi Tokuma, chairman of Tokuma Shoten, approached Miyazaki several times, asking him to produce a sequel. Miyazaki declined, instead proposing a new theatrical animation project called City of Flowing Water (水の流れる街 , Mizu no Nagareru Machi) about the lives of schoolchildren in the canals of Yanagawa City, Fukuoka. Isao Takahatawas set to direct while Miyazaki would participate in the setting and layout creation. Isao Takahata visi...

    The film premiered in 103 theaters in Japan on August 2, 1986. The final box office record was a disappointing 1.16 billion yen, significantly less than the 1.48 billion yen achieved by Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind in 1984. When asked about its failure, Hayao Miyazakisurmised it may be "because he chose an ordinary boy who does not have speci...

    In the late 1980s, an English version of the movie was produced by the request of Tokuma Shoten by Magnum Video Tape & Dubbing. It was screened on Japan Airlines flights as an in-flight movie and was also shown at least once on UK television on New Year's Eve in 1988. In 1989, the dub was picked up in the U.S. by the newly founded Streamline Pictur...

    Laputa: Castle in the Sky (Image Album) (イメージアルバム [空から降ってきた少女] , Tenkuu no Shiro Rapyuta Imeeji Arubamu [Sora Kara Futtekita Shoujo]) was released on May 25, 1986, before the film's premiere in August. The 12-track album contained a small booklet containing interviews and image boards to help deepen fans connection the film. Laputa: Castle in the S...

    Laputa: Castle in the Sky 35th Anniversary Campaign (天空の城ラピュタ35周年記念キャンペーン , Tenkūnoshiro Rapyuta 35 Shūnenkinen Kyanpēn), a promotional campaign commemorating the 35th anniversary of the film's release was held October 23, 2021. The specialty Ghibli store Donguri Closet released numerous tie-in merchandise including earrings, brooches, cufflings, g...

    Fox Squirrels appear in this film. They were originally from Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind.
    The robot is a re-used design from the Lupin the Third Part 2 episode Farewell My Beloved Lupin, which Miyazaki directed.
    There are three instances of morse code in the film, which were never decoded fully and assumed to be gibberish by fans, especially as the first message transmitted by Muska is a series of dots and...
    Ofuji Award; Mainichi Movie Competition
    First Place; Pia Ten (Best Films of the Year)
    First Place; Japanese Movies; City Road
    First Place; Japanese Movies; Eiga Geijyutsu (Movie Art)
  5. Castle in the Sky (天空の城ラピュタ Tenkū no Shiro Rapyuta?) is a 1986 Japanese animated adventure film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki, and is also the first film produced and released by Studio Ghibli.

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  7. A young boy and a girl with a magic crystal must race against pirates and foreign agents in a search for a legendary floating castle.

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