Castle in the Sky (lost alternate ending of Hayao Miyazaki animated fantasy-adventure film; existence unconfirmed; 1986): Difference between revisions

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[[Has brief:: ''Castle in the Sky'' (天空の城ラピュタ in Japanese, also known as ''Laputa: Castle in the Sky'' in Europe and Australia) is a 1986 Japanese animated film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. The third film produced under Miyazaki's directorship and the first by Studio Ghibli (formed one year prior).  
[[Has brief:: ''Castle in the Sky'' (天空の城ラピュタ in Japanese, also known as ''Laputa: Castle in the Sky'' in Europe and Australia) is a 1986 Japanese animated film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. The third film produced under Miyazaki's directorship and the first by Studio Ghibli (formed one year prior). The film is considered so iconic in its home country that it has aired annually on Japanese TV since 1988]], only breaking tradition on a few occasions due to unknown reasons. These annual airings are so popular that in some instances world records have been broken from Japanese Twitter users flooding the site to tweet the "Spell of Destruction" from the film.<ref>[https://kotaku.com/how-an-old-japanese-anime-broke-a-twitter-record-5868320 Information on the World Record ''Castle in the Sky'' broke in 2011.] Retrieved 09 Aug '20</ref>  
 
The film is considered so iconic in its home country that it has aired annually on Japanese TV since 1988]], only breaking tradition on a few occasions due to unknown reasons. These annual airings are so popular that in some instances world records have been broken from Japanese Twitter users flooding the site to tweet the "Spell of Destruction" from the film.<ref>[https://kotaku.com/how-an-old-japanese-anime-broke-a-twitter-record-5868320 Information on the World Record ''Castle in the Sky'' broke in 2011.] Retrieved 09 Aug '20</ref>  


[[Has brief:: Sometime in 2007, images were posted on the Japanese social networking site Mixi that seemed to be from one of these airings.]]<ref>[https://mixi.jp/view_bbs.pl?comm_id=158999&id=13485642 The original Mixi post where these images originated from.] Retrieved 09 Aug '20</ref> [[Has brief:: While the images were poor-quality, one could tell that they differed from the final film, and there seemed to be credits imposed onto the film itself, leading some to believe it was from '''a possible alternate ending'''.]]  
[[Has brief:: Sometime in 2007, images were posted on the Japanese social networking site Mixi that seemed to be from one of these airings.]]<ref>[https://mixi.jp/view_bbs.pl?comm_id=158999&id=13485642 The original Mixi post where these images originated from.] Retrieved 09 Aug '20</ref> [[Has brief:: While the images were poor-quality, one could tell that they differed from the final film, and there seemed to be credits imposed onto the film itself, leading some to believe it was from '''a possible alternate ending'''.]]  

Revision as of 19:12, 18 October 2020

Cinthes.jpg

One of the four images posted to mixi showing the possible alternate ending to Castle in the Sky.

Status: Existence Unconfirmed

Castle in the Sky (天空の城ラピュタ in Japanese, also known as Laputa: Castle in the Sky in Europe and Australia) is a 1986 Japanese animated film written and directed by Hayao Miyazaki. The third film produced under Miyazaki's directorship and the first by Studio Ghibli (formed one year prior). The film is considered so iconic in its home country that it has aired annually on Japanese TV since 1988, only breaking tradition on a few occasions due to unknown reasons. These annual airings are so popular that in some instances world records have been broken from Japanese Twitter users flooding the site to tweet the "Spell of Destruction" from the film.[1]

Sometime in 2007, images were posted on the Japanese social networking site Mixi that seemed to be from one of these airings.[2] While the images were poor-quality, one could tell that they differed from the final film, and there seemed to be credits imposed onto the film itself, leading some to believe it was from a possible alternate ending.

Many fans of the film have put in much effort to see if this supposed ending exists, so much so that a Twitter user by the name of video_vhs is offering a ¥50,000 reward (equivalent to $467.42 USD) for anyone who can find footage of it and a ¥70,000 reward (equivalent to $654.38 USD) for anyone who can find the original broadcast intact with the commercials included.[3]

Another image from Mixi. Note the credits that seem to be superimposed into the film.

The Story So Far

As stated previously, there has been quite a search effort involved for not only those trying to find the supposed alternate ending of the film, but also for the other lost Castle in the Sky broadcasts. According to the Twitter account video_vhs, the third broadcast from 1991 has been found, as well as the seventh broadcast from 1998, and the eighth one from 2001. The first (1988), second (1989), fourth (1993), fifth (1995), and sixth (1997) have not been found.[4] As a result of these broadcasts lacking any publicly available footage, video_vhs believes that one of them could contain the alternate ending.

Leading more credence to the theory is the amount of people who have claimed to see a different ending to the film. It’s become somewhat of an urban legend, even warranting a section on the Japanese Wikipedia page on the film. It’s become so widespread, that Studio Ghibli themselves had to debunk these claims.[5] With the possibility of a true alternate ending being debunked by those involved with production, it’s highly unlikely that the true “alternate ending” was as complex as many fans described.

Speculation

A post from the website Uso8oo was able to find many high quality versions of the images posted on Mixi.[6] The writer of the article proposes that the TV Station that aired this version of the film simply didn’t have enough time to air the full ending, and instead showed a shorter version instead. The post then went on the show that many of the images shown in the Mixi post were from earlier scenes in the film, or used pieces of concept art. This seems to be the simplest explanation as to why an alternate ending exists, and why so many people have claimed to see it. Some may claim that this could also be a possible work print, though it is doubtful that this type of media would be in the hands of TV networks, who are usually provided with a broadcast-ready final copy instead. Nevertheless, the source of these images has still not been adequately determined, leaving the existence of an alternate ending to Castle in the Sky ambiguous until recordings of the undocumented broadcasts are found.

Gallery

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External Links

References