# I would like you to discuss at length how the story and characters changed from the beginning to the end, and to compare the comic and animated versions. Also, it seems to me that Nausicaa was a very special character, so I would like you to discuss her independently of the other characters-to discuss the 'Nausicaa Theory' as it were.
MIYAZAKI 'Theory' is a strange word. I'm not sure I'd use it myself.
#I see. I'd like to ask a few questions about Nausicaa-in the context of the entire work, that is. I'd like to know how your views of the world and of civilization are reflected in Nausicaa.
MIYAZAKI That's not something I can talk about [laughs]. That should be discussed by somebody else.
#What are your recollections of the characters? And how did their roles change from the start? I hear that the characters often acted on their own-but was that really the case, or were you controlling their actions? Please talk about the characters.
MIYAZAKI If I'd written the whole story all at once, I'd still be excited about it, and would be able to talk about it. But it went on for a very long time, and by the time I finished it, it had become something of a grind-so I don't really want to talk about it.
When the series ended, I had absolutely no sense of fulfillment, no feeling of "It's over! I DID it!!". In 1993, I thought that I would finish the series in one year, but although I worked feverishly for two months, I still wasn't satisfied. But I knew that, physically, I was ready to end it. Mind you, there was no pressure from other people to end it there, it was just something I decided for myself. The editor told me that I could continue it for as long as I wanted.
Therefore, I decided on my own to end it. I did have doubts as to whether or not that was a good place to stop, and so I avoided looking over the whole story up to that point. I had received copies of all the chapters from Yoshi Kobayashi (the person in charge of Animage's editorial department), but I had no desire to look at them. I was scared. [laughs] Finally, in order to get the last book finished, I looked them over 2 days beforehand. With a great deal of trepidation. I was somewhat relieved. They were good-although it sounds strange to say that about one's own work.
It wasn't that I had forgotten most of what I had written, but rather, that I had TRIED to forget. It was scary. What had I written? [laughs] It was painful. Really! I still wondered if this was the right conclusion for Nausicaa, but I didn't know. Even now I'm not sure.
#I thought that it might have been better to end the story in one year. In the last seven days of the story, at the Shuwa cemetery, the tone of the story changed and it was pushed ahead all at once. From a dramatic standpoint, pushing ahead to the climax was exciting, but the story to that point had evoked an atmosphere of high civilization, and then it suddenly turned to spiritualism or mysticism.
MIYAZAKI Yes, indeed. That's because Nausicaa and Ohma were alone together.
#That was good, wasn't it? Although it felt like the story was uplifted all at once...
MIYAZAKI Continuing Nausicaa for that last year was really hard, although I don't know exactly why. I guess the problem was that I HAD TO WRITE WHAT I DIDN'T KNOW. Writing what you know is one thing-but I had to write about what I didn't know.
On the other had, my own views on nature-well, not even anything as distinct as a view-When I gave shape to my indistinct ideas, various weaknesses surfaced, and I had to deal with those.
In other words, while these indistinct thoughts about what kind of world Nausicaa's was were floating around in my head, they kept bumping into prior ideas, since I had been planning this world since 1980. And this gave rise to various problems. Some things just could not be. The world could not be so flimsy. I was forced to rethink the meaning of the Sea of Corruption, for example, or what exactly the Ohmu were.
But when I was writing, I didn't write from the standpoint that if 'this' were logical, then 'that' must be so. Instead I thought, if 'this' is what will happen, then 'that' is what will follow. For example, since I had already been thinking of Nausicaa as injured in some way, then I assumed that she would believe that her mother didn't love her. The readers would be able to sympathize with this, and that would automatically give them a handle on the character. To finish all this off, everything would have to be brought together, right? [laughs] That was really tiresome.
I had to go so far as to think about the very meaning of life. I didn't know, so it was very difficult.
Making the "NAUSICAA" Movie was Sheer Agony
#At the very start, were you thinking about ending it at the Shuwa cemetery?
MIYAZAKI No, I didn't think about it. To tell you the truth, I had no thoughts at all about the ending. There was only the the country of Torumekia, then the Valley of Wind and a small country in trouble. One young girl shouldered the burden of the fate of a whole tribe, and by so doing, she no longer had to go to war. It was a story about a world I didn't know, but I thought that many things would probably happen. And that's how it all began...really!! [laughs].
After I had started-and I know that this might sound strange-I was convinced that the story would never go for as long as it actually did. [laughs] I began it, even though I really felt that the story would be stopped halfway through-either because of my own circumstances, or because nobody would find it at all interesting. I then started working in the animation field, figuring all the time that the comic would eventually fold, or something. So I never gave any thought to it becoming a long series, or anything like that. It was difficult, and I didn't want to write the comic, because at work I was in the position of having to supervise everyone else's attitudes about the job. It's like having two jobs-your own and everyone else's. So it was impossible for me to do outside work as well, without running into serious obstacles. So, to make matters worse, there was my job.
Usually, a person like me, whose work requires 12 or 14 hours to do, cannot put in a full day at the office, and then go home and draw a comic book. All he can do is sleep. [To draw Nausicca] I had to reduce the amount of time I spent sleeping, right? But from the second story, it became something that I felt that I had to do, not something done at someone else's urging.
MIYAZAKI 'Theory' is a strange word. I'm not sure I'd use it myself.
#I see. I'd like to ask a few questions about Nausicaa-in the context of the entire work, that is. I'd like to know how your views of the world and of civilization are reflected in Nausicaa.
MIYAZAKI That's not something I can talk about [laughs]. That should be discussed by somebody else.
#What are your recollections of the characters? And how did their roles change from the start? I hear that the characters often acted on their own-but was that really the case, or were you controlling their actions? Please talk about the characters.
MIYAZAKI If I'd written the whole story all at once, I'd still be excited about it, and would be able to talk about it. But it went on for a very long time, and by the time I finished it, it had become something of a grind-so I don't really want to talk about it.
When the series ended, I had absolutely no sense of fulfillment, no feeling of "It's over! I DID it!!". In 1993, I thought that I would finish the series in one year, but although I worked feverishly for two months, I still wasn't satisfied. But I knew that, physically, I was ready to end it. Mind you, there was no pressure from other people to end it there, it was just something I decided for myself. The editor told me that I could continue it for as long as I wanted.
Therefore, I decided on my own to end it. I did have doubts as to whether or not that was a good place to stop, and so I avoided looking over the whole story up to that point. I had received copies of all the chapters from Yoshi Kobayashi (the person in charge of Animage's editorial department), but I had no desire to look at them. I was scared. [laughs] Finally, in order to get the last book finished, I looked them over 2 days beforehand. With a great deal of trepidation. I was somewhat relieved. They were good-although it sounds strange to say that about one's own work.
It wasn't that I had forgotten most of what I had written, but rather, that I had TRIED to forget. It was scary. What had I written? [laughs] It was painful. Really! I still wondered if this was the right conclusion for Nausicaa, but I didn't know. Even now I'm not sure.
#I thought that it might have been better to end the story in one year. In the last seven days of the story, at the Shuwa cemetery, the tone of the story changed and it was pushed ahead all at once. From a dramatic standpoint, pushing ahead to the climax was exciting, but the story to that point had evoked an atmosphere of high civilization, and then it suddenly turned to spiritualism or mysticism.
MIYAZAKI Yes, indeed. That's because Nausicaa and Ohma were alone together.
#That was good, wasn't it? Although it felt like the story was uplifted all at once...
MIYAZAKI Continuing Nausicaa for that last year was really hard, although I don't know exactly why. I guess the problem was that I HAD TO WRITE WHAT I DIDN'T KNOW. Writing what you know is one thing-but I had to write about what I didn't know.
On the other had, my own views on nature-well, not even anything as distinct as a view-When I gave shape to my indistinct ideas, various weaknesses surfaced, and I had to deal with those.
In other words, while these indistinct thoughts about what kind of world Nausicaa's was were floating around in my head, they kept bumping into prior ideas, since I had been planning this world since 1980. And this gave rise to various problems. Some things just could not be. The world could not be so flimsy. I was forced to rethink the meaning of the Sea of Corruption, for example, or what exactly the Ohmu were.
But when I was writing, I didn't write from the standpoint that if 'this' were logical, then 'that' must be so. Instead I thought, if 'this' is what will happen, then 'that' is what will follow. For example, since I had already been thinking of Nausicaa as injured in some way, then I assumed that she would believe that her mother didn't love her. The readers would be able to sympathize with this, and that would automatically give them a handle on the character. To finish all this off, everything would have to be brought together, right? [laughs] That was really tiresome.
I had to go so far as to think about the very meaning of life. I didn't know, so it was very difficult.
Making the "NAUSICAA" Movie was Sheer Agony
#At the very start, were you thinking about ending it at the Shuwa cemetery?
MIYAZAKI No, I didn't think about it. To tell you the truth, I had no thoughts at all about the ending. There was only the the country of Torumekia, then the Valley of Wind and a small country in trouble. One young girl shouldered the burden of the fate of a whole tribe, and by so doing, she no longer had to go to war. It was a story about a world I didn't know, but I thought that many things would probably happen. And that's how it all began...really!! [laughs].
After I had started-and I know that this might sound strange-I was convinced that the story would never go for as long as it actually did. [laughs] I began it, even though I really felt that the story would be stopped halfway through-either because of my own circumstances, or because nobody would find it at all interesting. I then started working in the animation field, figuring all the time that the comic would eventually fold, or something. So I never gave any thought to it becoming a long series, or anything like that. It was difficult, and I didn't want to write the comic, because at work I was in the position of having to supervise everyone else's attitudes about the job. It's like having two jobs-your own and everyone else's. So it was impossible for me to do outside work as well, without running into serious obstacles. So, to make matters worse, there was my job.
Usually, a person like me, whose work requires 12 or 14 hours to do, cannot put in a full day at the office, and then go home and draw a comic book. All he can do is sleep. [To draw Nausicca] I had to reduce the amount of time I spent sleeping, right? But from the second story, it became something that I felt that I had to do, not something done at someone else's urging.