Color me impressed, both the time stamp and the redirect are correct. I had to use moderator wizardry to accomplish that (I edited a word into the post, quoted that, and then removed it and used the quote tag I had gotten).
Is Freud difficult to understand? I read about a 15-year-old prodigy that had a lot of difficulty reading his work, in the book " The Chosen " by Chaim Potok.
Donner I would really like to thank you for answering my dumb questions. You're a pretty decent guy.
I remember being largely uninterested in what Freud had to say, and honestly remember very little that I wasn't already aware of from other sources.
I read him in a (required) college course that covered canonical thinkers of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: Darwin, Marx, Freud, Nietzsche, Virginia Woolf and W. E. B. Du Bois. I'd be embarrassed at how little I remember of any of these authors if the course had been set up better, instead it was basically a repeat lesson in how dry these works were. I'm actually not sure if I ever read
To The Lighthouse, by the time we got to the end of the semester this class had me more than a little burnt out, and we only had to do papers on three of these people (I did Darwin, Nietzshe, and Du Bois - and given how much I dislike Nietzsche's views on existentialism, a philosophy I otherwise generally agree with, that should tell you how bored I was with Freud).
I once had dinner with a group of people in Tokyo including Miyazaki and his son.
It was somewhat uncomfortable because Hayao didn't show up to a special screening of his son's film at the Ghibli museum and Goro (his son) was really angry with him.
I'd read about that, I suspect the overall situation was awkward for both of them, particularly since Miyazaki is now such a lauded name in animation.
Favourite Hayao Miyazaki film?
My favorite work of Miyazaki's, by far, is the Nausicaa manga. The film is what introduced me to his work and for a long time it was my favorite film of his - but since reading the manga the film just doesn't hold up well for me. I suspect my favorite is Howl's Moving Castle, while a large departure from the book I still liked how the characters were portrayed.
Porco Rosso is great and I find very well put together, if a bit silly. Laputa starts off great but I find it lags once they get to the city, although I still enjoy it. Spirited Away is gorgeous but I find the pacing odd and, again, I find that the ending drags - after the climatic scene with No Face it just feels like the movie gets rather muddled; great characters though, and Lin is one of my favorite's. It's been years since I've seen Princess Mononoke or Kiki's Delivery Service, I remember enjoying them but I'm not really in a position to comment on them. I've never actually seen My Neighbor Totoro, and here I really don't have any excuse. Ponyo on the Cliff had its moments but overall it didn't do much for me - although it didn't help that I only saw it in English and I was unimpressed with the two protagonists. (Funny enough I actually prefer the English dubbing in Howl's Moving Castle to the original Japanese.)
They're not Miyazaki's but I really need to get around to Whisper of the Heart and The Cat Returns. On that note I once did have the opportunity to see Grave of the Fireflies but specifically avoided it.
I don't believe I've seen any of Isao Takahata's films.