Manga & Anime Guideby Stephen Hunt’s SFcrowsnest
TheatricalFantasy

Howl's Moving Castle

2004 · Japan

A cursed girl and a vain young wizard in a striding castle; lush anti-war fantasy drawn from a British source.

Howl's Moving Castle cover

Overview

Howl's Moving Castle is Miyazaki adapting Diana Wynne Jones and producing a film that behaves like a splendid magical house with several rooms missing, three extra staircases and a fireplace that may be the most reliable adult present. Sophie, a young hatter, is cursed into old age and becomes entangled with Howl, a vain, powerful and emotionally evasive wizard whose castle lurches across the landscape on mechanical legs.

The film is romantic, anti-war, visually intoxicating and narratively untidy. That untidiness bothers some viewers and enchants others. Much like Howl himself, it is gorgeous, exasperating and not entirely committed to explaining where it has been.

Why it matters

It matters because it shows Miyazaki in full late-style mode: adapting a British fantasy novel but bending it toward his own obsessions with war, flight, age, appetite, vanity and the domestic labour required to keep magic from collapsing into rubbish.

Sophie is the film's anchor. Her transformation into old age becomes less a simple curse than a strange liberation from self-consciousness. Howl may have the flashier hair, but Sophie has the better spine.

What to expect

Expect a moving castle, scarecrows, witches, aerial warfare, comic domesticity and one of Ghibli's most beloved fire demons in Calcifer. The plot can feel dreamlike rather than rigorously engineered, particularly in its war material.

The anti-war imagery is unmistakable. Miyazaki fills the skies with beauty and then poisons them with bombers, because he is nothing if not consistent about distrusting the militarisation of flight.

Adaptations and versions

Howl's Moving Castle is a Studio Ghibli theatrical film directed by Hayao Miyazaki, adapted from Diana Wynne Jones's novel. It diverges significantly from the book, so readers should expect a transformation rather than a straight translation.

International editions and dub details should be checked before publication.

Where to start

This is a strong Ghibli film for fantasy lovers, especially those who value mood and character over tidy plot mechanics.

Fans of the novel should arrive prepared for Miyazaki's version to be its own creature. A charming creature, but one that has definitely chewed through the itinerary.

Verdict The SFcrowsnest take

Howl's Moving Castle is messy, romantic and magnificent to look at. It may wobble as a narrative machine, but as a film about ageing, courage and the foolishness of war, it has a heart big enough to power the whole ramshackle house.