Sometimes it seems as if every studio in Hollywood is making superhero movies. If their recently announced schedules are to be believed, then Marvel, Warner Bros, Sony and Fox will collectively release more than 20 such blockbusters before the end of the decade. The latest player in the superhero game
Big Hero 6: It's a boy's own gentle giant
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A scene from the movie Big Hero 6.
For Don Hall, the film's director, the news that Disney had acquired Marvel was thrilling. A lifelong reader of comic books, at the time he was working on the studio's 2011 version of Winnie the Pooh. But he quickly started researching Marvel's rich back catalogue. "On my lunch hours during Winnie the Pooh I made a list of what Marvel comics I'd liked as a kid," Hall says.
"I supplemented that list by going online, where I found something like 5000 Marvel characters. That's how I came across Big Hero 6. It's a title that shows up here and there throughout the Marvel universe. But there were only ever 13 issues total, which is very few. I thought the title was bitchin', and it was a Japanese superhero team, which was double-bitchin'. It struck me as being a love letter to Japanese pop culture."
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Disney's ranks are filled with fanboys, men and women who grew up loving comic books. Hall says that as word got around that he was developing an animated feature based on a Marvel title, staffers he had never met would approach him and demand to work on the film. His co-director, Chris Williams, says: "People often get into animation because they spent a lot of their childhood in their bedrooms writing stories, drawing, watching science-fiction movies and the rest of it. So when Don started talking about doing a superhero movie with Japanese anime influences, that struck a chord with a lot of the artists here."
Big Hero 6 takes place in the fictional city of San Fransokyo, a mash-up of San Francisco and Tokyo, where the Golden Gate Bridge has been modified to incorporate the shapes of a torii, or traditional Japanese gateway.
Disney's film is a hybrid of genres and styles. The scene in which Baymax first flies through the city wearing a red, armoured suit built for him by Hiro carries loud echoes of a similar sequence from the original Iron Man (2008), the movie that launched Marvel Studios and unleashed the current spate of superhero blockbusters.
The film-makers also harbour a shared affection for the work of the legendary Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki. No coincidence, then, that in silhouette Hiro and Baymax could almost be mistaken for Satsuki and Totoro, the young girl and kindly forest spirit of Miyazaki's My Neighbour Totoro (1988).
"There's something very powerful and intimate about the relationship between Satsuki and Totoro, and we were influenced by that," Williams says. "Totoro and Baymax have similar traits: they're quiet, girthy, but with a sense of goodness, selflessness and warmth."
Williams, who was born in 1971, suggests he and Hall are from the first generation of Americans exposed to contemporary Japanese culture. "My first exposure to anime as a kid was Battle of the Planets, the redubbed version of a popular Japanese animated series [Science Ninja Team Gatchaman]," he says. "Later, we would pass around rare video cassettes of anime movies like Akira, so we would get these little windows into what was happening in Japanese pop culture."
What: Big Hero 6, animated superhero movie from Disney and Marvel
When: Opens at cinemas on Boxing Day
Who's it for: Everyone but especially boys who like making stuff.
- Independent