Lantern Festival Transforms Japanese City
Multiple places claim to be the real-world inspiration for the Studio Ghibli anime Spirited Away. One place that isn’t usually mentioned in the discussion is Nagasaki, which is kind of surprising when you see how the city’s rows of red hanging lanterns, which not only mirror Spirited Away’s color design, but also its atmosphere.
反対側の景色もいいのです、途中からビルのガラスにランタンが反射して見えて幻想的 pic.twitter.com/ESbnhnILoT
— 羊食べる (@hitsuji_eat) February 4, 2019
Twitter user and Nagasaki resident @hitsuji_eat recently shared a video recorded on the train running between Nagasaki’s Meganebashi Bridge and Hama-no-Machi shopping arcade, but to anyone who’s seen Spirited Away, it also appears as though the train is on its way to the witch Yubaba’s Aburaya bathhouse.
Making the whole thing even more beautiful is that lanterns can be seen on both sides of the tracks, adding to the feeling of riding through a mysterious magical realm.
So why the gap between how strongly Nagasaki resembles the setting of Spirited Away and how infrequently the city gets brought up when talking about the movie? Probably because Nagasaki doesn’t always look like this.
長崎ランタンフェスティバルの時期ですね😇✨#ランタンフェスティバル pic.twitter.com/DNHiq8pUWQ
— かなかな🐰職業はポエマー🧚🏻♀️✨ (@elilly_mam) February 5, 2019
The images seen here are all from the annual Nagasaki Lantern Festival, which this year started on February 5. The festival more or less coincides with the lunar new year celebration, since Nagasaki, as one of the first cities in Japan to be opened to foreign trade, has long had connections with Chinese culture.
Today is the first day of the Nagasaki Lantern Festival! Both the Shinchi Chinatown and the surrounding area are filled with over 15,000 colorful lanterns and lights🏮🌟 #chinatown #chinesenewyear #lanternfestival #nagasakilanternfestival #長崎ランタンフェスティバル #新地中華街 pic.twitter.com/gfAlSSy2ns
— Kazue (@japanese123) February 5, 2019
During the festival, which lasts for two weeks, some 15,000 lanterns are hung in and around Nagasaki’s Chinatown neighborhood. That number gets visually doubled, though, when the lanterns are strung above one of the city’s rivers, or reflected in puddles of rainwater, creating the appearance of floating in space surrounded by the colorful, usually crimson orbs.
水たまりに映りこんだランタン綺麗#長崎ランタンフェスティバル pic.twitter.com/SWpI4A1XbJ
— 長崎市観光推進課 (@nagasakikanko) February 5, 2019
As mentioned above, the majority of the lanterns are clustered in Chinatown. The Nagasaki Bio Park zoo, however, is also having a mini lantern festival of its own in the habitat of its bath-loving capybaras.
こんにちは。雨の日曜日、風も強いです 😢
— 長崎バイオパーク公式 (@ngsbiopark) February 3, 2019
2/5から長崎ランタンフェスティバルがスタートしますので、露天風呂のランプもランタンっぽくしてみました。https://t.co/CUuhMeIylx pic.twitter.com/PDrup44v6Y
The festival also features parades, acrobatic performances, and live music, some of which take place while the sun is still out. The best time to go, though, is obviously after sundown, when the lanterns light up the night with their crimson glow.
リツイートをいただきましたので、もう少し🤗#長崎ランタンフェスティバル pic.twitter.com/aMy7MI5clD
— 高梅 仁 (@TP1fzb) February 5, 2019
2019's Lantern Festival will be going on until February 19. Being located on the southwestern island of Kyushu, Nagasaki is a bit of a long haul from Tokyo (or Sapporo, if you’re in town for the northern city’s Snow Festival, which is also going on now). But in terms of taking a trip to another world, it’s definitely worth hopping on a train or plane for.
Read the original article from SoraNews24 via the link below!
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