[[quoteright:250:http://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/castleinthesky.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:250: [[ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld Flying machines?]] [[PluckyGirl Brave young heroine?]] [[SignatureStyle It must be Miyazaki]]!]]

Also known as ''Laputa: Castle in the Sky''

Inspired by one chapter of ''[[Literature/GulliversTravels Gulliver's Travels]]'', ''[[LaputaCastleInTheSky Castle in the Sky]]'' is a fantasy action-adventure tale raised to StudioGhibli standards. Two orphans battle sky pirates and evil government forces trying to seize the legendary floating city of Laputa. This was HayaoMiyazaki's third film, and the first to be created at Studio Ghibli, which was formed to produce the film.

'"Castle In The Sky'' could be considered a fairy tale... one with SteamPunk, flying castles, secret princesses, and magic. The film opens with a family of {{Sky Pirates}} led by the matriarch Dola attacking an airship intent on stealing a [[OrphansPlotTrinket blue crystal amulet]] from a girl named Sheeta. Sheeta, who had already been kidnapped by the evil StateSec Colonel Muska, uses the opportunity to escape and falls to what appears to be certain death until her pendant ignites and starts gently floating her back to Earth. Her descent is spotted by a young miner named Pazu, who catches her and takes her home, eager to determine if this mysterious floating girl is somehow connected with the fabled [[FloatingContinent floating castle Laputa]], which his father once saw, though [[CassandraTruth no one believed him]] or his photograph.

Dodging another attempt by Dola's gang to capture Sheeta's crystal, the kids manage to escape... right into the hands of the military. Taking the children prisoner in a castle, Muska convinces Sheeta to cooperate in his search for Laputa by threatening harm to Pazu. Sent back to his village, Pazu is immediately captured by Dola's gang who immediately set off on yet another attempt to seize the crystal. Reluctantly making common cause with Dola in order to rescue Sheeta, Pazu joins the pirates. Meanwhile a despondent Sheeta recites a "magic spell" her grandmother taught her to recite in times of trouble. The spell activates her pendant, triggering a beam which points the way to Laputa ''and'' a dormant Laputian robot hidden in the dungeons below. Responding to Sheeta's request for aid the robot [[CrushKillDestroy causes such destruction]] that Pazu and Dola manage to rescue Sheeta in the confusion but Muska ends up with the pendant. Muska and the local Army commander promptly set out for Laputa aboard the Goliath, an enormous [[ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld aerial battlecruiser]].

Seriously outgunned and outnumbered but armed with Sheeta's description of the location of Laputa, the kids and the pirates nevertheless try to head off the government agents aboard Dola's own airship, the ''Tiger Moth'', hoping that fair winds and a little luck will allow them to beat the army to the prize. What will they find in Laputa? Will it be filled with treasure or danger? What does Muska want with Laputa, and why is he so obsessed with it?

As part of their distribution deal, Disney has brought this film to America with a voice cast which includes AnnaPaquin, James Van Der Beek, Cloris Leachman, MandyPatinkin, MarkHamill, and Andy Dick as well as a new score provided by JoeHisaishi (who wrote the original soundtrack). This latter decision caused controversy with fans and critics more familiar with the more silent Japanese version, but Joe Hisaishi mentioned in his blog that he and Miyazaki were pleased with the soundtrack.

The dub, originally recorded in 1998, was initially scheduled for a 1999 video release, but continually delayed for unexplained reasons (though the re-scoring and a sudden shift from direct-to-video to theatrical release that never happened are the most commonly cited). It was screened at select childrens festivals before finally debuting on VHS and DVD in April 2003, alongside ''SpiritedAway'' and ''KikisDeliveryService'', gradually garnering new fans. This dub is one of only two Ghibli films (the other being ''Kiki's Delivery Service'') which Disney "Americanized"; future Ghibli releases only featured new voicework instead of the extensive musical reworking that ''Castle in the Sky'' and ''Kiki's Delivery Service'' underwent. A 2010 re-release of the film replaced the re-scored soundtrack with the original and also removed some of the additional chatter added to the dub (again to fill-in some of the more silent moments). Inexplicably, though, the faithful subtitle track on the 2003 DVD release was mysteriously replaced with a {{dubtitle}}. (Even more strangely, the Japanese, Australian, and UK Blu Rays ''contain'' the extended score on the English track — sans the extra dialogue and rerecorded sound effects from the 2003 release —, but the American BD release does not.)

A little known fact: there also exists a rare English dub distributed, but not produced, by Carl Macek's company Creator/StreamlinePictures, dubbed by Streamline regulars, apparently as an exclusive for Japan Air Lines as an in-flight movie. It was briefly released in 1989, but failed to find an audience. As with a similar older dub distributed by Streamline, ''Manga/{{Akira}}'', Carl Macek was embarrassed with it.
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!!Tropes:
* AccidentalMisnaming: Played in the dub with titles. While Pazu and Sheeta keep calling Dola by her name, and all the pirates constantly call her Mom, she keeps insisting they call her Captain.
--> '''Dola:''' "We'll ''all'' find her! And call me ''Captain''!"
--> '''Pirates:''' "Yes, Mom!"
* AirborneAircraftCarrier
* AfterTheEnd: Laputa is a relic of an earlier, but more advanced, civilization. The environment on the Earth's surface also seems to display signs of past violence - see GhibliHills.
* ActionMom: Dola may not be a HotMom ([[IWasQuiteALooker anymore]], if her portrait in her room is anything to go by), but she still leads her pirate clan (consisting of mostly her sons). And she's no [[ArmchairMilitary armchair admiral]] either.
* AppliedPhlebotinum: Aetherium (Or Volucite, depending on which version you watch), which Sheeta's necklace is made of, has anti-gravity powers.
* AntiHero: Dola and the pirates.
* {{Arcadia}}
* ArmiesAreEvil: Although [[EvilerThanThou not nearly as bad as Muska]].
* AuthorAppeal: Loads of flying scenes, fantastical aircraft, and precipitous heights.
* {{BFG}}: The pirates happily arm themselves with gigantic grenade launchers.
* BigEater: All the pirates, which means that HilarityEnsues when Sheeta is tasked with cooking for them.
* BridalCarry: How Pazu holds Sheeta after he catches her in the beginning. Although he visibly strains while trying to carry her.
* CaptainObvious: Muska and one of the soldiers after the robot escapes.
---> '''Soldier:''' It's the robot!
---> '''Muska:''' It's coming towards us!
** Also Sheeta, after Dola's speeder stalls out.
---> '''Sheeta:''' No! They're falling!
* {{Chiaroscuro}}
* ChildrenAreInnocent
* ClothingDamage: One of Dola's sons tries to intimidate Pazu's boss by flexing his muscles enough to burst his shirt, only to have the boss burst his own shirt (read: exploded into shreds) in response, much to his wife's displeasure.
-->"I'm not mending that, I hope you know."
* ColorCodedForYourConvenience: Sheeta's dress is purple, foreshadowing [[spoiler: her royal blood.]]
* ConvenientlyAnOrphan: Both the children.
* CoolAirship
* [[CoolPlane Cool Planes]]
* CoolTrain: The armoured train, and the little mining shunter.
* DangerousForbiddenTechnique: The spell of destruction that Sheeta's grandmother taught her.
* {{Determinator}}: Pazu and his quest to find the city his father told him about. He also will stop at nothing to save Sheeta from Muska and the army, even if it means teaming up with pirates.
* DisappearedDad: Pazu's father, the only man who had seen Laputa with his own eyes.
* DisneyVillainDeath: Muska [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness disposes of the general and his men]] by dropping them from Laputa to the ground [[spoiler: [[KarmicDeath which is how Muska himself dies]] after the city is destroyed]].
* DulcineaEffect: A strange girl drops out of the sky with a mysterious pendant and she's getting chased by suspicious-looking men and the army. [[JumpedAtTheCall Does Pazu ask any questions? Never!]]
* EnemyMine: Even though the pirates ransacked his house, Pazu teams up with them to save Sheeta and stop Muska.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: We first see Sheeta trapped in a room on an airship surrounded by military folks, looking an awful lot like a DistressedDamsel. Until the part where they stop watching her, and she [[CrowningMomentOfAwesome crashes a bottle over the only guard left in her room and escapes through the window of the moving blimp.]]
** As if that's not enough, it's later established that she didn't even know her magic necklace would save her if she fell!
* EvenBadMenLoveTheirMamas: Though Dola and her boys aren't all THAT bad.
* [[spoiler: EverythingsBetterWithPrincesses: Sheeta turns out to be one.]]
* EvenEvilHasStandards: The army general despises Muska...and this proves to be not without reason when [[spoiler: Muska causes him and his crew to die a DisneyVillainDeath.]]
* EvilLaugh: Muska, when he takes control of Laputa's power and uses it to dispose of the General and his army (and their almighty battleship).
* EvilPlan: Muska wants to TakeOverTheWorld using Laputa as a KillSat. To this end he enlists a local military and kidnaps Sheeta so he can find and use the place.
* FallingIntoHisArms
* FantasticNuke: Muska's plan is to take over and convert Laputa into a KillSat of sorts. Luckily the robots that guard the city aren't having any of it...[[spoiler:until Muska takes control of them and kills every one of the soldiers on Laputa]].
* FloatingContinent
* GirlishPigtails: Sheeta, until her ImportantHaircut. And Dola too...
* GhibliHills: Naturally. Although it's worth noting that the landscape looks a bit... worn. Pazu's hometown is a mining village, surrounded by deep chasms riddled with tunnels and endless wooden scaffolding, and the green grass on the surface is punched full of craters. Another Ghibli film that references an apocalyptic past -- particularly obvious when one considers the parallels between [[spoiler: the [[KillSat superweapon]] in the heart of the Castle and nuclear weaponry]].
* GoThroughMe: [[TheBigGuy Pazu's boss]] does this to protect him and Sheeta from the mooks chasing them.
* GrievousBottleyHarm: Sheeta smashes a champagne bottle over Muska's head at the beginning of the film.
* HardHead: After crashing on top of Pazu, Sheeta asks him if he's all right, and he replies his head is harder than his boss' fists. (In Disney's dub, he instead jokes that if his head were any harder it could be used for a cannonball.)
* HeyYouHaymaker: After one of the pirates get into a fistfight with Pazu's boss, a member of the watching crowd suddenly does this to him. This quickly turns the fight into a full-blown mob.
* HoldingHands: Pazu and Sheeta do this often.
* IfMyCalculationsAreCorrect
* ImperialStormtrooperMarksmanshipAcademy: Almost to the point of GunsAreWorthless. Apparently, the best a trained army can do against an unarmed boy is slightly graze his cheek.
* ImprobableAimingSkills: Not so much for Muska, however - he manages to shoot [[spoiler:off both of Sheeta's pigtails mid-range.]]
* ImprovisedWeapon: Sheeta rescues herself in the first scene of the film by beaning one of her captors in the head with a bottle. Later, she throws a coal shovel at Dola's boys during the memorable train chase sequence.
* InformedAttribute: One of the Sky Pirates warns Pazu that Pa is even harder on people than Dola. On the contrary, he's shown to be far more mellow.
* IWasQuiteALooker: Dola has a portrait of herself as a young lady in her bedroom. She was very pretty.
* JabbaTableManners: Dola and the pirates. See BigEater.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Dola. Pazu even comments at one point that Dola "is much nicer than she pretends to be." (At which she does a brief double-take, although by that point she has warmed up to both Pazu and Sheeta.)
* JumpedAtTheCall: Pazu is quite happy to get dragged into a seat-of-your-pants adventure by the arrival of Sheeta. To him, it just means that he won't have to wait 'till he's finished building his flyer before heading out on an adventure.
* LargeHam: In Disney's dub, some of the pirates or incidental characters may qualify (not that it's a bad thing), but most definitely Cloris Leachman's performance as Dola in general (to good effect, as she arguably makes the character the most memorable in the whole movie); likewise, when Muska goes crazy at the end, MarkHamill really gets to have fun, laughing maniacally and spouting a very memorable "Goodbye! Enjoy the ride!" prior to sending the soldiers to their deaths. There are even places where he sounds like SelfDemonstrating/TheJoker.
** The pirate trio of Louie, Charles/Shalulu, and Henri all sound like they are obviously enjoying themselves. They're voiced by [[ThePrincessBride Inigo Montoya]], [[WesternAnimation/ABugsLife Tuck & Roll]], and [[Disney/TheLionKing Nuka]].
** "Where are you MUSKA?!" the General shouts. You can tell Creator/JimCummings is having a blast doing that line, and the role in general.
* LostTechnology
* LostInTranslation: Although faithful in spirit overall, some aspects of the original script didn't survive in the script for the Disney dub. The references to "Gulliver's Travels" and "Treasure Island" are both omitted, and the last part of Sheeta's speech at the end of the film is changed from "you can't survive without mother Earth" to "the world cannot live without love," which feels out of place with the actual song.
** Oddly enough, even though the forgotten '80s JAL dub maintains the last part of Sheeta's speech and the "Treasure's Island" reference, it too omits the "Gulliver's Travels" reference.
* LullDestruction: To many purists, the extra lines of dialogue, particularly the Dola gang's banter, qualifies. However, other viewers see them as [[CrowningMomentOfFunny crowning moments of funny]] and/or fleshing out the characters' personalities... to the point that it proved jarring to such viewers when Disney removed the additional lines for its 2010 reissue. (The same is true of Jiji's oneliners in ''KikisDeliveryService''.)
* TheMenInBlack: ThoseTwoGuys who follow Muska around
* MagicCompass: The way to Laputs is shown when Sheeta accidentally activates her pendant which, in addition to activating a dormant robot that absolutely trashes a military base, shines a beam of light in the direction Laputa is.
* MarketBasedTitle: The word "Laputa" was dropped from the title in the US release because it means "the whore" in Spanish. Miyazaki took the name from ''[[Literature/GulliversTravels Gulliver's Travels]]'', likely without even realizing that Jonathan Swift had chosen the name for that very reason. However, most international releases of the film kept the word anyway. It is exclusively called Laputa in Australia.
* MarshmallowHell: Done by Dola to Sheeta. Played for laughs, see VictoriasSecretCompartment below.
* MementoMacguffin: Sheeta's necklace, which is an heirloom [[spoiler: of the Laputian royal family.]]
* NerdGlasses: Papa.
* NoExportForYou: Ironically, the soundtrack of the US score is only available for purchase in Japan even though the English dub is not sold over there.
* NotEvilJustMisunderstood: Dola and her boys are typical Miyazaki heavies who eventually get won over to the good side. And of course they weren't really evil, just goofy pirates. Averted with Muska, however. He is actually the most unusual villain for a Miyazaki movie as he is totally malevolent with no redeeming qualities whatsoever. The only other Miyazaki villain that even comes close is the very similar Count Cagliostro from CastleOfCagliostro. But that was really more Miyazaki playing around in someone else's universe.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: AnnaPaquin, who voices Sheeta in the English dub, slips into her New Zealand accent frequently. This works to the benefit of the character though, since Sheeta is supposed to be from somewhere far far away.
* OrphansPlotTrinket: Sheeta's pendant.
* OutOfTheInferno: The Laputian robot when escaping the castle.
* OvertOperative: Muska refers to himself as the government's top agent to a roomful of a people.
* PersonOfMassDestruction: The robots. Thankfully, they're [[GentleGiant wholly benevolent.]]
* PinkMeansFeminine: Dola, who colors a lot of the pirate's stuff pink.
** Sheeta's outfit is blue at the beginning of the film, but pink once she joins the pirates' crew.
* PinPullingTeeth: Dola pulls out a German "potato masher" style stick grenade and pulls the pin with her teeth. Potato masher grenades didn't have pins. They used a pull cord in the handle instead.
* ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnything: Although they do score quite a good haul of treasure at the end.
* PluckyGirl: Sheeta. Being a Miyazaki heroine, this is a given.
* PowerGlows: Aetherium (Volucite/Levitation), the AppliedPhlebotinum of the story.
* ProtagonistCenteredMorality: When the Army begins looting Laputa, Pazu reacts with disgust, calling them thieves. Dola and the gang receive no such reprimand when it's revealed they snagged some golden goodies for themselves before Laputa floated away.
** Granted, they did not, unlike the soldiers, attempt to pull the palace apart.
** And it's implied they're going to use the treasure to buy a new airship. Plus they're ''pirates'', not soldiers.
* PunchClockVillain: The General and the Army . They're all too willing to plunder Laputa's treasures, [[spoiler:but they turn on Muska once his plan is revealed]].
* PyrrhicVictory: [[spoiler: Laputa is saved from the army only to drift off into space. The treasure and technology are all lost.]]
* RatedMForManly: Mr. Duffy A.K.A The Boss especially during his shirt-ripping muscle flex competition with Charles (nicknamed Shalulu).
* [[RoseHairedGirl Rose Haired Woman]]: Dola has pink hair.
* RoyalBlood: [[spoiler: Sheeta and Muska are both descendants of the Laputian royal family.]]
* ScaryShinyGlasses: Colonel Muska's glasses do this on at least one occasion.
* SceneryPorn: It seems like every time you blink, there's another establishing shot or sweeping pan.
* ShoutOut: The fox-squirrel critters from ''{{Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind}}'' make an appearance in Laputa. The odd headless beaver-tailed creatures and the longhaired yaks are from Nausicaa as well, and the robots strongly resemble the Heedra. The latter three only appear in the manga.
* SinisterShades: The villains have them.
* SkyPirate: Dola and her crew.
* SocialDarwinist: Muska, as he reveals in a MotiveRant.
* SpiritualSuccessor: ''{{Nadia The Secret of Blue Water}}'' took inspiration from this film.
* SteamPunk: Mixed with a little Feudal Punk.
* SuperPoweredRobotMeterMaids: One of the active robots in Laputa is a gardener and guardian of the wildlife, but like all of the other Laputian robots it appears to be armed with weapons of mass destruction.
* SurpriseCheckmate: When Dola is playing chess in her room.
* TakeMyHand: Sheeta and Pazu do this.
* TrueName: Sheeta and Muska. For the record, they are [[spoiler: Lucita - pronounced Lusheeta - Toel Ul Laputa and Romuska Palo Ul Laputa, which points out their status as members of the Laputian royal family.]]
* UnfortunateName: In Spanish "la puta" means "the whore"
** While that is true, it helps that it's pronounced "Rapyuta" in Japanese, and "Láputa" in Spanish. (In the Disney dub, it's even called "Lah-pyutah".)
** In the Spanish dub, they use the correct pronunciation trougouth the film, but it's done naturally and does not feel offensive.
* VictoriasSecretCompartment: Dola somehow manages to fill her cleavage with jewels even as they barely escape with their lives.
* VillainousBreakdown: Muska upon realizing he's been outwitted by two children, with plenty of ThisCannotBe.
* WaveMotionGun: Laputian robots have ''two:'' a slashing laser and a Destructo-Beam.
** It's worth noting that the lasers used by the robots follow a realistic theory about the capability of laser weapons: They don't have a maximum range and they travel near-instantly. This is most clearly demonstrated when [[spoiler:Sheeta throws off the damaged Fortress robot's aim and the beam shoots off across the countryside for ''miles'' before it can cut the beam to avoid risking harm to Sheeta.]]
* WorldTree: Laputa is built around a huge, millennial tree. [[spoiler: At the end of the film, the city is destroyed, but the tree lives on and finds a new home in outer space.]]
* ZeppelinsFromAnotherWorld
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