Porco Rosso - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "Porco Rosso"
紅の豚 (1992)
Timing: 1:33 (93 min)
Porco Rosso - TMDB rating
7.795/10
3673
Porco Rosso - Kinopoisk rating
7.924/10
54742
Porco Rosso - IMDB rating
7.7/10
115000

Actors and characters

Photo Shūichirō Moriyama #82878

Shūichirō Moriyama

Shūichirō Moriyama
Character Kurenai no Buta (voice)
Photo Tokiko Kato #124814
Tokiko Kato
Character Jina-sama (voice)
Photo Bunshi Katsura Vi #94848
Bunshi Katsura Vi
Character Pikkoro-oyaji (voice)
Photo Tsunehiko Kamijō #20301

Tsunehiko Kamijō

Tsunehiko Kamijō
Character Manmayuto no shachô (voice)
Photo Akemi Okamura #8312Photo Akemi Okamura #8313

Akemi Okamura

Akemi Okamura
Character Fio Pikkoro (voice)
Photo Akio Otsuka #23427Photo Akio Otsuka #66008Photo Akio Otsuka #66009

Akio Otsuka

Akio Otsuka
Character Donarudo Kâchisu (voice)
Photo Hiroko Seki #45383

Hiroko Seki

Hiroko Seki
Character Bâ-chan (voice)
Photo Reizō Nomoto #124815
Reizō Nomoto
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Osamu Saka #44145

Osamu Saka

Osamu Saka
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Yu Shimaka #115786
Yu Shimaka
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Mahito Tsujimura #54512
Mahito Tsujimura
Character (voice)
Photo Minoru Yada #54515

Minoru Yada

Minoru Yada
Character (voice)
Photo Yoko Soumi #99715Photo Yoko Soumi #99716

Yoko Soumi

Yoko Soumi
Character (voice)
Photo Yuzuru Fujimoto #101431Photo Yuzuru Fujimoto #101432
Yuzuru Fujimoto
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Tatsuyuki Jinnai #315033
Tatsuyuki Jinnai
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Kazunori Arai #315034
Kazunori Arai
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Nobuo Tanaka #256041
Nobuo Tanaka
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Shinnosuke Furumoto #315035
Shinnosuke Furumoto
Character Mamma Aiuto Gang (voice)
Photo Masayuki Inagaki #315036
Masayuki Inagaki
Character Major Ferrarin (voice)
Ginzo Matsuo
Character (voice)
Photo Akimasa Omori #128561Photo Akimasa Omori #128562
Akimasa Omori
Character (voice)
Photo Katsuyo Endou #315038
Katsuyo Endou
Character (voice)
Photo Ayako Taneda #315039
Ayako Taneda
Character (voice)
Hirotsugu Moriyama
Character (voice)
Photo Yuri Satou #315040
Yuri Satou
Character (voice)
Takeyuki Jinuchi
Character (voice)
Atsuko Nakazawa
Character (voice)
Hiroko Nakatsugawa
Character (voice)
Akio Matsuoka
Character (voice)
Photo Hirozumi Sato #378209
Hirozumi Sato
Character (voice)
Photo Daisuke Inoue #195229Photo Daisuke Inoue #195230Photo Daisuke Inoue #195231
Daisuke Inoue
Character (voice)
Ayumi Kita
Character (voice)
Photo Maiko Sato #378210
Maiko Sato
Character (voice)
Rie Morita
Character (voice)
Wakana Takahashi
Character (voice)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The film is based on Miyazaki's manga "The Age of the Flying Boat" [Hikoutei Jidai] (1990). However, the manga contained practically no mention of fascists or the love story between Porco and Gina.
  • "Porco Rosso" was originally planned as a 30-45 minute film for showing on board aircraft of "Japan Airlines".
  • Much of the events in "Porco Rosso" are based on real events and real people. The exception, of course, is the "pigheadedness" of Marco Pagot.
  • The pirate gang "Mamma Aiuto" translates from Italian as "Mommy, help!".
  • At the beginning of the film, titles are shown in the following languages: Japanese, Italian, Korean, English, Chinese, Spanish, Arabic, Russian, French, and German.
  • In the film, Marco Pagott went to Milan to collect an airplane and discovered that only women were working at the factory. When he asked why, he was told that all the men had gone to work abroad due to the ‘Great Depression’. In reality, preparations for military and colonial conquests allowed Italy to emerge from the ‘Great Depression’ of the 1930s with minimal losses.
  • The Japanese title of the film translates as ‘Crimson Pig’. However, Miyazaki recommended that foreign translators use the Italian version of the title. Crimson is the color of Porco’s seaplane.
  • Porco turns into a pig specifically because Miyazaki himself loves pigs. He likes to depict himself as a pig and believes that ‘every man, upon reaching middle age, turns into a pig’.
  • Marco Pagott is a real person, an Italian animator and a good friend of Miyazaki. Marco’s main rival, Donald Curtis, is named after Glenn Curtiss, one of the pioneers of American and world aviation.
  • Initially, the film was to be set in one of the most beautiful cities on the Adriatic coast – Dubrovnik, Croatia, founded by the Romans. However, the Croatian and Yugoslav Wars began in 1991, and Serbian artillery practically wiped Dubrovnik off the face of the earth. Therefore, the film's action was moved to an unnamed island in the Adriatic. Specifically, the destruction of Dubrovnik prompted Miyazaki to make the film more serious.
  • The seaplanes featured in the film actually existed, although Miyazaki slightly modified the design of most of them. Schneider Trophy seaplane races also existed. The only thing that didn't exist was an 'industry' of air piracy (although individual cases are known in the history of aeronautics).
  • Tokiko Kato, who voiced Gina, Porco's former lover, in the film, is a famous Japanese singer.
  • In the French dub of the film, the role of Porco was voiced by French actor Jean Reno. In the film that made him famous, 'Léon' (1994), Reno’s character says, 'Pigs are better than people.'
  • The scene with the deceased pilots was taken from Roald Dahl’s story 'They Never Grow Old'.
  • The original mentions an engine from "Folgore", but at the time of the film's events, neither the aircraft nor the engine could have existed.
  • The film was based on Miyazaki's manga 'Hikoutei Jidai' (The Age of Hydroplanes) [1990]. However, the manga contained almost no mention of fascists or the love story between Porco and Gina.
  • ‘Porco Rosso’ was originally planned as a 30-45 minute film for screening on board aircraft of ‘Japan Airlines’.
  • In the film, Marco Pagot travels to Milan to assemble an airplane and discovers that only women are working at the factory. When he asks why, he is told that all the men have gone to work due to the ‘Great Depression’. In reality, preparations for military and colonial expansion allowed Italy to exit the ‘Great Depression’ of the 1930s with minimal losses.
  • The Japanese title of the film translates as ‘Crimson Pig’. However, Miyazaki recommended that foreign translators use the Italian version of the title. Crimson is the color of Porco’s seaplane.
  • Porco transforms into a pig specifically because Miyazaki himself adores pigs. He likes to depict himself as a pig and believes that “every man, upon reaching middle age, turns into a pig.”
  • The seaplanes featured in the film actually existed, although Miyazaki slightly modified the design of most of them. Schneider Trophy seaplane races also existed. What didn’t exist was an “industry” of air piracy (although individual instances of such things are known in the history of aeronautics).
  • In the French dub of the film, the role of Porco was voiced by the French actor Jean Reno. In the film that made him famous, “Léon” (1994), Reno’s character says, “Pigs are better than people.”
  • The scene with the deceased pilots is borrowed from Roald Dahl’s story “They Never Grow Old.”
  • The original mentions an engine from a “Folgore,” but at the time of the film’s events, neither that aircraft nor the engine could have existed.
Did you like the film?

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