zarifes@bnrmtv.UUCP (Kenneth Zarifes) (03/19/86)
I am posting this for a friend. ******************************** I read Wendi Li's review of the English Nausicaa. It was very good, although I disagree on one point. Some of the edited scenes were actually significant to the original plot. The scene in Nausicaa's garden room demonstrated that the plants from the "Toxic Jungle" were not inherently poisionous. All the plants came from the jungle, but they were grown in clean sand taken from the bottom of wells, using well water. As a result, they did not give off poison spores. Nausicaa's conclusion was that the soil of the Valley of the Wind was contaminated, and was the cause of the illness which afflicted her father and others. In the scene underneath the "Toxic Jungle", Nausicaa listened against a petrified tree, and heared the sound of water flowing through it. She then sees sand falling down through the roof. When she examines the particles, she crunchs one clump in her fingers. She realizes that the same type of clumps are found at the bottom of the wells in the Valley of the Wind, their source of uncontaminated water. The reason the air and water are clean in that section of the Jungle is because the Jungle plants actually purify the air, soil, and water of the earth. Ultimatly, human survival depends on the Jungle, because that is what purifies the water found in wells. Later, when she get's captured by Asubel's (Milo) father, she tries to convince him that his plan to attack the Jungle using the Fire Demon is suicidal. Steven Barnes -- {hplabs,amdahl,3comvax}!bnrmtv!zarifes --Ken Zarifes