Porco Rosso Italian Dub (PLUS)
While Studio Ghibli dubs are generally celebrated worldwide, the is considered by purists and critics alike to be a unicorn . It is one of the very few instances where the Italian voice cast is frequently argued to be superior to the original Japanese audio. But how did a story about a depressed, flying pig become the quintessential Italian film? The Adriatic Setting: A Love Letter to Italy First, we must remember that Porco Rosso is set almost entirely in Italy. Specifically, the Adriatic Sea during the interwar period (late 1920s). The locations—the hidden coves of Dalmatia, the lagoon of Venice, the island of Burano—are not backdrops; they are characters.
Fio is the energetic 17-year-old mechanic who saves Porco’s plane. In the Japanese version, she is cute. In the Italian version, she is fiercely pragmatic. Stagni gives Fio a Roman accent that implies street-smart intelligence. When she yells at Porco to fix his engine, she sounds like a determined nonna rather than a damsel. porco rosso italian dub
This is the secret weapon. Gina sings "Le Temps des Cerises" (a revolutionary French song) and runs a hidden garden hotel. Melina Martello’s voice is husky, mature, and deeply sad. The Italian script leans heavily into the Sofferenza (suffering) of Gina—a woman who has lost three pilots to the sky. Martello’s delivery of the line "Vai, stupido, vai!" (Go, you idiot, go!) at the climax is arguably the most emotionally devastating moment in any Ghibli dub. Translation Choices: Adding "Italianità" The Japanese script is direct. The Italian script is flavored . While Studio Ghibli dubs are generally celebrated worldwide,
Michele Kalamera did not live to see the film’s 40th anniversary, but his voice remains etched into the memory of Italian cinephiles. Every time a seaplane flies low over the Venetian lagoon, Italians don’t hear Japanese or English. They hear the raspy, tired, heroic voice of a pig who would rather be free than conform. The Adriatic Setting: A Love Letter to Italy
