Showing posts with label puppet animation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label puppet animation. Show all posts

02 June 2020

Watch: White Road (白の路, 2003)




Tomoyasu Murata (村田朋泰) has made his early independent film White Road (白の路 / Shiro no michi, 2003) available on YouTube for the first time.  It is one of a series of short puppet animations with a pianist as the main protagonist. White Road brought Murata’s work to a wider audience in East Asia because it was re-edited and used as a music video for popular J-Pop band Mr. Children’s 2004 song Hero. Images from other animated films by Murata were projected onto screens during Mr. Children’s 2004 Shufuku no Oto tour.

 

Memories of a boy and a girl. Even now, as an adult, I can't forget the memories and wistful pain. Like running through a white landscape forever.
男の子と女の子が短い秋に過ごした思い出。大人になったいまでも、忘れない記憶と切ない痛み。男は少年だったころの路を辿る。どこまでも真っ白な景色を駆けていくように。  

The film has an elegiac tone.  Instead of dialogue or narration, the story is told through character expression, puppet movement, sentimental music, foley effects (wind, the crunching of snow), silence and expressive use of colour.  The predominant colour of the film is indeed the white of the title, but it is complemented by the use of blue light, which adds to the melancholy atmosphere.

White Road shows the nameless pianist returning to his rural childhood home in the winter. He is haunted by the memories of a young girl who had been his playmate and the puppy that they loved but died, possibly due to their unwitting neglect. The pianist’s memories are evoked through flashbacks that sometimes involve him sharing the screen with his younger self. Particularly poignant is the scene in which he mourns the puppy and an adult ghost of the dog looks on as if forgiving him for his childhood mistake. We are also invited to share in the pianist’s grief for his lost childhood friend, who moved away with her family.

For more information about the director see: https://www.tomoyasu.net/
Follow Murata's production company on twitter: @TMC_STAFF

2020 Catherine Munroe Hotes

22 February 2019

Tomoyasu Murata: Stop Motion Master




Tomoyasu Murata: Stop Motion Master
Saturday, February 23, 3 PM, 5 PM and 7 PM

Japan Society
333 East 47th Street
New York, NY 10017
https://www.japansociety.org/event/tomoyasu-murata-stop-motion-master

SPECIAL SCREENING
North American Premiere

One of Japan's most prolific independent animation artists, Tomoyasu Murata (村田朋泰, b. 1974) has created breath-taking, boundary-breaking stop motion animated films over the last two decades. Initially inspired by the expressive power of traditional Japanese bunraku puppet theatre, Murata's films — at once tender, whimsical and mysterious — deal with themes of memory, absence and mujo (the Buddhist concept of impermanence) through the cinematic manipulation of his meticulously handcrafted puppets and fantastical miniature sets. The eight short films in this program range from the artist's award-winning student work to recent projects that respond to the Great East Japan Earthquake.

All films written, directed and animated by Tomoyasu Murata.

Nostalgia
睡蓮の人
Suiren no Hito
2000 / 16’

In Murata’s award-winning thesis work, which mourns the loss of a loved one, an elderly man’s daily routine is interrupted by a rediscovered fragment of a precious memory.




The Scarlet Road
朱の路
Ake no Michi
2002 / 14’

Part of Murata’s “Road” series, a sorrowful pianist on a journey meets a girl who gives him a vermillion flower in a tunnel connecting them to a world beyond.




Family Deck (Vol. 1, 5, 6)
家族デッキ
Kazoku Dekki
2007 / 15’

The Seven Lucky Gods (or kami, meaning both "hair" and "gods") live in the Takada’s barber shop in Tokyo—a set based on a real-life now-lost local store close to Murata’s heart—where they play charming tricks on the family of four.



Forest this Flower Blooms
木ノ花ノ咲クヤ森
Ki-no Hana-no Sakuya Mori
2015 / 11’

In the first episode in a series of films centred on The Great East Japan Earthquake, an amnesiac wolf traces his past and escapes from hunters who are after him in an eerily beautiful moonscape.

Ametsuchi
天地
Ametsuchi
2016 / 11’

The island repeats volcanic eruption after earthquake, smoke and glowing heat bubbling from the morphing surface—but when the tectonic activity recedes, all is sand and, finally, the miracle of water flowing, of life.

A Branch of a Pine is Tied Up
松が枝を結び
Matsuga Edawo Musubi
2017 / 17’

Twins are separated by the destructive earthquake and tsunami that ravaged Japan's Tohoku region in 2011, but with a swirling snow globe, they traverse the present and the past, the living and the dead: reconciling, remembering, and restoring.




22 May 2018

Tokyo University of the Arts Animation at Nippon Connection 2018




A selection of works by the latest cohort of graduates from Tokyo University of the Arts’ (Geidai) MA in Animation will once again screen at Nippon Connection.  The works will be presented by Yuichi Matsumoto (松本祐一 , b. 1975 / twitter)  assistant professor in the Geidai Graduate School of Film and New Media.  Matsumoto is a sound programmer and composer who has collaborated with other artists and musicians such as Masato Hatanaka.  Born in Yokohama, Matsumoto started off in the field of power electronics research and development with a degree from Ibaraki University, but he later studied music composition at IAMAS (International Academy of Media Art and Science) under the tutelage of Kazuko Hayakawa and Masahiro Mina.  Matsumoto won the top award at the Toru Takemitsu Composition Awards in 2008 for his work What do you think about the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki?  The competition judge that year was the American composer Steve Reich 

Matsumoto is known from his Enquête-Art / アンケート・アート (Questionnaire or Survey Art) in which he uses surveys to gather opinions from many people and then presents the results in a musical work.  You can learn more on his website: enquete-art  or his  YouTube channel.   In addition to presenting this programme of Geidai graduate works, Matsumoto will host a workshop for kids called Paint Your Own Music where children can use a device that he invested to covert their drawings into music.  Learn more here.   

Here are the graduate films that will appear at Nippon Connection.  The descriptions are those of the artists themselves with minor spelling and grammar revisions for clarity:

A4 Microcosm
by Haruka SHIMIZU / 清水はるか, 2018, 2:22 min.
“Microorganisms increase, gather and change to a A4 paper. You [can] feel. . . sign[s] of life [on] the paper.”


FLUFFICTION
モフモフィクション / Mofumo Fikushon
by Yoshiki IMAZU / 今津良樹, 2018, 6:40 min.
“Discover [a] world populated by.  .  . mysteriously charming imaginary creatures. They have adorably fluffy bodies and are becoming an ever more common sight in daily life.”


Live or Let Live
花とラルバ / Hana to Rabuba
by Yoko ASANO / 浅野陽子, 2018, 8:48 min.
“There's a pet caterpillar named Larva in my class. I don't like bugs but Larva is sweet and we become friends. But one day, I am faced with a horrible choice.”


Dance to Life
毎日は踊りたいことだらけ / Mainichi wa Odoritai koto darake
by Haruka HIRAMATSU / 平松悠, 2018, 2:22 min.
“For her, dance is life.  And life is dance.  Every tingle in her heart gets her swinging to the beat.”


The Red Bridge is Falling Down
あかばしは落ちた / Akabashi wa Ochita
by Daiki MORINAGA / 森永大貴, 2018, 7:28 min.
“Everyone crosses the Red Bridge and yet no one likes him. One day, he falls into the deep valley.”


today plus one
あしたから / ashita kara
by Yumeno HASHI / 星夢乃, 2018, 2:04 min.
“We go to sleep in hopes [of] a better tomorrow. The moment of truth nears as our eyes slowly open to the new day...”


Typhoon No.14
たいふう14ごう / Taifū 14 Gō
by Akino FUKUJI / 福地明乃, 2018, 6:56 min.
“Okinawa [feels] ominous right before the arrival of a typhoon. At first, Anri is excited by the unusual turn of events, but gradually she becomes fearful of the threatening typhoon. Then, her big sister tells her that typhoons have an eye...”


The Body Swap Center
性格変更スクール / Seikaku Henkō Sukūru
by Kazuki SEKIGUCHI / 関口和希, 2018, 8:35 min.
“Mimi is fed up with her pathetic self. One day she walks along looking at the ground like usual when she notices a suspicious flyer.”


The Pearl Remains
真珠草 / Shunju kusa
by Suyo YAMAZAKI / 山崎スヨ, 2018, 2:37 min.
“A woman traces her memories through a pearl ring and comes upon her mother gazing at the same ring. But her memories soon lose their outline and become enclosed within the pearl.”


Jinxes
わたしルール / Watashi Rūru
by Yuki MAEHATA / 前畑侑紀, 2018, 2:47 min.
“A girl heading home from school is met with a bigger version of herself [posing] arbitrary challenges with unspeakable consequences. The little girl tries to keep up but suddenly the stakes are raised.”


gals
女友だち / Onna tomodachi
by Caori MURATA / 村田香織, 2018, 2:10 min.
“Reminiscing [about] the days I spent with an old friend, facing up to the narrow but deep gap that lies between us.”


fruits
くだもの / kudamono
by Takahiro SHIBATA / しばたたかひろ, 2018, 2:23 min.
“At some point, children diverge from the ideal path set forth for them by adults. The trigger is usually a trivial incident.”


Take Me Home
by Nozomi KOYASU / 子安のぞみ, 2018, 5:37 min.
“Brothers eating dinner, a girl watering the plants, a boy awakening in the night… daily scenery from the house where they all lived at one point or another.”


Quest of the Battling Gods
怪獣神話 / Kaijū Shinwa
by Yosuke TANI / 谷耀介, 2018, 13:18 min.
“In the moments before death, one of the Battling Gods recalls his defeat in a magnificent fight. That battle transcended meta worlds, time and parallel universes as the Battling God faced off with another of his kind. All living creatures celebrate their fight with cries of joy.”


Date and Location:
Saturday, June 2, 17:30 Naxoshalle Kino


Catherine Munroe Hotes

03 August 2017

Geidai Animation: First Year Works 2013 (YouTube Playlist)


This playlist features the first year works by the Geidai (Tokyo University of the Arts) Graduate Animation Class of 2014. To learn more about these young artists, read my overview of the DVD Geidai Animation: 5th Graduate Works 2014 or click on the links below to check out their websites and social media accounts.  Only the trailer to Mari Miyazawa's Twins in the Bakery (2013) is currently available online. Takashi Shibuya and Tsumugi Harunari graduated with the class of 2015




First Year Films
一年次作品2013


A Piece of Green
ひとつのカケラ
Hitsotsu no Kakera
2013 / 05'38"
Kaori Iwase (岩瀬夏緒利, b. 1988)  




Playground
あきちあそび
Akichi-asobi
2013 / 05'09"
Ryōsuke Ōshiro (大城良輔, b. 1988)
twitter / tumblr / vimeo

Tiny Tot Adventures
アカベンチャー 
Aka-benchā
2013 / 06'07" 
Noriko Okamoto (岡本典子, b. 1989)



Do As the Fish Tells You
魚のいうことを聞く
Sakana no iukoto wo Kiku
2013 / 05'28"
Onohana (小野ハナ/Hana Ono, b. 1986) 



I’m Nothing
なんでもない
Nandemonai 
2013 / 04'06"
Ayaho Kawakami (川上彩穂, b. 1989) 



My Frame
私の額縁 
Watashi no Gakubuchi
2013 / 07'29"
Yewon Kim (キム・イェオン, b. 1988)  



Kicking Rocks
石けり
Ishi keri 
2013 / 05'00"
Yūtarō Kubo (久保雄太郎, 1990) 




My Dear Flesh
かみさまのはらわた
Kamisama no Harawata 
2013 / 05'02"
Moe Koyano (小谷野萌, b. 1989)  



SELF Image
自我像
Jigazō  
2013 / 02'38"
Takashi Shibuya (澁谷岳志, b. 1988)


Happy fluffy time
2013 / 05'26"
Kazushige Tōma (当真一茂, b. 1988) 



Ream
Ren 
2013 / 02'51"
Saki Nakano (中野咲, b. 1988) 




cubic centimeter
2013 / 02'48"
Tsumugi Harunari (春成つむぎ, b.1983)


Twins in Bakery
 2013 / 04'55"
Read review of Twins in the Bakery.


Daily Lives at Daisy Lodge
コーポにちにち草のくらし
Kōpo Nichichi Kusa no Kurashi 
2013 / 08'23"
Manami Wakai (若井麻奈美, b. 1989)




Cathy Munroe Hotes 2017