08 September 2011

Films for Hope at the Japan Society



Animation fans in New York City have an amazing opportunity this weekend to see some great animation and at the same time raise money for victims of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. Films for Hope, curated by Justin Leach, is a special showcase of animated short films from all around the world. On September 11th, exactly six months after the disaster that devastated Japan on March 11th, this one-day event brings together thrilling animation that display the creativity of artists inspired by Japanese animation techniques and storytelling.

The festival features the East Coast premiere of Pixar’s latest animated short film, La Luna. Director Enrico Casarosa will be on hand to give a presentation on La Luna, as well as discuss his efforts to help Japan through grassroots fundraising. Dai Sato will present Five Numbers!, his brand new animated feature. Mr. Sato will also talk about his efforts to help those impacted by the earthquake as well as share his thoughts on how the disaster will impact the animation industry of Japan.

This festival is a joint initiative of the Film Program and the U.S.-Japan Innovators Network. 50% of all proceeds will go to Japan Society’s Earthquake Relief Fund. All of the films shown have been graciously donated in support of the project.

Once Upon a Dream: Kids’ Block
Sunday, September 11, 1 PM – 2 PM


Le Royaume by Oussama Bouacheria, Julien Chheng, Sébastien Hary, Aymeric Kevin, Ulysse Malassagne, Franck Monier, Nuno Alves Rodrigues
Mobile by Verena Fels
Happy Bogeys 1 by Takashi Kurihara
Paraphernalia by Sabrina Cotugno
DreamGiver by Tyler Carter
Happy Bogeys 2 by Takashi Kurihara
Burning Safari by Vincent Aupetit, Jeanne Irzenski, Florent De La Taille, Maxime Maleo, Aurelien Predal, Claude-William Trebutien
Salesman Pete by Marc Bouyer, Max Loubaresse, Anthony Vivien
Happy Bogeys 3 by Takashi Kurihara
The Arctic Circle by Kevin Parry
Lizard Planet by Tomoyoshi Joko
Happy Bogeys 4 by Takashi Kurihara
Shell Out by Sunmee Dong
Gulp by Sumo Science (Ed Patterson and Will Studd)
Out of Sight by Yu Ya-Ting

Komaneko: The Curious Cat
Sunday, September 11, 2:30 PM — 3:30 PM


2006, 60 min., 35mm, colour. No dialogue.

From Tsuneo Goda, the director of the Domo-kun series. The stop motion animation is done by Hirokazu Minegishi, who got his start as an assistant to Japan’s top puppet animators Tadanari Okamoto and Kihachiro Kawamoto.

Komaneko spends her days in her attic making films with her handmade dolls, in this puppet animation featuring five short episodes. Komaneko’s pastel hues, kawaii characters and storylines delight both children and adults alike.

Great for kids 2+! All ages welcome.


Sector Animauteurs
Sunday, September 11, 4 PM — 5:15 PM


Fifteen animated short films including Oscar winner La maison en Petits Cubes and Fantoche winner In a Pig’s Eye.

Rain Town by Hiroyasu Ishida
Caffeine by Danae Diaz and Patricia Luna
Happy Bogeys 5 by Takashi Kurihara
In a Pig's Eye by Atsushi Wada
Happy Bogeys 6 by Takashi Kurihara
Paths of Hate by Damian Nenow
Happy Bogeys 7 by Takashi Kurihara
Key Lime Pie by Trevor Jimenez
Kung Fu Cooking Girls by Jin-Roh
Grand Central by Charlotte Cambon, Théo Guignard, Noé Lecombre, Hugo Moreno, Soizic Mouton
Hello Brooklyn by Alice Bissonet, Benjamin Moreau, Corentin Penloup, Marion Roussel, Louis Thomas
Happy Bogeys 8 by Takashi Kurihara
Alma by Rodrigo Blaas
The Lighthouse Keeper by David Francois, Rony Hotin, Jeremie Moreau, Baptiste Rogron, Gaelle Thierry, Mailys Vallade
La Maison en Petits Cubes by Kunio Kato

La Luna and Five Numbers!
Centerpiece Presentation
Sunday, September 11, 5:30 PM — 7 PM


La Luna, 2011 - New York Premiere
6 min. 51 sec., 35 mm, color, Directed by Enrico Casarosa (Pixar)

Five Numbers!, 2011 - U.S. Premiere
24 min., DVD, color, Directed by Hiroaki Ando (Bandai Visual)

La Luna is the timeless fable of a young boy who is coming of age in the most peculiar of circumstances. Tonight is the very first time his Papa and Grandpa are taking him to work. In an old wooden boat they row far out to sea, and with no land in sight, they stop and wait. A big surprise awaits the little boy as he discovers his family's most unusual line of work.

In Five Numbers, four ex-convicts woke up in the ultimate prison. They do not know why they are there. The race to escape the prison ensues. The only person who seems to know the way out is the fifth prisoner, a mysterious old man with a black cat.

Screenings followed by a conversation with Enrico Casarosa (Director / Head of Story, Pixar Animation Studios) on the making of La Luna and Dai Sato (Scriptwriter of Cowboy Bebop, Samurai Champloo, Tekken: Blood Vengeance) to discuss post-3/11 Japan and the anime community.

Followed by a reception.

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TICKETS FOR EACH PROGRAM
$10/$7 Japan Society members, students and seniors

ONE-DAY PASS
$34/$24 Japan Society members, students and seniors
(Offer available only at Japan Society Box Office or by telephone at (212) 715-1258. Offer not available online.)

02 September 2011

A Child’s Metaphysics (こどもの形而上学, 2007)


Koji Yamamura’s playful animated short A Child’s Metaphysics (こどもの形而上学/ Kodomo no Keijijogaku, 2007) is a delightful rumination on what it means to be a child. The film has unjustly received very little critical attention since its release as it was overshadowed by the success of Franz Kafka’s A Country Doctor (2007) – which won Yamamura top awards at almost every international festival in which it competed.

Children are a constant theme in Yamamura’s work. He has made animated shorts for children – such as the Karo and Piyobupt films (1993) – and has illustrated many picture books for kids. He has also done animation workshops with children. His award-winning film Your Choice! (1999) was completed using ideas from “junior directors” at his children’s workshops.

A Child’s Metaphysics concerns itself with the limitless imagination of children – a topic Yamamura has previously taken on with Kid’s Castle (1995) and Bavel’s Book (1996). Against a textured yellow background, an episodic series of surreal vignettes involving children with oversized heads drawn with black ink unfolds. Each short episode concerns itself with the fundamental question of the nature of being. One child’s head is transformed into a giant magnifying glass, another’s head is expanding full of numbers, another holds a watering can over his ear so that a sprout grows out of it, another child catches her own tears in a glass for safekeeping, while yet another child tries to fit a large key into a keyhole on his own head as if trying to unlock the secrets to his own existence. The film is by turns touching and amusing.

The vignettes are all drawn in the same style, often with a theatrical piece of cloth or other theatrical element decorating the scene. They are all tied together by the music of Prokofiev which has been arranged and performed by the microtonal pop duo SYZYGYS (Hitomi Shimizu and Hiromi Nishida).

A Child’s Metaphysics can be seen on film at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography as part of the Muybridge’s Strings Road Show between 17 September and 7 October.

For people not lucky enough to be in Tokyo, it can also be found on KimStim/Zeitgeist’s Franz Kafka’s A Country Doctor and Other Fantastic Films by Koji Yamamura. Please support this independent animator by ordering his work now:

The World of Young Japanese Animation Auteur Tomoyasu Murata (日本を代表する若手アニメーション作家の世界)


K’s Cinema in Shinjuku is running a two-week retrospective of the works of animator Tomoyasu Murata from September 3rd until the 16th. Murata is a prolific animator and artist. One of the top puppet animators of his generation, Murata also experiments with a variety of animation techniques including cutouts, montage, and computer animation. K’s Cinema will be screening three different programs of his animated shorts. Read the profile that I wrote for Midnight Eye to learn more about Tomoyasu Murata. Click on links below to read reviews of the films.  

Murata's works are also available to purchase on his website.



Program A: The Road Series (4 works)



Scarlet Road (朱の路, 2004)
White Road (白の路, 2003)
Indigo Road (藍の路, 2006)
Lemon Road (檸檬の路, 2008)

Program B (5 works)



Handstand Boy, Intently Runs! (さかだちくん、ひたすら走る!, 2004) 
Handstand Boy Goes to the Department Store (さかだちくん、デパートへ行く!, 2009)
Handstand Boy Intently Eats! (さかだちくん、ひたすら喰う!, 2006)
The Deck Family (家族デッキ, 2007)
Born in Arakawa, Name is Tomoyasu Murata (生は荒川、名は村田朋泰, 2006)

Program C (14 works)



Momoiro Ryokan CM (百色旅館 CM 天然色, 2008)
The Star Murata Band (ザ★MURATABAND)
NEWS74
Hantomei no Mimi wo Motsu Shōjo (半透明の耳を持つ少女, 2008) 
The Star Sekai no Subete no Shichigatsu-tachi (ザ★世界のすべての7月たち, 2008) 
Nostalgia (睡蓮の人, 2000)
Memory (オモヒデ, 2001)
Hifukidake (火吹竹, 2004)
Tōryanse (とおりゃん, 2004)
Winter Rainbows (冬の虹, 2005)
Metropolis (2005) 
Ablation/My Pudding (アブレーション/わたしのプティング, 2009) 
♯1
Oyasumi


Schedule on K's Cinema Website.


K’s Cinema Shinjuku (MAP)
東京都新宿区新宿3丁目35-13 3F
TEL:03-3352-2471 FAX:03-3352-2472