Tokyo International Film Festival pushes for Japanese film to be cool again

27th Tokyo International Film Festival aims to help restore Japan as a leader in cinematic works

Director-actor Takeshi “Beat” Kitano (above) on Japanese films of today. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCEPRESSE
Director-actor Takeshi “Beat” Kitano (above) on Japanese films of today. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCEPRESSE
Actors in body suits of characters from The Ultraman, one of the highlights at the Tokyo film festival. The event opened with Disney animated feature Big Hero 6 (above). -- PHOTO: WALT DISNEY PICTURES
Actors in body suits of characters (above) from The Ultraman, one of the highlights at the Tokyo film festival. The event opened with Disney animated feature Big Hero 6. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCEPRESSE

Japan used to be an Asian movie powerhouse but these days, its position as the setter of trends in film and fashion is now far behind that of its neighbour, South Korea.

Just as K-pop and K-drama have pushed out J-offerings in the region on radio and television, in film, Hayao Miyazaki (My Neighbour Totoro, 1988) and Takashi Miike (Thirteen Assassins, 2009) have given way to Park Chan Wook (Oldboy, 2003) and Bong Joon Ho (Memories Of Murder, 2003).

The 27th Tokyo International Film Festival is a key move in a bold, US$500-million (S$638-million) push called Cool Japan, launched last year to restore the country's status as a leader in film.

More than 100 journalists were flown in, courtesy of the Cool Japan plan, to attend the festival, taking place mostly in the upscale Roppongi Hills area of Tokyo.

Last Thursday, its opening movie was the world premiere of a hotly anticipated Disney animated feature Big Hero 6. The festival will end on Friday.

On the red carpet was Prime Minister Shinzo Abe shaking hands with John Lasseter, Big Hero 6's executive producer and chief creative officer at Pixar and Walt Disney Animation.

Two key components of the big push forward are animation and video games.

The Ultraman and robot-wars Evangelion anime of Hideaki Anno and a series of short films-based games from Super Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto are highlights at this year's festival. There was also a cosplay event yesterday.

Last Friday, Lasseter gave a seminar about how Japanese animation, in particular the work of Miyazaki and his Studio Ghibli company, has been a deep influence in his life.

One Singapore film, As You Were, from director Liao Jiekai of the 13 Little Pictures film collective, was selected for the festival's Asian Futures section.

An impressionistic drama about lovers spending their final moments together, it is making its world debut and will be competing with nine other films by young Asian film-makers for a prize.

Singapore film-maker Eric Khoo is on the six-member International Competi- tion Jury, which is headed by James Gunn, director of this year's Hollywood blockbuster hit Guardians Of The Galaxy.

But for Japan, coming back to the forefront will be hard. At a talk last Saturday, a student participant asked about the chance of Japanese films making a resurgence.

Speaker Takeshi "Beat" Kitano, creator of a series of hard-boiled yakuza movies known around the world, was characteristically blunt.

The Japanese film industry, he said, was hobbled by the fear of risk and prefers to stick to a business model that stifles change.

He advised young Japanese film-makers to stick to independently made works if they want to remain creatively free.

Japanese films today rely too heavily on brand-name manga (comics) or novels for source material, he said.

"There are now fewer Japanese films based on original stories. The movie studios don't have the courage to pay an unknown screenwriter.

"That is the business, we have no choice."

johnlui@sph.com.sg

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