ReportWire

Tag: Tokyo Film Festival 2025

  • Tokyo: Yoji Yamada and Lee Sang-il Talk Japanese Cinema, Craft and Following Anime’s Global Success

    [ad_1]

    Two generational talents of Japanese cinema shared the stage to discuss each other’s work at Tokyo International Film Festival, where each has been celebrated with an award. Yōji Yamada, 91, has more than 90 directing credits to his name, while Lee Sang-il’s Kokuho is the biggest Japanese live-action box office hit in decades, having passed 16 billion yen ($105 million), and is Japan’s entry for the best international film Oscar.

    Mutual respect was more than evident, and the conversation flowed through analysis of their craft to gentle teasing, mostly from Yamada, at the standing-room only event.

    The veteran director was the first recipient of the festival’s Akira Kurosawa Award in 2004, along with Steven Spielberg. This year, it was Lee’s turn to receive it, with Yamada given the Lifetime Achievement Award the previous day.

    “They’ve introduced our films side by side, but compared with his grand epic, mine feels like quite a lightweight. I’m almost embarrassed to see them together,” said Yamada of his Tokyo Taxi, his reimagining of Christian Carion’s Driving Madeliene (2022).

    Lee, whose film Kokuho translates as national treasure, replied: “If there is such a thing as a living national treasure in filmmaking, Yamada-sensei is definitely one. I just hope to absorb even a little of his dedication.”

    Though there was a moderator on stage, Yamada effectively took his role for the opening stretch of the talk, asking questioning Lee on how he had portrayed Japan’s traditional kabuki theater, and the human drama between two of its practitioners, so vividly and convincingly onscreen.  

    Yamada began by probing into the “dramatic structure” of Kokuho, the story of two kabuki actors whose lives are bound by artistry, desire, and fate.

    “Usually, when you have two male leads, a woman is between them in some sort of triangle. But here, something entirely different lies between them: homosexuality. It’s this irrational romantic force that becomes the very theme of the story. That’s what makes this film extraordinary,” said Yamada.

    That dynamic tension had been created by Shuichi Yoshida, the author of the 2018 novel on which the film is based, noted Lee. The director previously adapted Yoshida’s Akunin (Villain) in 2010 and Ikari (Rage) in 2016, both to acclaim.

    “The tension between bloodline and sexuality creates a fascinating duality. I didn’t want jealousy or rivalry like in Amadeus. Since both men devote themselves to the same suffering, I hoped a kind of transcendent beauty would emerge by the end,” explained Lee.

    For Yamada, that avoidance of conventional melodrama was one of the keys to the film’s power.

    The two leads trained for about a year and a half in total to portray the male kabuki performers of female roles, known as onnagata, noted Lee: “They even practiced on days off during shooting. Their persistence and dedication were incredible.”

    Tanaka Min, who plays the elderly kabuki master in Kokuho, was cast in his first major film role by Yamada in The Twilight Samurai in 2002 (the film won a record 12 Japan Academy Awards and was nominated for the then best foreign language film Oscar).

    “He’s a butoh dancer [postwar avant-garde theater] not an actor, and at first he was terrible,” laughed Yamada. “Completely wooden. But his physicality and voice had such presence that it didn’t matter. Even now he hasn’t really ‘improved’, but that’s what makes him special, like a Noh actor. You don’t need him to act; his just being there is enough.”

    Pushing back against Yamada’s playful ribbing about his reputation as a demanding director, Lee said, “That presence, combined with his movement, gives him a kind of magic. I wasn’t harsh in directing him. He doesn’t change no matter what you say, so instead of forcing it, I’d suggest small adjustments in tone or gesture. His stillness speaks volumes.”

    Aside from its setting in the niche world of highbrow traditional theater, another reason Kokuho’s commercial success has been a surprise is its nearly three-hour runtime. Lee revealed that his initial cut was actually four and a half hours. “All the kabuki scenes were about twice as long; That alone was an extra half hour; we had to trim a lot.”

    Despite Yamada’s best efforts, after an offstage prompt, talk turned to Tokyo Taxi, and how he approached the remake.

    “I simply asked myself, if it were Japan, how would it go? A Japanese taxi driver and an elderly Japanese woman, their relationship would of course be different,” said Yamada.

    Scenes with the taxi driver (Takuya Kimura) at home with his family, which were not part of the original, were singled out for praise by Lee for adding domestic realism.

    “I really wanted to make that breakfast scene,” said Yamada. “The year before, he [Kimura] played a top Paris-trained chef. This time, he’s eating natto [fermented soybeans]. But he’s very earnest and sincere. Always early on set: a true professional.”

    Next it was time for Lee to tease Yamada, asking why he always stands right beside the “Because the actors need to know I’m watching,” replied Yamada. “They can feel the director’s gaze. I don’t understand how some directors give directions from a monitor, sometimes from another room.”
    camera on set.

    Smiling as he did so, Yamada steered the conversation back to Kokuho, asking Lee about the numbers of extras in the kabuki scenes (500), and how he had broken multiple cinematic conventions in creating his tour de force.

    Answering an audience question about the potential for Japanese live-action filmmaking to emulate the international success of anime, Yamada made an impassioned plea for more government backing.

    “Japanese animation is a huge global success, while our live-action films barely register. When I entered the industry 70 years ago, Japanese cinema was vibrant and internationally respected — Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, Ozu’s Tokyo Story, Mizoguchi’s Ugetsu. Now, Korea and China have surged ahead. It’s painful to watch,” Yamada said. “We need not just filmmakers’ effort but national support. The Korean government truly backs its film industry. Japan should do the same. It’s a matter of cultural policy.”

    [ad_2]

    Gavin Blair

    Source link

  • Tokyo: ‘Shogun’ Star Takehiro Hira Honored With The Hollywood Reporter’s Trailblazer Award

    [ad_1]

    Takehiro Hira‘s late career success streak continued on Tuesday night in Tokyo, as the in-demand Japanese actor was awarded The Hollywood Reporter‘s Trailblazer Award at a swanky gala event held at the sky-high Roppongi Hills Club.

    The American Film Night event, a collaboration between THR and the Motion Picture Association, took place during the Tokyo International Film Festival on a night the city was dealing with the traffic and security crunch of Donald Trump’s state visit to Japan. Away from the closed roads and police checkpoints of central Tokyo, guests, including Hollywood talent and executives, as well as local power brokers, found respite on the 51st floor of the Roppongi Hills Club with stunning nighttime views of the city.

    Receiving his award from THR‘s Asia bureau chief Patrick Brzeski and MPA APAC president and managing director Urmila Venugopalan, Hira follows Shogun co-star Tadanobu Asano as a recipient of the coveted THR Trailblazer Award, and becomes the second Japanese honoree. THR‘s Trailblazer Award is given to artists whose work and careers illuminate stories and characters who have been traditionally marginalized in Hollywood.

    Takehiro Hira and MPA APAC president and managing director Urmila Venugopalan.

    MPA

    A well-deserved honoree, Hira was recognized for a career that took an unorthodox and circuitous route to success. Born in Japan, but raised in the U.S. from his teenage years onwards, Hira followed his father Mikijirō Hira into acting. After minor parts in Japanese dramas, Hira came to prominence in recent years with roles in prestige Hollywood projects including Giri/Haji, The Swarm, Monarch: Legacy of Monsters, Captain America: Brave New World, and of course FX’s critical smash hit Shogun. Among the deluge of Emmy nominations that Shogun received in 2024, Hira was nominated in the best supporting actor in a drama series category. Most recently, Hira stars in Hikari’s feature Rental Family, a buzzy dramedy starring Oscar-winner Brendan Fraser that is attracting awards talk.

    Speaking to THR at the event, Hira discussed what it meant to him to receive the Trailblazer Award, and how his career reflected his commitment to taking a different path. “Well, I made a decision to sort of quit Japan [a few years ago], and make a full commitment to working in Hollywood. Back then, people weren’t very supportive, but I believed in my choices. So it really means a lot to me to get this recognition, as it wasn’t always easy,” Hira said.

    He added, “When I made that transition to Hollywood, we had COVID and the strikes, so just getting a job or an audition in Hollywood was not easy. I never really imagined how this would snowball into something like this. I feel very lucky.”

    From left: Paul Schrader, Alan Poul and THR’s Asia bureau chief Patrick Brzeski.

    Abid Rahman

    Also among the attendees at Tuesday night’s event were Elvis producer and longtime Baz Luhrmann collaborator Schuyler Weiss, Shogun producer Eriko Miyagawa, Alien Earth producer Apinat Obb Siricharoenjit, legendary filmmaker Paul Schrader, veteran producer Alan Poul and up-and-coming filmmaker and model Hailey Gates, whose film Atropia is showing in Tokyo festival’s main competition. Japanese stars Hideaki Itō (Last Samurai Standing, Tokyo Vice) and Sho Kasamatsu (Gannibal, Tokyo Vice) were also there.

    Among the many entertainment industry executives in attendance were TIFFCOM CEO Yasushi Shiina; Yoshishige Shimatani, MPA Japan chairperson and former president of Toho; Tamotsu Hiiro, Disney’s managing director of Japan; Gaku Narita, Disney’s executive director of original content in Japan; and Andrew Ure, Netflix’s vp of global affairs in APAC.

    Japan’s minister for internal affairs and communications Yoshimasa Hayashi and the country’s former justice minister Takashi Yamashita were among the prominent local political representation. In his remarks, Hayashi said, “I’ve only been internal affairs and communications minister for about a week but have been chair of the parliamentary group for promoting film and content for two decades. The Japanese content business has been growing robustly and has now overtaken the [domestic] semiconductor industry.”

    From left: ‘Elvis’ producer Schuyler Weiss; Takehiro Hira; MPA APAC president and managing director Urmila Venugopalan; Japan’s minister for internal affairs and communications Yoshimasa Hayashi; chairperson of the cabinet committee Takashi Yamashita; secretary general of the digital content strategy subcommittee, Liberal Democratic Party, Taro Yamada; and chairperson MPA Japan Yoshishige Shimatani.

    MPA

    [ad_2]

    Abid Rahman

    Source link

  • TIFFCOM: Korean Action-Comedy ‘Boss’ Sells Across Asia

    [ad_1]

    Seoul-based sales outfit Finecut has inked a series of international distribution deals across Asia for Korean action-comedy Boss ahead of the TIFFCOM content market in Tokyo.

    The hit film, currently Korea’s fifth-biggest title of 2025, has sold to Japan (KDDI), Taiwan (Cai Chang International), Cambodia (Abnormal Studios), India (Star Entertainment), Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore (Clover Films), Mongolia (Izagur Media LLC) and Vietnam (Khang Media).

    The film premiered at the Busan International Film Festival in September ahead of its commercial release in South Korea on Oct. 3. It has earned $15.8 million to date, according to the Korean Film Council. It also received a limited release in North America — courtesy of 213 Pictures & Media — on Oct. 17.

    Boss centers on a power struggle inside a small-time gangster crew, where two reluctant underlings are thrust into a battle for a leadership role they don’t want — while a third, overeager contender schemes for the top job that no one will give him. The ensemble cast includes Jo Woo-jin (Harbin, Hard Hit), Jung Kyung-ho (Men of Plastic, Hospital Playlist), Park Ji-hwan (The Roundup franchise), Lee Kyoo-hyung (Prison Playbook) and Lee Sung-min (No Other Choice, Handsome Guys). The film is directed by Ra Hee-chan (Mr. Idol) and produced by Hive Media Corp — the banner behind 12.12: The Day, Handsome Guys and Harbin — in association with Mindmark Inc.

    The deals were unveiled Monday ahead of the upcoming TIFFCOM content market in Tokyo, where Finecut will be an active presence. Running Oct. 29–31 at the Tokyo Metropolitan Industrial Trade Center, this year’s TIFFCOM is leaning into dealmaking and business-development discussions with some 20 seminars covering topics from IP adaptation and the global surge of Japanese animation to co-production playbooks for China and other growth territories. The market is also introducing the TGFM Awards, a new set of industry honors taking place Oct. 31 at Tokyo Midtown Hibiya to support projects seeking gap financing.

    [ad_2]

    Patrick Brzeski

    Source link

  • Carlo Chatrian Named Jury President at Tokyo Film Festival

    [ad_1]

    Carlo Chatrian will serve as the president of the international competition jury at the 38th Tokyo International Film Festival, organizers announced on Thursday.

    An Italian journalist, author and programmer, Chatrian has worked as a film critic for several magazines. He has been a programmer for the Alba Film Festival, Florence Festival dei Popoli and Visions du Réel. In 2009, he curated a program on Japanese animation, including a book, a retrospective and an exhibition. And he was the artistic director at the Locarno International Film Festival (2013-2018) and the Berlinale (2020-2024).

    Chatrian’s writings include works on filmmakers Frederick Wiseman, Errol Morris and Nanni Moretti, and a column for Italian newspaper, La Stampa. He is currently the director of the National Museum of Cinema in Turin and is a member of both the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and the Academy of Italian Cinema.

    “It is a great privilege to chair the jury of the Tokyo International Film Festival, an event that, especially under the new direction, has become a vital meeting point for the art of cinema at a global level,” Chatrian said in a statement. “I thank the Chairman Ando-san and the Programming Director Ichiyama-san for giving me this opportunity. I’m looking forward to discovering the selection, as I’m sure I will be inspired and touched by the work of the filmmakers. I’m equally excited to know my fellow jurors and start engaging with them in rich and nourishing conversations.”

    Ando Hiroyasu, chairman of TIFF, added in a statement, “Mr. Chatrian has extensive experience both as a film critic and as a director of prestigious film festivals like Locarno and Berlin. He most recently participated in the Tokyo International Film Festival in 2021 and 2023, giving us the privilege of witnessing his keen insight and unwavering passion for cinema firsthand. Amid a period of profound global transformation, we are truly looking forward to the insights he will bring through his role as a jury president.”

    The 2025 Tokyo Film Festival runs from Oct. 27 through to Nov. 5.

    [ad_2]

    Abid Rahman

    Source link