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Millennium Actress (2003)
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Reviews Counted:47
Fresh:44
Rotten:3
Average Rating:7.5/10
Consensus: The story of an aging movie actress' complicated personal saga unfolds in this sophisticated anime film that deftly blurs memory and make-believe into a meditation on the nature of cinema itself.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for thematic elements, violence and brief mild language
Runtime: 87 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Sep 12, 2003 Limited
Synopsis: Chiyoko Fujiwara was once a major movie star who dominated the Japanese cinema world. Thirty years ago, she abruptly disappeared from the screen and from public view. One of her greatest admirers,... Chiyoko Fujiwara was once a major movie star who dominated the Japanese cinema world. Thirty years ago, she abruptly disappeared from the screen and from public view. One of her greatest admirers, Genya Tachibana, is a documentary filmmaker who has traveled to the isolated mountain lodge where she makes her home to interview her. There, he presents her with an old key, and as if the key had opened a door to her memories, Chiyoko starts telling the story of her life, interweaving moments from her past and future and passing through the boundary between reality and the movies that had made up so much of her life. As her story unfolds, Chiyoko seems to transcend time and space, traveling freely through the corridors of fictional movies and reality. Chiyoko was born when the Great Earthquake hit Tokyo in 1923, as war is looming in Imperial Japan. At a very young age, she is discovered as an actress, and soon becomes one of Japan’s most popular stars. Over the course of her career, her movies and her roles encompass all the epochs of Japanese history, bringing her and her audience back more than five hundred years, and then moving chronologically through the centuries to the present and beyond. Chiyoko’s first major role finds her in the Warring States Period of the 15th and 16th centuries, where we see her as a princess in a burning castle tower. Her movies swiftly carry her into the Edo Period (1603 – 1868), when the Shogun ruled the country. In one moment, she is portraying a ninja fighting against samurais, but another role transforms her into an innocent local girl who confronts a group of elite samurai guards. She runs away, only to find herself being arrested in a scene set against the backdrop of Japan’s Meiji Period (1868 – 1912), at the dawn of a new era when the power of the Emperor was restored. Chiyoko escapes, but in her next movie, we find her in the pre-World War II and war-torn decades of the Showa Period (1912 – 1945). As Chiyoko chronicles her life and career, we come to learn that not only was Chiyoko an icon of the Japanese cinema, but her roles also represented feminine icons of Japanese history. Through each role and in every era, Chiyoko has only one wish—to see her first love, an injured artist and painter she had helped escape from government authorities as a girl. Chiyoko risks everything to hide the mysterious stranger in her storage house. Before she can learn his identity and mission, however, he leaves her…but not before he presents her with the all-important key. From that moment on, she determinedly keeps running—in real life, and in her movies—believing that they will meet again and she will learn the true meaning of the key. As her identity changes with each movie role, so does that of her true love. Yet Chiyoko keeps running after him through the passages of time. Wherever she goes, she also must battle her enemies: a man with a scar and a rival actress, both of whom continue to change their appearances according to the time periods and settings of the movies that make up Chiyoko’s life. The two filmmakers, Genya Tachibana and his cameraman Kyoji Ida, become so immersed in Chiyoko’s story that they are amazed to find themselves actually witnessing the events as she describes them. To the astonishment of his cameraman, Tachibana is not only present, but has become a character in her movies, appearing to rescue her whenever she is in danger. Chiyoko keeps running through the centuries in pursuit of the "love of her life," as if she had lived for 1000 years. In what appears to be her final role, seemingly in the future, she rockets to the moon, leaving us to wonder what adventures await her there. -- © Go Fish Pictures [More]
Starring: Miyoko Shoji, Mami Koyama, Fumiko Orikasa, Shozo Iizuka
Starring: Miyoko Shoji, Mami Koyama, Fumiko Orikasa, Shozo Iizuka, Masaya Onosaka
Director: Satoshi Kon
Director: Satoshi Kon
Screenwriter: Sadayuki Murai
Producer: Taro Maki
Composer: Susumu Hirasawa
Studio: Go Fish Pictures
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Reviews for Millennium Actress
Paints a vivid portrait, blending pathos and unrequited love with a rich collage of Japanese history
Like Perfect Blue, Millennium Actress is about living with ghosts, but where the one is all shadow, Millennium Actress is all alight.
Millennium Actress has more layers to it than the proverbial onion, but Kon's sure hand keeps things moving right along.
Fails in one critical component: We are never made to care about the main character.
Given its complex array of fact, fiction, location, character and atmosphere, Millennium Actress is almost unimaginable in any other medium.
... Japan has always been more open to the possibilities of the medium to tell sophisticated, mature stories; and this is both, in the best sense of the definition.
Unusual but woozily fascinating...if Kon's picture may not be a model of narrative coherence, it offers as compensation a large number of magical moments.
This somewhat surreal animé import is unlikely to earn the same mainstream recognition as last year's Spirited Away, but it's certainly worth a look.
The animation may not be as breathtaking as we have seen in other anime movies, but what it lacks in visual style it makes up for with a good story.
Anime has never been my cup of oolong. Or it wasn't until Satoshi Kon's bold, time-traveling sophomore feature, Millennium Actress.
[It] would deserve credit for being more thematically ambitious than the average animated film if it incorporated those themes with any aplomb.
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