Perfect Blue
Perfect Blue | |
---|---|
File:PerfectBlue.jpg | |
Directed by | Satoshi Kon |
Screenplay by | Sadayuki Murai |
Produced by | Hiroaki Inoue |
Starring | Junko Iwao Rica Matsumoto Shinpachi Tsuji Masaaki Ōkura |
Cinematography | Hisao Shirai |
Edited by | Harutoshi Ogata |
Music by | Masahiro Ikumi |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Rex Entertainment |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 81 minutes |
Country | Japan |
Language | Japanese |
Budget | $3.5 million |
Perfect Blue (パーフェクトブルー, Pāfekuto Burū) is a 1997 Japanese animated psychological thriller-horror film directed by Satoshi Kon and written by Sadayuki Murai, based on the novel Perfect Blue: Complete Metamorphosis (パーフェクト・ブルー 完全変態, Pāfekuto Burū: Kanzen Hentai) by Yoshikazu Takeuchi. The film follows Mima Kirigoe, the member of a Japanese pop idol group who decides to retire from music to pursue an acting career. As she becomes a victim of stalking and goes deeper and deeper into her first role, she starts to lose her perception of what is real and what is fiction.
Plot
Mima Kirigoe, the lead singer of the fictional J-pop idol group "CHAM!", decides to leave the group to become an actress, believing that the idol group life is a dead end job. Her first role is in a crime drama series, Double Bind. Some of her fans are upset by her change in career, including a stalker known as "Me-Mania". Shortly after leaving CHAM!, Mima receives an anonymous fax calling her a traitor. She also finds a website called "Mima's Room", which features public diary entries that claim to be written by her that discuss her life in great detail. She brings the site to the attention of her manager, ex-pop star Rumi Hidaka, but is advised to ignore it.
On the set of Double Bind, Mima succeeds in getting a larger part. However, the producers decide to cast her as a rape victim in a strip club. Rumi warns Mima that it will damage her reputation, but Mima accepts the part. The scene traumatizes Mima (as well as Rumi, who leaves the production control room crying), and she increasingly becomes unable to distinguish reality from her work in show business.
Several people involved in creating Double Bind, including the show's writer and photographer, are found murdered. Mima finds evidence that makes her a suspect in those murders, and her increasing mental instability makes her doubt her own innocence. Meanwhile, Me-Mania is constantly shown standing amongst the Double Bind filming crew, and his further obsession is revealed when he is shown receiving emails from Mima's pop idol persona through the Mima's Room website. It is at this point that reality starts breaking down for the viewer as well: in one scene, Mima is revealed by a police psychiatrist to be the split personality delusion of a woman named Yoko Takakura, only for the Double Bind camera crew to yell "Cut"; in another, Me-Mania finally confronts and attempts to rape Mima, stopped only when Mima hits him in the head with a hammer, knocking him unconscious. Rumi finds Mima backstage immediately afterward, and upon both returning to the scene, Me-Mania's blood and body are not found on the now-empty set. This causes Mima to further doubt her perception of reality.
Rumi offers to drive Mima home. Upon arriving, Mima tries to call Mr. Tadokoro, but he doesn't pick up the phone as he has also been murdered, along with Me-Mania. Mima drops the call upon realizing that she is actually in a completely different apartment, decorated to resemble her own pop idol apartment at the beginning of the film. When Mima encounters Rumi, her manager is wearing a replica of Mima's CHAM! costume and, in a psychotic break, fully believes that she the "real Mima"; Rumi is in fact the diarist behind Mima's Room and the one who committed the murders. Rumi is angry that Mima—who has been suffering from folie à deux throughout the film—has been ruining the "real Mima's" reputation and decides to save her pristine pop idol image through murdering the "fake" Mima. After a chase through the city, Mima, despite being wounded herself, manages to incapacitate Rumi in self-defense. Mima then saves Rumi from an oncoming truck, whose headlights she mistakes for stage lights. Both parties collapse as the truck's occupants call for an ambulance.
Mima, now an accomplished actress, shows up at a mental institution to visit Rumi, who still believes herself to be Mima. As Mima leaves, she overhears the nursing staff believing that she is a Mima look-alike, as Mima would have no reason to visit an institution. Mima enters her car and, looking into the rear view mirror, declares "I'm the real thing" and smiles.
Voice cast
Character | Japanese | English[1] |
---|---|---|
Mima Kirigoe | Junko Iwao | Ruby Marlowe[2] |
Rumi | Rica Matsumoto | Wendee Lee[3] |
Tadokoro | Shinpachi Tsuji | Gil Starberry |
Me-Mania | Masaaki Ōkura | Bob Marx[4] |
Tejima | Yōsuke Akimoto | Steve Bulen |
Takao Shibuya | Yoku Shioya | Jimmy Theodore |
Sakuragi | Hideyuki Hori | Sparky Thornton[5] |
Eri Ochiai | Emi Shinohara | Lia Sargent |
Mureno | Masashi Ebara | Jamieson Price |
Director | Kiyoyuki Yanada | Richard Plantagenet |
Yatazaki | Tōru Furusawa | – |
Yukiko | Emiko Furukawa | Bambi Darro |
Rei | Shiho Niiyama | Melissa Williamson |
Tadashi Doi | Akio Suyama | – |
Cham Manager | – | Dylan Tully |
The actors in the English adaptation are listed in the credits without specification to their respective roles: James Lyon, Frank Buck, David Lucas, Elliot Reynolds, Kermit Beachwood, Sam Strong, Carol Stanzione, Ty Webb, Billy Regan, Dari Mackenzie, George C. Cole, Syd Fontana, Sven Nosgard, Bob Marx, Devon Michaels, Robert Wicks and Mattie Rando.[6]
Production
Originally the film was supposed to be a live action direct to video series, but after the Kobe earthquake of 1995 damaged the production studio, the budget for the film was reduced to an original video animation. Katsuhiro Otomo was credited as "Special Supervisor" to help the film sell abroad and as a result the film was screened in many film festivals around the world. While touring the world it received a fair amount of acclaim, jump-starting Kon's career as a filmmaker.[7]
Kon and Murai did not think that the original novel would make a good film and asked if they could change the contents. This change was approved so long as they kept a few of the original concepts from the novel. A live action film Perfect Blue: Yume Nara Samete was later made (released in 2002) that is much closer to the novel. This version was directed by Toshiki Satō from a screenplay by Shinji Imaoka and Masahiro Kobayashi.[8]
Like much of Kon's later work, such as Paprika, the film deals with the blurring of the lines between fantasy and reality in contemporary Japan.[9]
Release and broadcast
Perfect Blue was released in the United States by Manga Entertainment on VHS in 1999 on both a R rated version and its original unrated uncut version. It was later released in 2000 in an unrated-only DVD release. The movie was also released on UMD by Anchor Bay Entertainment on December 6, 2005.[10] It featured the movie in cinema widescreen, leaving the movie kept within black bars on the PSP's 16:9 screen. This release also contains no special features and only the English audio track.
In the US, Perfect Blue aired on the Encore cable television network and was featured by the Sci Fi Channel on December 10, 2007 as part of its Ani-Monday block. In Australia, Perfect Blue aired by the SBS Television Network on April 12, 2008 and previously sometime in mid 2007 in a similar timeslot.
Analysis
Susan Napier uses feminist film theory to analyze the film, stating that, "Perfect Blue announces its preoccupation with perception, identity and performance - especially in relation to the female - right from its opening sequence. The perception of reality cannot be trusted, with the visual set up only to not be reality, especially as the psychodrama heights towards the climax."[7] Napier also sees themes related to pop idols and their performances as impacting the gaze and the issue of their roles. Mima's madness results from her own subjectivity and attacks on her identity. The ties to Alfred Hitchcock's work is broken with the murder of her male controllers.[7] Otaku described the film as "critique of the consumer society of contemporary Japan."[7][Note 1]
Reception
The film was critically well received in the festival circuit, winning awards at the 1997 Fantasia Festival in Montréal, and Fantasporto Film Festival in Portugal.
Critical response in the United States upon its theatrical release was mixed.[11] The film holds a 68% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[12] Some critics associated it with common anime stereotypes of gratuitous sex and violence. Kon responded to this criticism by stating that he was proud to be an animator and Perfect Blue was more interesting as animation.[7]
Time included the film on its top 5 anime DVD list,[13] and Terry Gilliam, of whom Kon was a fan[14] included it in his list of the top fifty animated films.[15] Perfect Blue ranked #25 on Total Film's all-time animated films.[16] It also made the list for Entertainment Weekly's best movies never seen from 1991–2011.[17]
Influence
Madonna incorporated clips from the film into a remix of her song "What It Feels Like for a Girl" as a video interlude during her Drowned World Tour in 2001.[18][19]
In 2010 Darren Aronofsky acknowledged there being similarities between Perfect Blue and his film Requiem for a Dream as well as Black Swan.[20] A re-issued blog entry mentioned Aronofsky's film Requiem for a Dream as being among Kon's list of movies he viewed for that year.[21]
See also
Notes
- ^ Reference to the quote is provided by Napier as: Jay, "Satoshi Kon", Otaku (May/June 2003):22
References
- ^ Patten, Fred (2005). Beck, Jerry (ed.). The Animated Movie Guide. Chicago Review Press. p. 190. ISBN 9781569762226.
{{cite book}}
: Unknown parameter|editorlink=
ignored (|editor-link=
suggested) (help) - ^ Interview with English Mima (DVD). Manga Entertainment. 2000.
- ^ Interview with English Rumi (DVD). Manga Entertainment. 2000.
- ^ Interview with Mr. Me-Mania (DVD). Manga Entertainment. 2000.
- ^ "Original Animation". kirkthornton.com. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
- ^ A Perfect Blue Day (DVD). Manga Entertainment. 2000. – closing credits
- ^ a b c d e Brown, Steven (September 2008). Cinema Anime - "Excuse Me, Who Are You?": Performance, the Gaze, and the Female in the Works of Kon Satoshi by Susan Napier. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 23–43. ISBN 978-0-230-60621-0.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: year (link) - ^ "夢なら醒めて…". Japanese Cinema Database. Retrieved 2009-10-18.
- ^ "Satoshi Kon, Anime's Dream Weaver". Washington Post. 2007-06-15.
- ^ "PSP Perfect Blue". Retrieved 2015-08-16.
- ^ "Perfect Blue". Animerica. 2000-04-07.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "5 Top Anime Movies on DVD". New York Times. 2005-07-31.
- ^ "Interview 03".
- ^ "Time Out's 50 Greatest Animated Films – Part 3 with Time Out Film - Time Out London". Timeout.com. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ^ Kinnear, Simon. "50 Greatest Animated Movies". TotalFilm.com. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
- ^ "50 Best Movies You've Never Seen". Entertainment Weekly's. 2012-07-16. Retrieved 2015-08-02.
{{cite web}}
: Check|archiveurl=
value (help) - ^ Clements & McCarthy 2012 – entry: Urotsukidoji
- ^ Cinquemani, Sal (September 10, 2001). "Madonna: Drowned World Tour Review". Slant Magazine. Archived from the original on 2007-03-20. Retrieved August 29, 2015.
Though her Cowgirl image is easily her least significant incarnation to date, Drowned World proves that Madonna is still unmatched in her ability to lift cultural iconography into the mainstream. The Geisha cycle is epilogued with hard techno beats and violent imagery taken from the groundbreaking Japanese anime film, Perfect Blue. The story's main character, Mima, a former pop star haunted by ghosts from her past, dreams of becoming an actress but resorts to porn gigs in her search for success.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ "KON'S TONE » VSダーレン". Konstone.s-kon.net. 2001-01-23. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
- ^ 2011/06/22 水曜日 - 高橋かしこ (2011-06-22). "コンズ便り »コンズ便り» ブログアーカイブ » 雑食日誌2000 - KON'S TONE". Konstone.s-kon.net. Retrieved 2013-01-04.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- Book references
- Clements, Jonathan; McCarthy, Helen (2012). The Anime Encyclopedia, Revised & Expanded Edition: A Guide to Japanese Animation Since 1917. Stone Bridge Press. 867pp. ISBN 9781611725155.
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External links
- 1997 films
- 1997 anime films
- 1990s mystery films
- 1990s psychological thriller films
- Directorial debut films
- Films based on Japanese novels
- Films directed by Satoshi Kon
- Japanese films
- Japanese thriller films
- Japanese-language films
- Madhouse (company)
- Psychological thriller films
- Suspense anime and manga
- Japanese idol anime and manga