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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Zipangu Fest 2011



Zipangu Fest gets underway tomorrow night in London and runs until the 24thof November.  It is the first UK-widefestival devoted to Japanese film.  Thefestival bills itself as a showcase for the best of cutting edge and avant-garde Japanesecinema.  Last year’s inaugural festivaltook place at various venues around London’s East End before travelling toregional events in Bristol, Leeds, Coventry, Nottingham and Newcastle in theUK, and further afield to Tallinn, Estonia.  This year's festival is packed with cinematic gems both new and old.

Animationand Experimental Films

Myfavourite parts of the festival programme this year are the animation and experimental film events.  There are two screenings celebrating the work of Takashi Makino: Enter the Cosmos and Seasons Inter View.  Makino is one of Japan’s top experimentalfilmmakers.  His colourful abstract works take spectators on a journey of thesenses.  Makino will be in attendance forthe latter of the two screenings. 

Somebrilliant animated shorts will be featured in the Beyond Anime: The Outer Limits screening including works by Ryu Furusawa, Ryo Hirano, and KTOONZ.  I highly recommend the work of Image Forum graduates NasukaSaito and Mana Fujii, whose works I ranked as the best of the Dome Animation special at Nippon Connection 2010.  

Julian Ross has curated a special event for Zipangu called Nippon Re-Read: Radical Fragments and Abstractions from Japan I and II + Cat Soup which will present a spectrum of experimental works past and present.  It is a strong programme which will be topped off by a screening of Tatsuo Sato's Cat Soup (2001) with live accompaniment by premiere noise-rock band Bo Ningen. All proceeds from this event with go to disaster relief efforts in Japan.

Documentaries

Thefestival will open with the stunning new film KanZeOn (Neil Cantwell, 2011), amystical journey from the timeless to the modern that examines the role ofsound in Japanese Buddhism. This screening includes a discussion with special guests Neil Cantwell, Tim Grabham, and ta2mi led by Lucia Dolce, the director of the Centre for the Study of Japanese Religion at SOAS.

In the wakeof the March 11 disaster in the Tohoku region of Japan, Zipangu has introduceda Nuclear Reactions programme featuring Hitomi Kamanaka’s documentaries Ashes to Honey (read review) and Rokkasho Rhapsody (read review) - both of which I recommend highly.  In addition, Zipangu is screening Shinpei Takeda’s moving road-tripdocumentary Hiroshima Nagasaki Download, in which two college friends interviewatomic bomb survivors living in North America.  There will be a Q+A with the director after the screening.  Hiroshima Nagasaki Download will be preceded by The Student Wrestler (Yumehito Imanari, 2010) which was the winner of the audience award at Image Forum 2010.

Other docs on the programme include We Don’t Care About Music Anyway (Cédric Dupire/Gaspard Kuentz, 2009) about  Tokyo’s avant-garde noisemusic scene and horrormeets J-pop in Shirome, a mockumentary that involves director Koji Shiraishiluring prepubescent idol band Momoiro Clover into a supposedly haunted abandonedschool – the result lies somewhere between the Blair Witch Project and theX-Factor.

Rare Films

The ZipanguRetro programme will feature a rare screening of the 1959 docudrama Lucky Dragon No. 5 directed by one of post-war Japan’s most important independent filmmakers, Kaneto Shindō.  It tells the storyof the Bikini Atoll hydrogen bomb catastrophe that exposed a Japanese fishingboat crew to radioactive fallout.  

Anotherrare film being screened as part of Zipangu Retro is a 1930s ghost story The Ghost Cat and the Mysterious Shamisen (Kiyohiko Ushihara, 1938).  Subtitled especially for Zipangu Fest andnever seen before in the UK, this gem is one of Japan’s few survivingpre-war horror films.

UK Premiere of Abraxas 
UK fans ofJapanese cinema should also be sure to check out the UK premiere of themuch-lauded feature film Abraxas, which tells the story of a punk musicianturned Buddhist monk.  Abraxas was asurprise hit at the 2011 Sundance Festival and was well received at Nippon Connection 2011.  Read Marc Saint-Cyr’sreview of the film to learn more.




Zipangu Fest 2011 – celebrating the best of cutting edge and avant-garde Japanesecinema – will be held at London’s Institute of Contemporary Arts and Café Otofrom November 18th to 24th, before moving to venues around the UK. The festivalwill showcase a selection of Japan’s finest features, documentaries, shorts,animation and experimental films.  For full details visit: http://zipangufest.com.