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1 Production  





2 Synopsis  





3 Reception  





4 Awards  





5 Notes  





6 References  














Junk Head






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Junk Head
Directed byTakehide Hori
Written byTakehide Hori
Based onJunk Head 1
by Takehide Hori
Produced byKent Yoshida
Starring
  • Takehide Hori
  • Atsuko Miyake
  • CinematographyTakehide Hori
    Edited byTakehide Hori
    Music byTakehide Hori
    Yoshiki Kondo

    Release date

    • March 26, 2021 (2021-03-26)[1]

    Running time

    101 minutes
    CountryJapan
    LanguageJapanese

    Junk Head is a 2021 Japanese stop motion animated science fiction film written and directed by Takehide Hori, based on his 2013 short film Junk Head 1.[a][3][5][6] The film comprises some 140,000 stop-motion shots, and runs for 101 minutes.[5] The story is set in a distant future world where humans have received longevity but lost their fertility, and are nearly extinct by population decline.

    Director Guillermo del Toro positively reviewed the film and it won three awards. It was said by the director to be part of a trilogy.

    Production

    [edit]

    Not only the direction and scenario writing but almost all work, including voices, sculpting puppets, lighting, camera operating, editing, composing music, were, in the beginning, done by Hori alone.[5][7][6] At first, he assumed like most people that "films are not a one-man project".[4] Then, hearing that Makoto Shinkai made his first film, Voices of a Distant Star, by himself, and, inspired by Shinkai's story, he decided to try to make a film and ventured into the world of film-making at almost forty years old.[4] However, Hori had neither knowledge nor experience in film-making, and was entirely self-taught.[3] It took Hori four years to make a short version of the film for a preview.[3] He made a long version for theatrical release with a small team.[3] It took around seven years to complete the final product.[5][8] The short version was released at 2013, and the long version was released at 2017.[4]

    Synopsis

    [edit]

    The story is set in a distant future world where humans have received longevity but lost their fertility, and are nearly extinct by population decline.[3][9] The protagonist, a cyborg explorer, enters an underground world where artificially created species live.[3][5] His mission is intended to research for their secrets of reproductivity.[5] As the story goes on, it becomes gradually clear that the underground world is a kind of dystopia where dangerous monsters roam or ambush,[3][5] and that the artificially created intelligent species developed a unique society.[10] The story ends in an unexpected manner.[3] Director Hori noted the film was the first part of a trilogy.[b][3]

    Reception

    [edit]

    The film is described as "grotesque but humorous".[3][9] A reviewer of the Fantasia International Film Festival 2021 noted that the film might be too weird for more mainstream anime fans.[7] Siddhant Adlakha of Fantastic Festival 2021, Austin, Texas, mentioned that nightmarish creature designs in the film "evoke H.R. Giger".[8] A page for the Festival Européen du Film Fantastique de Strasbourg 2021 guessed that the designs are inspired by not only Giger but also Jerome Bosch and M.C. Escher,[11] and pointed out that the film called to mind Grand-Guignol in its post-apocalyptic and horrifying atmosphere.[12] A curator of the 20th New York Asian Film Festival noted that Director Hori's world may channel to the Brothers Quay, Jan Švankmajer, Terry Gilliam, Edward Gorey and others, on the other hand, emphasized the originality of the Director Hori.[5] Director Guillermo del Toro lauded a short version of the film as a "work of deranged brilliance".[4][13]

    A description by the Japanese Film Festival 2021 in Australia guessed that the film was the humorous appropriation of a classic Nietzschean idea: "God is dead and we killed him".[9] However, the reviewer of the Fantasia Film Festival 2021 opined that Hori could have focused on the narrative themes of the film – the nature of humanity and mortality – but he did not do so, and the protagonist, who is called "God" by the underground residents, is preoccupied with being chased by the monsters and engaging in comedic interactions with different humanoid groups.[7] The reviewer concluded that the film is "about just basking in the cool, creepy world Takahide Hori has created".[7]

    A reviewer of Asian movies Kotzathanasis appreciated that the film was made to be virtually silent with the only words uttered actually being incoherent sounds.[10] The reason for the appreciation is that it allowed the spectator to focus on the extraordinary images rather than the dialogue.[10]

    Awards

    [edit]

    The film won the best animated feature award in the 2017 Fantasia Film Festival.[9] Director Hori won the best director of a new wave feature in the 2017 Fantastic Festival.[9] The film won the Golden Stork in the international animated film competition of the Festival Européen du Film Fantastique de Strasbourg 2021.[12]

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^ Hori, Takehide, born in Oita prefecture in 1971,[2] is an interior decorator who has worked on interior designs at a theme park and other facilities.[3][4]
  • ^ As of the year 2021, Director Hori was collecting money for making the next film by crowdfunding and running his interior decoration business.[4]
  • References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Hadfield, James (1 April 2021). "'Junk Head': One man's imaginatively twisted labor of love". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  • ^ "Staffs of Yamiken". 2017. Retrieved 2021-11-01.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Self-taught animator spends 7 years on 'Junk Head'". Asahi Shimbun. 2021-05-03. Retrieved 2021-10-28.
  • ^ a b c d e f Ishii, Ken (2021-04-09). "Post-Apocalyptic Film Junk Head Lauded as 'Work of Deranged Brilliance' by Guillermo del Toro". Japan Forward. Retrieved 2011-11-08.
  • ^ a b c d e f g h "20th New York Asian Film Festival - Junk Head". New York Asian Film Festival. 2021-08-06. Retrieved 2021-10-28.
  • ^ a b "Junk Head (2021)". Helsinki International Film Festival – Love & Anarchy. 2021. Archived from the original on 2021-11-02. Retrieved 2021-11-01.
  • ^ a b c d Reuben Baron (2021-08-02). "Fantasia 2021: Junk Head Is a Strange Stop-Motion Anime Wonder". Retrieved 2021-11-02.
  • ^ a b "Junk Head". Fantastic Fest 2021, Austin, Texas. 2021-09-23. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  • ^ a b c d e "Indie | Cinephile | Junk Head". Japanese Film Festival in Australia 2021. 2021-10-28. Retrieved 2021-10-29.
  • ^ a b c Kotzathanasis, Panos (August 19, 2021). "Animation Review: Junk Head (2021) by Takahide Hori". Asian Movie Pulse.
  • ^ "Junk Head". Festival Européen du Film Fantastique de Strasbourg 2021. 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  • ^ a b "International Animated Film Competition: The Golden Stork — JUNK HEAD (Janku Heddo), directed by Takahide Hori, Japan". Festival Européen du Film Fantastique de Strasbourg 2021. 2021. Retrieved 2021-10-31.
  • ^ "Guillermo del Toro's Official Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved 2021-11-06.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Junk_Head&oldid=1190690842"

    Categories: 
    2021 films
    Films set in subterranea
    Japanese post-apocalyptic films
    2020s stop-motion animated films
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