Paprika (2006 film)

Paprika

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Satoshi Kon
Produced by
Screenplay by
  • Seishi Minakami
  • Satoshi Kon
Based on Paprika 
by Yasutaka Tsutsui
Starring
Music by Susumu Hirasawa
Cinematography Michiya Katou
Edited by Takeshi Seyama
Production
company
Distributed by Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan
Release dates
  • September 2, 2006 (2006-09-02) (Venice)
  • November 25, 2006 (2006-11-25) (Japan)
Running time
90 minutes
Country Japan
Language Japanese
Box office $944,915[1]

Paprika (Japanese: パプリカ Hepburn: Papurika) is a 2006 Japanese animated science fiction thriller film co-written and directed by Satoshi Kon, based on Yasutaka Tsutsui's 1993 novel of the same name, about a research psychologist who uses a device that permits therapists to help patients by entering their dreams. It is Kon's fourth and final feature film before his death in 2010.

Kon and Seishi Minakami wrote the script, and Japanese animation studio Madhouse Inc. animated and produced the film alongside Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan, which distributed it in Japan. The score was composed by Susumu Hirasawa.

The soundtrack is significant for being the first film to use a Vocaloid: "Lola."[2][3]

Plot

In the near future, a revolutionary new psychotherapy treatment called dream therapy has been invented. A device called the "DC Mini" allows the user to view people's dreams. The head of the team working on this treatment, Doctor Atsuko Chiba, begins using the machine illegally to help psychiatric patients outside the research facility, using her alter-ego "Paprika", a sentient persona that she assumes in the dream world.

Paprika counsels Detective Toshimi Konakawa, who is plagued by a recurring dream. Its incompleteness is a great source of anxiety for him. At the end of the session, she gives Konakawa a card with a name of a website on it. This type of counselling session is not officially sanctioned, so Chiba, her associates and Konakawa must be cautious that word does not leak out regarding the nature of the DC Mini and the existence of Paprika. Chiba's closest ally is Doctor Kōsaku Tokita, a genius man-child and the inventor of the DC Mini. Because they are unfinished, the DC Minis lack access restrictions, allowing anyone to enter another person's dreams, which poses grave consequences when they are stolen. Almost immediately, the chief of the department, Doctor Toratarō Shima, goes on a nonsensical tirade and jumps through a window, nearly killing himself.

Upon examining Shima's dream, consisting of a lively parade of objects, Tokita recognizes his assistant, Kei Himuro, which confirms their suspicion that the theft was an inside job. After two other scientists fall victim to the DC Mini, the chairman of the company, who was against the project to begin with, bans the use of the device completely. This fails to hinder the crazed parade, which manages to claim Tokita, who went inside Himuro's dream trying to find answers and intruded into Konakawa's dream. Paprika and Shima take matters into their own hands and find that Himuro is only an empty shell. The real culprit is the chairman, with the help of Doctor Morio Osanai, who believes that he must protect dreams from mankind's influence through dream therapy. Paprika is eventually captured by the pair after an exhausting chase. There, Osanai admits his love for Chiba and literally peels away Paprika's skin to reveal Chiba underneath. However, he is interrupted by the outraged Chairman who demands that they finish off Chiba; as the two share Osanai's body, they battle for control as they argue over Chiba's fate. Konakawa enters the dream from his own recurring dream, and flees with Chiba back into his. Osanai gives chase through Konakawa's recurring dream, which ends in Konakawa shooting Osanai to take control of the dream. The act actually kills Osanai's physical body with a real bullet wound.

Dreams and reality have now merged. The dream parade is running amok in the city, and reality itself is starting to unravel. Shima is nearly killed by a giant Japanese doll, but is saved by Paprika, who has become an entity separate from Chiba thanks to dreams and reality merging. Amidst the chaos, Tokita, in the form of a giant robot, eats Chiba and prepares to do the same for Paprika. The chairman returns in the form of a living nightmare, reveals his twisted dreams of omnipotence, and threatens to darken the world with his delusions. A ghostly apparition of Chiba appears and reveals that she has been in love with Tokita this whole time and has simply been repressing these emotions. She comes to terms with her own repressed desires, reconciling herself with the part of her that is Paprika. Paprika returns to Tokita, throwing herself into his body. A baby emerges from the robotic shell and sucks in the wind, aging as she sucks up the chairman himself, becoming a fully-grown combination of Chiba and Paprika. In this new form, she is able to consume the chairman's dream form and end the nightmare he created before fading away.

In the final scene, Chiba sits at Tokita's bedside as he wakes up. Later on, Konakawa visits the website from Paprika's card and receives a message from Paprika: "Atsuko will change her surname to Tokita...and I suggest watching the movie Dreaming Kids." Konakawa enters a movie theater and purchases a ticket for Dreaming Kids.

Production

Voice cast

Music

Paprika Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Susumu Hirasawa
Released November 23, 2006
Length 43:31
Label TESLAKITE (Japan)
Milan Entertainment (USA)
Producer Chaos Union
Susumu Hirasawa soundtrack chronology
Paranoia Agent Original Soundtrack
(2004)
Paprika Original Soundtrack
(2006)

The soundtrack was released on November 23, 2006 under the TESLAKITE label. It was composed by Susumu Hirasawa. A bonus movie was included on the CD, using the closing theme to Paprika. The last track, "The Girl in Byakkoya", features three spoken lines in Vietnamese. The soundtrack is significant for being the first made for a film to use a Vocaloid (using the Lola voicebank) for some vocals.[2][3] "The Girl in Byakkoya" shares its name with an alcoholic cocktail served in the café bar GAZIO, which serves other cocktails named after Hirasawa's songs; the establishment is operated by Yuichi Hirasawa, Susumu Hirasawa's brother.[4]

Track listing

  1. "Parade" (パレード Parēdo, 5:46)
  2. Baikaiya (媒介野?, "Mediational Field", 4:59)
  3. Kairō no Shikaku (回廊の死角?, "A Blind Spot in a Corridor", 1:59)
  4. Sākasu e Yōkoso (サーカスへようこそ?, "Welcome to the Circus", 1:00)
  5. Kuragari no Ki (暗がりの木?, "A Tree in the Dark", 1:26)
  6. Nigerumono (逃げる者?, "Escapee", 3:14)
  7. "Lounge" (2:05)
  8. Sono Kage (その影?, "Shadow", 3:19)
  9. Shizuku Ippai no Kioku (滴いっぱいの記憶?, "A Drop Filled with Memories", 4:39)
  10. Oumono (追う者?, "Chaser", 3:03)
  11. Yoki (予期?, "Prediction", 1:44)
  12. "Parade (instrumental)" (5:51)
  13. Byakkoya no Musume (白虎野の娘?, "The Girl in Byakkoya - White Tiger Field", 4:47)

Release

Festivals

Paprika premiered on September 2, 2006, at the 63rd Venice Film Festival.[5][6] It screened at the 44th New York Film Festival, playing on October 7, 2006. It competed at the 19th Tokyo International Film Festival October 21–29, 2006, as the opening screening for the 2006 TIFF Animation CG Festival.[7] It also competed in 27th Fantasporto from February 23 to March 3, 2007. Paprika was shown at the 2007 National Cherry Blossom Festival in Washington, D.C., as the closing film of the Anime Marathon at the Freer Gallery of the Smithsonian, and at the 2007 Greater Philadelphia Cherry Blossom Festival. It played at the Sarasota Film Festival on April 21, 2007, in Sarasota, Florida. Additionally, it was shown at the 39th International Film Festival in Auckland, New Zealand, on July 22, 2007, and was shown as the festival traveled around New Zealand.

Reception

Paprika has received positive reviews from most film critics. It holds an 84% "Fresh" approval rating on the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 85 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10 and the consensus, "Following its own brand of logic, Paprika is an eye-opening mind trip that rarely makes sense but never fails to dazzle. The film weaves in and out of dream worlds seamlessly and presents an offbeat puzzle of a fantasy."[8] Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score, rated the it 81 out of 100, based on 26 reviews from film critics.[9] Paprika won the Best Feature Length Theatrical Anime Award at the sixth-annual Tokyo Anime Awards during the 2007 Tokyo International Anime Fair.[10]

Andrez Bergen of Yomiuri Shimbun praised the Paprika as the "most mesmerizing animation long-player since Miyazaki's Spirited Away five years ago" (in 2001). He also praised the film's animation and backgrounds.[11] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle gave it a positive review, saying that the film is a "sophisticated work of the imagination" and "challenging and disturbing and uncanny in the ways it captures the nature of dreams". LaSalle later went on to say that the film is a "unique and superior achievement."[12] Rob Nelson of The Village Voice praised the film for its visuals. However, he complained about the plot, saying that Paprika is not "a movie that's meant to be understood so much as simply experienced - or maybe dreamed." Nelson later went on to say that Kon "maintains a charming faith in cinema's ability to seduce fearless new (theater) audiences, even one viewer at a time."[13] Manohla Dargis of The New York Times said that the film has a "sense of unease about the rapidly changing relationship between our physical selves and our machines." Dargis praised Kon for his direction, saying that he "shows us the dark side of the imaginative world in Paprika that he himself has perceptively brightened."[14] Helen McCarthy in 500 Essential Anime Movies said that Paprika "proves once again that the great science fiction doesn't rely on giant robots and alien worlds".[15]

Conversely, Roger Moore of the Orlando Sentinel gave a negative review, saying "With a conventional invade-dreams/bend-reality plot, it's a bit of a bore. It's not as dreamlike and mesmerizing as Richard Linklater's rotoscope-animation Waking Life, less fanciful than the Oscar-winning anime Spirited Away."[16] Bruce Westbrook of the Houston Chronicle said the film "is as trippy as a Jefferson Airplane light show" and criticized the characters and the dialogue.[17]

The Lord of the Rings actor Elijah Wood praised Paprika in an interview.[18] Time Magazine included it in its top 25 animated films of all time,[19] while Time Out also included the film in its list of top 50 animated films of all time.[20] Rotten Tomatoes included it in its list of fifty best animated films of all time.[21] Newsweek Japan included Paprika in its list of the 100 best films of all time, while the American edition of Newsweek included it among its top twenty films of 2007.[22] Metacritic has listed the film among the top 25 highest-rated science fiction films of all time,[23] and the top 30 highest-rated animations of all time.[24]

Awards and nominations

Paprika received the following awards and nominations:[25]

Year Award Category Recipient Result
2006 Montréal Festival of New Cinema Public's Choice Award Satoshi Kon Won
2006 63rd Venice International Film Festival Golden Lion (Best Film) Satoshi Kon Nominated
2007 Fantasporto Critics Choice Award (Prêmio da Crítica) Satoshi Kon Won
2007 Newport Beach Film Festival Feature Film Award for Best Animation Satoshi Kon Won
2007 Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Animated Film Nominated

Live-action adaptation

A live-action adaptation of Paprika, to be directed by Wolfgang Petersen, was in development in 2010.[26] However, since the release of Inception, the Christopher Nolan movie which came out that same year and had a similar premise [27] there has not been any significant update to whether Petersen's adaptation will be produced.

See also

References

  1. "Paprika (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 18, 2013.
  2. 1 2 Hirasawa, Susumu. "HIRASAWA三行log>> お姉さんを磨け" [HIRASAWA Three-Line log>> Refining the Elder Sister]. HIRASAWA三行log (in Japanese). Chaos Union. Retrieved July 15, 2010.
  3. 1 2 Tomita, Akihiro (December 2008). バーチャルな「女性」への欲望とは何か [What is the Desire for a Virtual "Woman"]. Eureka Comprehensive Special Issue ♪ Hatsune Miku an angel that landed on the net (in Japanese) (Seidosha) (15): 60. ISBN 978-4-7917-0187-2.
  4. "メニュー|GAZIO 80年代ニューウェイブの音楽とカフェ&バー". GAZIO.
  5. "Venezia 63 - In Competition...". ...Biennale Cinema... 63rd Venice Film Festival... la Biennale di Venezia. p. 2. Retrieved 2006-08-17.
  6. Eric J. Lyman (2006-07-28). "Five U.S. films in Venice fest competition". The Hollywood Reporter. VNU eMedia, Inc. Archived from the original on 2006-10-20. Retrieved 2006-08-17.
  7. "amimecs TIFF 2006 TIFF Animation CG Festival (provisional title)". 19th Tokyo International Film Festival Press Conference. Tokyo International Film Festival. 2006-07-31. Retrieved 2006-08-17.
  8. "Paprika - Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Flixster. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  9. "Paprika (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  10. "Results of 6th Annual Tokyo Anime Awards Out". Anime News Network. 2007-03-19. Retrieved 2008-09-12.
  11. Paprika review, Andrez Bergen. Yomiuri Shimbun, November 25, 2006.
  12. LaSalle, Mick (June 8, 2007). "Wildest dreams come true, and they can be scary". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  13. Nelson, Rob (May 15, 2007). "Kon's Cure for Cinema". The Village Voice. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  14. Dargis, Manohla (May 25, 2007). "In a Crowded Anime Dreamscape, a Mysterious Pixie". The New York Times. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  15. McCarthy, Helen. 500 Essential Anime Movies: The Ultimate Guide. — Harper Design, 2009. — P. 26. — 528 p. — ISBN 978-0061474507
  16. Moore, Roger (August 10, 2007). "`Paprika' doesn't deliver on the dream". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  17. Westbrook, Bruce (June 21, 2007). "Paprika". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved April 1, 2012.
  18. "Elijah Wood Q+A". Ain't It Cool News. Retrieved September 11, 2009.
  19. "The 25 All-Time Best Animated Films". Time. June 23, 2011.
  20. "Time Out's 50 greatest animated films". Time Out. Retrieved November 3, 2011.
  21. "Paprika (2007)". Best Animated Films. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  22. "Newsweek Japan Lists Kon's Paprika Among 100 Best Films". Anime News Network. 2008-05-06. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  23. "Top Sci-Fi Movies". Metacritic. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  24. "Top Animation Movies". Metacritic. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  25. "Awards for Paprika (2006)". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  26. "Wolfgang Peterson Talks About His Live-Action Adaptation of Paprika". /Film.
  27. Andrew Osmond (2010-08-26). "Satoshi Kon obituary". The Guardian.

External links

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