2023 Christmas Special – Tokyo Godfathers

Screening as part of the Mockingbird’s Alternative Christmas Film Festival

© 2003 Satoshi Kon / Tokyo Godfathers Committee

What is Tokyo Godfathers about?

From legendary director Satoshi Kon (Millennium Actress, Paprika), an unconvential Christmas story. One Christmas Eve, three homeless people—a middle-aged alcoholic named Gin with a gambling addiction, a trans woman named Hana hoping for her own christmas miracle, and a dependent teenage runaway named Miyuki with anger aissues—discover an abandoned newborn on Christmas Eve.

On the baby is a note asking the finder to take good care of her and a key, leading to a bag with clues to the parents’ identity. The trio sets out to find the parents. Hana names the baby Kiyoko, based on the Japanese translation of “Silent Night”. On the way they meet multiple characters of Tokyo life and their pasts. A wondorous blend of comedy, pathos and melodrama crossed with hard-boiled action, and enormous coincidence.

© 2003 Satoshi Kon / Tokyo Godfathers Committee

Why we chose Tokyo Godfathers

Legendary director Satoshi Kon hardly needs an introduction. With Perfect Blue, Millennium Actress and Paprika, he made three of the greatest animes of all time, frequently on everyone’s top movie lists.

Out of the 5 projects completed by Kon, Tokyo Godfathers is perhaps one of the uniquest. It’s heavily inspired by the John Ford, the 1948 western, 3 Godfathers (itself, the fifth feature adaptation of Peter B. Kyne’s 1913 novel The Three Godfathers). It’s also the only work from Kon that its entirely ‘down to earth’ in its setting, not blurring reality and corrupted memories.

In an interview, Kon admitted that the implication of a social & political statement was something he had in mind especially because homelessness is ignored as a societal issue iin Japan. Kon said: “The important thing wasn’t to just present the homeless problem in the script, but to focus on the mindset surrounding things we ‘discard’. These are people who have been ‘discarded’ from society; the homeless, the runaway girl. In Japanese society, civil rights that the people have are few in number. I wanted to examine how someone separated from mainstream society would once again rejuvenate society.”

In our eyes it’s essential viewing, taking a previously trodden christmas narrative and turning it into something quite special. It it translates what Christmas is supposed to be about through humour, pain, love, hate, shock and awe. Taking those abandoned by society and reforming them into a family, without diminishing the gravity of their current predicaments.

Kon passed away on August 24, 2010 at the age of 46 but his legacy and impact has reached far and wide, with directors such as Darren Aronofsky (“Without his work, Neo might never have taken the red pill, and the post-Matrix rash of Hollywood films dealing with subjective reality – Fight Club, Inception, Requiem for a Dream – might never have tumbled down the rabbit-hole and on to our screens. So why aren’t we seeing more tributes to his art?”) and Guillermo del Toro (“PERFECT BLUE by Satoshi Kon. A Giallo for all. And, dare I say it? Perhaps one of the most intricate ones ever made. In any medium.”) expressing their love for his works.

© 2003 Satoshi Kon / Tokyo Godfathers Committee

Where can I see Tokyo Godfathers?

Tokyo Godfathers | 88 mins | 12, is screening at the Mockingbird Screen 1, Sunday 17th December at 15:30

© 2003 Satoshi Kon / Tokyo Godfathers Committee


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2023 Film Schedule – Millennium Actress

Read more: 2023 Film Schedule – Millennium Actress
© 2001 Millennium Actress Production Committee

What is Millennium Actress about?

From director Satoshi Kon (Perfect Blue, Paprika), take a journey through cinema history via his unique, world-bending perspective.

Millennium Actress Synopsis

With the renowned Ginei Studios shutting down and their buildings about to be demolished, film-maker Genya Tachibana sets out to commemorate this historical moment by interviewing the studio’s former superstar – the now-reclusive Chiyoko Fujiwara.

Thirty years on from her disappearance from the limelight, one question lingers – why did she end her career and vanish at the peak of her acting powers? The truth lies within a key found by Genya many years prior… a key that is far more than just a memento, and instead serves as an emblem of her entire raison d’être.

As Chiyoko recounts her story, so Genya and his cameraman are pulled into a wide-ranging journey through the lens of her films. Interviews and recollections, acting and reality, all blur into the single rich tapestry of a remarkable life.

© 2001 Millennium Actress Production Committee

Why we chose Millennium Actress

Legendary director Satoshi Kon hardly needs an introduction. With Perfect Blue, Millennium Actress and Paprika, he made three of the greatest animes of all time, frequently on everyone’s top movie lists.

Kon’s first original story and last traditionally animated movie, Millennium Actress is a work of astonishing storytelling. It delivers a bittersweet, deeply moving plot filled with drama and comedy, telling us both the story of Chiyoko, and her films. Perhaps unimaginable in any other medium, it merges character, location, mood, art, fact and fiction into a beautifully complex swirling whole, with both cinema and reality blurring into a seamless construct whirling through Japanese History.

Kon passed away on August 24, 2010 at the age of 46 but his legacy and impact has reached far and wide, with directors such as Darren Aronofsky (“Without his work, Neo might never have taken the red pill, and the post-Matrix rash of Hollywood films dealing with subjective reality – Fight Club, Inception, Requiem for a Dream – might never have tumbled down the rabbit-hole and on to our screens. So why aren’t we seeing more tributes to his art?”) and Guillermo del Toro (“PERFECT BLUE by Satoshi Kon. A Giallo for all. And, dare I say it? Perhaps one of the most intricate ones ever made. In any medium.”) expressing their love for his works.

Worthy of multiple viewings, Millennium Actress has received widspread critical acclaim and has won numerous awards including:

  • Grand Prize in the Japan Agency of Cultural Affairs Media Arts Festival, in 2001 tying with Spirited Away.
  • Best Animation Film and Fantasia Ground-Breaker at the 2001 Fantasia Film Festiva
  • Feature Film Award at the 8th Animation Kobe
  • Ofuji Noburo Award at the 2002 Mainichi Film Awards,
  • Orient Express Award at the 2001 Festival de Cine de Sitges in Spain.

The film was also nominated for four Annie Awards in 2004, including Outstanding Direction and Writing.

© 2001 Millennium Actress Production Committee

Where can I see Millennium Actress?

Millennium Actress | 87 mins | PG, is screening at the Mockingbird Screen 2, Saturday 30th September at 15:45

© 2001 Millennium Actress Production Committee

If you like this, consider Perfect Blue (18)

© 1997 Madhouse

Marking the incredible directorial feature debut of the late prolific animator Satoshi Kon, Perfect Blue is a dark take on the price of fame that spirals into the surreal.

Mima, a young pop idol, is in the prime of her career. Ready to seize her moment in the spotlight, she decides to cross over into acting, but her role is not as clean cut as she originally imagined. When a diary detailing every aspect of her life appears online, Mima begins losing her grip on reality, trapped in a web of paranoia and confusion.

Perfect Blue |97 mins | 18, is screening at the The MAC Birmingham, Friday 29th September at 18:00

© 2001 Millennium Actress Production Committee

Home Viewing

The classic film available for the first-time in the UK on Blu-ray from All the Anime. The film comes with The film, with viewing options in both English and original Japanese with English subtitles, plus interviews with Abby Trott (US teen voice of Chiyoko Fujiwara), Laura Post (US voice of Eiko Shimao), Producer Masao Morosawa and Producer Tarô Maki


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