Category: anime / In category: 8 of 10 / Overall: 86 of 100
Watching it this evening, a world of wonders opened to me. And I want to weep in frustration that the man who gifted them was taken at the age of 46, having had the chance to make only half a dozen features.
‘Millennium Actress’ begins with independent filmmaker Genya Tachibana and his much put-upon cameraman Kyouji tracking down reclusive septuagenarian film star Chiyoko Fujiwara. It has been thirty years since she last appeared on screen, controversially disappearing from the set of her last movie (a sci-fi production) after an earthquake hits the studio and she almost dies.
Now, as Tachibana puts it in the portentous voiceover to his documentary, “the bulldozers have succeeded where years of earthquakes failed” and the studio is being levelled. It’s a very different Japan and it soon becomes obvious that the still elegant Chiyoko, surprisingly agreeing to be interviewed by Tachibana, has been more at home with her memories than the march of time.
Is your head buzzing yet? By rights, ‘Millennium Actress’ ought to provoke chronic confusion. It’s not just metaphysical, it’s meta-textual. Ton plays around with concepts of memory, fantasy, reality and fiction to a startling degree. Chiyoro’s real life, particularly her ceaseless quest to find a man she helped evade capture by the authorities (an artist and a political dissenter), is mirrored by the travails of her characters in a series of different films. Scenes from her life, particularly her troubled relationship with arrogant director Otaki, suddenly halt mid-scene and Kon’s camera pulls back to reveal she’s on a film set. Minor incidents and images recur both onstage and off. Ton orchestrates the ambiguities with such ease and confidence that the sheer complexity of the film – potentially its Achilles heel – actually becomes its strongest element.
In other words: if Alain Resnais had directed an anime, this would be it.
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