Publicity
Stills of "Paprika"
(Courtesy from The Picturehouse)
In
Japanese with English subtitles
Genre: Anime Director: Satoshi Kon Cast: Megumi Hayashibara, Tôru Furuya,
Kôichi Yamadera, Katsunosuke Hori, Toru Emori, Akio Ôtsuka,
Hideyuki Tanaka, Satomi Koorogi, Daisuke Sakaguchi, Mitsuo Iwata,
Rikako Aikawa RunTime: 1 hr 30 mins Released By: The Picturehouse Rating: NC-16 (Some Nudity) Opening Day: 19 July 2007
Synopsis:
29 year old, Dr. Atsuko Chiba is an attractive, but modest Japanese
research psychotherapist, renowned for her advanced scientific
work. Her alter-ego is a stunning and fearless 18 year old “dream
detective,” code named PAPRIKA, who can enter into people’s
dreams and synchronize with their unconscious to help uncover
the source of their anxiety or neurosis.
At
Atsuko’s lab, a powerful new psychotherapy device known
as the “DC-MINI” has been invented by her brilliant
colleague, Dr. Tokita, a nerdy genius who is rather too fond
of his food. Although this state-of-art device could revolutionize
the world of psychotherapy, in the wrong hands the potential
misuse of the device could be devastating, allowing the user
to completely annihilate the dreamer’s personality while
they are asleep.
When
one of the only four existing DC-MINI prototypes is stolen
in the final stages of research, and simultaneously Dr. Tokita’s
research assistant, Himuro, goes missing, Atsuko suspects
it’s not a coincidence. Several of the remaining researchers
at the lab start to go mad, dreaming while in their waking
states, haunted by a Japanese doll which featured heavily
in the dreams of one of Himuro’s schizophrenic patients.
Atsuko now knows for certain that the DC MINI is being used
to destroy people’s minds. She fears that not only will
the government refuse to sanction the use of the machine for
psychotherapy purposes when it becomes public, but whoever
is manipulating the machines has a more evil purpose in mind.
Movie Review:
The beauty of any animation is its ability
to move beyond what is real and create a a world of our dreams.
In Paprika, the dream world is exactly what we get. Director
Satoshi Kon (Millennium Actress, Tokyo Godfathers) helms a
story of reality, nightmares, and the surreal as a madman
begins tampering with people's dreams.
Satoshi
Kon’s Paprika is a whimsical sci-fi film noir that shuttles
between a psychiatric institute’s sanitized halls and
the dream life of its patients. At a center not merely for
treatment but also for experiment, a new device called the
DC Mini has been stolen and is being used against patients,
doctors and hospital staff alike, infiltrating their dreams
and interweaving them with the nightmares of the mentally
ill. Kon’s colorful fantasy pits a female therapist
in the center of this mystery, whose detective skills are
sharpened by her ability to transmogrify herself via the DC
Mini into our film’s heroine, the fiery Paprika. There
is, around the edges, a nice little mystery at work. Introducing
a detective (Akio Ohtsuka) haunted by an unsolvable murder
case, and his interplay with both Atsuko and Paprika makes
for some engaging noir-lite moments. A visit to an abandoned
theme park suggests clues at a deeper puzzle, while the cop’s
own dreams begin to combine with the main fantasy hinting
that the crimes may be connected somehow.
Paprika
is definate recomendation as there are many scenes that work
when put them together with the overall movie. A running gag
involving the cop’s dreams - a collection of old movie
clichés - is quite welcome. The secondary characters,
including a massively overweight scientist and his diminutive
boss, are colorful enough to carry us through. A sense of
humor tickles the entire production, resulting in some unexpectedly
large laughs throughout.
Alas,
Paprika is not for children. It's disturbing at times, though
not in a cheap violent way. More like great art that has the
courage to face demons with unique intensity. Adding it's
merits immediate attention, the catchy, intrusive blend of
Japanese pop/electronic dance music’s only function
is to propels the story into action. The dream control at
the center of Paprika is indeed inspired and potentially brilliantly
phantasmagoric, and Kon and his fellow writer Minakami Seishi
keep the film light on its toes as it indulges in pop fantasy
(most clearly seen in red-haired, costumed Paprika, a literal
kind of dream superhero) and, most successfully, in the sci-fi
concept’s self-reflexivity.
It's
difficult to say how the mainstream press and public will
react to this film. Despite the visuals, those who have been
coddled by the hyper-realism of most live action movies may
reject the other-worldliness of the logic and narrative at
work here. I suspect there will be a lot of nit-picking about
minor plot points they deem to be ridiculous and easily dismissible.
I wonder how many people will truly be able to disengage themselves
from their realities, as this film demands, and be able to
take on the world of dreams with the abandon that their characters
do. Like real dreams, the world is a nonsensical mish-mash
of life experience, hidden thoughts and agendas, and all the
stories and popular culture that make up our lives. Susumu
Hirasawa's always unique synthesizer work here is appropriately
abrasive and inspiring.
After all, Paprika, in this dreamworld, is
more or less a superhero, and she brings the film an unrestrained
joy. Dreams are a potentially happy thing, and those who have
been subverted by the “psycho-terrorist” are almost
drunk on the possibilities of this new world that has none
of reality's rules. Little effort is made to build suspense
or scare us; the characters are too busy with their orgy of
delusional delights.
And while the story may make this Kon’s
least inspired film, the animation is his most inspired: every
corner of the frame is crammed with massive amounts of colorful
detail. It’s here, in this rich, impressive artwork,
that the movie truly feels like a dream, and it’s here
that the film wins us back. “Paprika” is an example
of style over substance in the anime world, but for the most
part, it’s just enough style for us to forgive the substance.
Movie
Rating:
(It's like Alice in Wonderland hyper chaotic mode!)