Manga and Anime in Japan Today

Endless Experimentation: Independent Animation Master Yamamura Kōji

Culture

Animator Yamamura Kōji has won a reputation through works including the surreal Atamayama (Mount Head). In this interview he discusses the particular fascination of short-form animation, which he sees as entirely different from feature films in its independent spirit.

Yamamura Kōji

Born in 1964. Graduated from Tokyo Zōkei University. Created children’s anime in the 1990s, including Karo to Piyobuputo (Karo & Piyobupt), Pakushi (Pacusi), and Baberu no hon (Bavel’s Book). His 2002 work Atamayama (Mount Head) won six major awards at international festivals and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film. With Atamayama (Mount Head) and his 2007 work Kafuka: Inaka isha (Franz Kafka’s A Country Doctor), he became the first person to win top prizes at all of the big four animation festivals: Annecy, Zagreb, Hiroshima, and Ottawa. In 2013, he opened the animation store and gallery Au Praxinoscope in Setagaya, Tokyo. He also teaches young animators as a professor at Tokyo University of the Arts.
Web: http://www.yamamura-animation.jp/e-news.html

Dreaming With Open Eyes

Among the nine works to appear in this summer’s cinema selection is Sati no “Parādo” (Satie’s Parade), a 14-minute film created in 2016. Last year marked 150 years since the birth of the French composer Erik Satie. Yamamura’s film, taking Satie’s ballet Parade as its subject, has already been shown at several international film festivals.

“I hadn’t planned to coincide with the anniversary as I’d actually wanted to create the film from about 10 years earlier. It’s inspired by Satie’s music. In particular, Dutch jazz musician Willem Breuker’s arrangement and performance of Satie is exceptional, and it made me want to produce footage to accompany it.”

Erik Satie appears with his trademark bowler hat, glasses, and walking stick in Sati no “Parādo” (Satie’s Parade).

The ballet, first staged in 1917, had a stellar artistic team. Satie provided the music, Jean Cocteau penned the script, and Pablo Picasso designed the costumes and sets. It was composed for the Ballets Russes company, led by artistic director Sergei Diaghilev. The action takes place in front of a circus tent as performers show off their tricks and managers call out to spectators to draw them inside. With three masters of the avant-garde giving their talents full rein, it was a groundbreaking work. Yamamura’s film recreates the ballet’s debut performance, accompanied by the Willem Breuker Collective’s music. Satie, Cocteau, and Picasso also appear in the animation.

“In short works, an equal relationship between music and images creates a complete new world. Some people never listen to Satie or modern classical music. They may find this animation difficult to understand. But it’s a chance to encounter the music, and watching the film provides fresh surprises. I hope some viewers will find themselves wanting to listen to more of Satie’s compositions and Breuker’s jazz.”


The trailer for Sati no “Parādo” (Satie’s Parade).

Music also plays a major role in Mizu no yume (Water Dream). This short four-part work in traditional Japanese ink depicts life in the ocean from its initial emergence to the evolution of the whale. The August Yamamura selection includes the first four-minute section. Water Dream will be completed around the autumn of 2017. French pianist Catherine Verhelst commissioned the film, watching each section herself before composing accompanying music.

Also in the selection is the odd and somehow humorous six-minute film Kaibutsugaku shō (Notes on Monstropedia). Yamamura has stated a desire to adapt the eight-century Kojiki (Record of Ancient Matters), which gives the mythic origins of Japan. Some early stories are gathered in the twelve-minute Kojiki: Hyūga hen (The Hyūga Episode of Kojiki), another film in the varied selection.

Yamamura chose the title for his film selection, Migi me to hidari me de miru yume (Dreams Seen with the Right Eye and Left Eye), based on another Satie work, Choses vues à droite et à gauche (sans lunettes) (Things Seen Right-to-Left [Without Glasses]). “I took the idea from the title of the piece. Animations are dreams you see while your eyes are open. They’re dreams that keep both your right and left brain thoroughly active. The phrase ‘without glasses’ is a little sarcastic. Looking to the right and left, the viewer seems to see (or understand) everything perfectly, but in fact can’t see at all. . . . Unlike Satie, I am entirely straightforward in simply hoping the audience will enjoy the films.”

Early life in the first section of Mizu no yume (Water Dream).

Kaibutsugaku shō (Notes on Monstropedia) imagines a book about European monsters in the Middle Ages. A picture book was published in July.


The trailer for Kaibutsugaku shō (Notes on Monstropedia).

(Originally written in Japanese by Itakura Kimie of Nippon.com. Photos by Ōkubo Keizō.)

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